History

  • The Biden Deception

    Joe Biden served as the 47th Vice President under Barack Obama for eight years. Despite obvious signs of cognitive decline, he was pushed forward as the Democratic nominee in 2020.

  • 1947 Paris Peace Treaties

    The 1947 Paris Peace Treaties were a set of agreements signed in Paris that officially ended World War II between the Allied powers and Italy, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Finland. 

  • Henry Ford

    Henry Ford, born in 1863, was a transformative American industrialist and business magnate whose innovations reshaped the fabric of modern society.

  • Thomas Edison

    Thomas Alva Edison, born on February 11, 1847, was a towering figure in American history—an extraordinary inventor, visionary entrepreneur, and symbol of innovation whose genius helped shape the modern world.

  • Alexander Graham Bell

    Alexander Graham Bell, born on March 3, 1847, was a visionary inventor, scientist, and engineer whose groundbreaking work forever transformed human communication.

  • The Gettysburg Address

    The Gettysburg Address, delivered by President Abraham Lincoln on November 19, 1863, is one of the most revered and enduring speeches in American history. It begins with the solemn and poetic phrase, “Four score and seven years ago,”

  • John Adams

    John Adams, born on October 30, 1735, was more than just a Founding Father—he was a pillar of principle, a fierce advocate for independence, and a man whose convictions shaped the very soul of America.

  • Thomas Jefferson

    Born on April 13, 1743, Thomas Jefferson was more than a Founding Father—he was a visionary whose intellect shaped the soul of a nation. A statesman, diplomat, lawyer, philosopher, and architect of liberty, Jefferson’s ideas laid the foundation for what the United States would become.

  • Thomas Paine

    A Spark of Revolution: The Power of 47 Pages On January 10, 1776, a voice rose above the noise of uncertainty and fear—a voice of clarity, conviction, and undeniable purpose. That voice belonged to Thomas Paine, and it came in the form of a 47-page pamphlet titled Common Sense. These 47 pages didn’t just inform—they…

  • IN GOD WE TRUST

    On July 30, 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the law P. L. 84-140, which made “In God We Trust” the nation’s official motto. The motto had appeared on coins since the Civil War era, but now it would also be printed on paper currency.

  • The 4th of July

    Independence Day—July 4th—is more than a celebration of freedom. It marks the birth of a nation built on the unshakable belief that all people are created equal and endowed by their Creator with unalienable rights. On this day in 1776, the Declaration of Independence was adopted, and with it, the United States of America stepped…

  • Israel

    On November 29, 1947, the world witnessed a moment that would shape destiny. The United Nations adopted Resolution 181, a bold and historic decision to end the British Mandate and divide the land into two states—one Jewish, one Arab.

  • The President and the Press

    On April 27, 1961, in the grand setting of the 47 story Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City, President John F. Kennedy delivered a speech that would come to stand as one of the most urgent and prophetic calls to truth in American history. Speaking to the American Newspaper Publishers Association, Kennedy was not merely…