March 3, 2025
|
4 Policies the Trump Admin Can Adopt to End the Persecution of Pro-Life Advocates |
by Ben Johnson |
After four years of legal victimization by the Biden-Harris administration, pro-life advocates breathed a sigh of relief when President Donald Trump took office. The president promptly set about reversing the Left's weaponization of government, ordering the Justice Department to drop prosecutions of peaceful sidewalk counselors and pardoning nearly two dozen Christians targeted by a Democratic Party that relies heavily on donations from the abortion industry. But now, constitutional attorneys have listed four additional ways the Trump administration - which has delivered a palpable conservative agenda through executive orders - could rectify the federal government's targeting of the pro-life movement without having to consult with another branch of government. |
|
|
|
PERKINS: DOGE's 'Tush Push' Moment |
by Tony Perkins |
The official rationale for calling for the Tush Push to be banned from the NFL is player safety. Yet critics argue this ban is about removing a play no one can effectively defend. This brings us to DOGE, an initiative designed to expose and eliminate decades of government waste, fraud, and abuse. Like the Tush Push, it's highly effective - and there's a growing effort to shut it down. |
|
|
|
IVF Factors the Trump Administration Should Consider |
by Bob Marshall |
The answer President Trump proposes in his IVF executive order is not, unfortunately, poised to solve the problem of infertility. There's a danger that America will be pushed into a political shotgun marriage with a predatory industry that, in fact, kills many more babies than it creates, costs more than much more effective restorative reproduction health approaches, and results in more adverse medical-health complications for the pregnant mother and her IVF-conceived child. |
|
|
|
Trump-Zelensky Meeting Ends Early after Heated Argument |
by Joshua Arnold |
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's first meeting with President Donald Trump ended acrimoniously on Friday, after a meeting in the Oval Office exploded in a heated exchange, which was caught on video due to the unusual presence of television cameras. Less than three hours after Zelensky's arrival, Trump sent him packing, stating on Truth Social, "I have determined that President Zelenskyy is not ready for Peace if America is involved. ... He disrespected the United States of America in its cherished Oval Office. He can come back when he is ready for Peace." |
|
|
|
Congressional Hearing: USAID Bankrolls Far-Left Activists |
by Joshua Arnold |
Expert witnesses testified before Congress Thursday about the waste and abuse of grants issued by the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), from progressive kickbacks to funding for terrorists. The testimony came in a hearing titled, "America Last: How Foreign Aid Undermined U.S. Interests Around the World," before the Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency (DOGE), a part of the U.S. House Oversight Committee. |
|
|
|
DOGE Is Great, but Entitlement Reform Is Necessary for Balancing the Budget |
by Zachary Gohl |
Naturally, every conservative would like to see the budget balanced, but if this dream is to become a reality, it cannot happen solely at the hands of DOGE. The dirty little secret is that the only way to balance the budget and truly begin to pay off the national debt is to reform entitlements. |
|
|
|
Federal Court Rules Colorado Christian School Can Receive Gov't Funding |
by S.A. McCarthy |
A federal court has determined that a Christian school in Colorado cannot be barred from a government funding program for hiring Christian employees and holding teachers to Christian standards. U.S. District Court Judge Daniel D. Domenico, who was appointed by President Donald Trump in 2019, issued a ruling this week in favor of Darren Patterson Christian Academy, a Christian school which had previously been prohibited from participating in a state preschool program. |
|
|
|
Wyo. Legislature Enacts Bill Protecting Public Employees from Being Forced to Use 'Preferred Pronouns' |
by Sarah Holliday |
Wyoming's SF 0077, which officially goes into effect July 1, protects teachers, professors, and other public employees from being forced to use inaccurate pronouns if it violates their conscience and deeply held beliefs. While some left-wing voices have deemed acts such as these as "attacks" on LGBT-identifying people, the Wyoming Legislature sees it differently. "Compelled speech is not free speech," the legislation states. |
|
|
|
Indian Authorities Are 'Turning a Blind Eye' to Christian Persecution: Expert |
by Sarah Holliday |
During Thursday's "Washington Watch," Family Research Council President Tony Perkins observed, "India, [the] largest so-called democracy in the world, is a place of great hostility and discrimination toward Christians," and this persecution is only "growing ever more severe." Despite the rising rates of hostility in that country, and the push Perkins made for reform during his time at the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, India has not been recognized as a country of particular concern. |
|
|
|
South America and the Trump Administration: Focused on Promoting the Freedom Model, Part 2 |
by Yoe Suarez |
Beyond internal politics, with the United States being the global power, what prospects are there for South America from the change in the White House? |
|
|
|
Advertising or Manipulating? The Use of AI in Children's Advertisements |
by Monika Mercz |
In an era where artificial intelligence (AI) increasingly permeates various facets of society, its application in influencing behavior - particularly among vulnerable populations like children - raises significant ethical and legal concerns. |
|
|
|
Florida Weighing Prosecution of Suspected Rapist and Social Media Influencer |
by S.A. McCarthy |
Officials in the Sunshine State are looking into legal measures to potentially prosecute a pair of controversial - and possibly criminal - social media influencers. On Thursday morning, brothers Andrew and Tristan Tate arrived in Fort Lauderdale, after travel restrictions imposed on the two by Romanian authorities had been lifted. |
|
|
|
|