Articles

  • Jan 24, 2025 | newsmax.com | Michael Dorstewitz

    The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) was held this week in Davos, Switzerland, and the timing could not have been worse. The WEF wants to control every facet of the lives of every person on Earth, excluding themselves, of course.

  • Jan 22, 2025 | newsmax.com | Michael Dorstewitz

    Despite the audacity former President Joe Biden displayed by preemptively pardoning family members who had allegedly engaged in an international influence-peddling scheme, there was one pardon that smelled even more than the rest. That honor belongs to Biden’s 11-plus-year pardon of Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former 38-year director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), who also served as chief medical adviser to President Biden. Sen.

  • Jan 20, 2025 | newsmax.com | Michael Dorstewitz

    With the lowest favorability rating of any exiting president since Richard Nixon, Joe Biden sought something, anything, he could latch onto to call a win amidst an administration distinguished by failure. He thought he’d found it Friday by announcing that the Equal Rights Amendment had finally been ratified, which was first proposed and approved by Congress more than 50 years ago.

  • Jan 17, 2025 | newsmax.com | Michael Dorstewitz

    January 2025 may be remembered as the month fact-checkers took their last breath — and despite all the caterwauling from Democrats and legacy media, that’s a good thing. President Joe Biden denounced its demise during his brief farewell speech to the nation Wednesday night. "Americans are being buried under an avalanche of misinformation and disinformation enabling the abuse of power. The free press is crumbling. Editors are disappearing. Social media is giving up on fact-checking.

  • Jan 15, 2025 | newsmax.com | Michael Dorstewitz

    Defense secretary nominee Pete Hegseth faced four-plus hours of intense grilling from Senate Democrats at the Senate Armed Services Committee Tuesday. In the end, not only was he unscathed, but he demonstrated the "calm under fire" demeanor we expect from a secretary of defense, and in the end, he’ll be confirmed, although probably along party lines. Hegseth released a written copy of his opening statement, outlining what his three priorities would be if confirmed for the office.

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