So, there were two interesting headlines yesterday. First, we’ve got Pope Leo XIV touring Turkey to honor the ancient roots of Christianity. On the other, we’ve got an Afghan evacuee — supposedly a vetted U.S. “ally” — allegedly ambushing National Guardsmen near the White House. If that combination doesn’t describe the moment we’re living in,…
Truth, Justice, and the Fine Art of Not Looking the Other Way
Washington suddenly seems to be rediscovering the concepts of truth, justice, and responsibility. And honestly? It’s about time. For a town that couldn’t find its own moral compass with a GPS, a map, and three tour guides, we’ll take the progress where we can get it. President Trump’s administration has been busy trying to broker…
Truth Before Feelings: Why Passports Should Reflect Biological Reality
There’s a lot of heat — and very little light — surrounding the Supreme Court’s recent decision allowing President Trump’s administration to enforce a policy requiring passports to reflect a person’s biological sex, not self-identified gender. Predictably, the talking heads went into overdrive, accusing the Court and the administration of cruelty, discrimination, and “erasing” transgender…
A Test of Leadership and Integrity on Both Sides of the Equator
When President Trump announced sanctions against Colombia’s President Gustavo Petro, his family, and several top officials, the media reacted like the sky was falling. But here’s the simple truth: when it comes to the global drug trade, there’s a limit to what polite diplomacy can accomplish. At some point, words have to give way to…
The Idol of Government: When We Trust the State More Than God
The government’s closed, the paychecks are paused, and somewhere between the Capitol and the cable news crawl, panic is setting in. Federal workers are anxious, politicians are grandstanding, and Americans everywhere are discovering just how much of their daily peace depends on whether Congress passes a spending bill. But this shutdown — messy as it…
An Update on the Assassination of Charlie Kirk
In the past few days, much more has come into focus regarding Tyler Robinson’s case. The fog of shock has begun to lift, and while that clarity brings sharper details, it also brings sharper pain. We are learning more about what happened, why it may have happened, and what the legal road ahead looks like,…
Holding Justice, Mercy, and Hope in the Wake of Tragedy
This is one of those moments that doesn’t just make the headlines; it hits us right in the gut. It’s the kind of tragedy that makes you stop what you’re doing, sit down for a moment, and whisper, “Lord, what’s happening to our country?” For those of us who cherish our faith, who believe in…
Reflections on the Assassination of Charlie Kirk
I watched the video of the shooting this morning, and I sincerely wish I hadn’t. It was horrific and disturbing. It left me shaken, unsettled, and with a pit in my stomach that I haven’t been able to shake all day. Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA, was gunned down at a Utah…
Righteous Judgment or Political Revenge? A Look at the Bolton Search
On Friday morning, just as most folks were pouring their first cup of coffee, FBI agents showed up at John Bolton’s Bethesda, Maryland home and his Washington, D.C. office with court-approved search warrants in hand. The early-morning raid wasn’t routine; it marked a major escalation in a long-dormant national security investigation. At the heart of…
Selling the Soil: Should America Trade Her Public Lands for Profit?
House Republicans have introduced a new proposal tucked into a broader energy package—one that would authorize the sale of over 350,000 acres of public land in Nevada and Utah. On its face, the idea sounds simple enough: use underutilized federal land to alleviate housing shortages, boost local economies, and fund public works. The estimated revenue…