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January 5, 2026
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| Will Maduro's Capture Signal the End of an Anti-Christian Regime? |
| by Yoe Suarez |
| Nicolas Maduro, longtime dictator of Venezuela, has been captured by an incredible operation that bombed Fuerte Tiuna, the biggest military base in Caracas. The implications are still unknown, but the region has been shaken, for sure, as Venezuelans looked at the sky for Chinook, Black Hawk, and Little Bird helicopters. |
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| Mamdani's Inauguration Speech Rife with Radical Rhetoric, Troubling Symbolism |
| by Casey Harper |
| A common crime of American politics occurs when a politician jazzes up the base with partisan rhetoric only to transform into a muddled centrist after Election Day. At least for now, New York City's smiling socialist mayor Zohran Mamdani is not guilty of that crime. But if he keeps on this track, he'll be guilty of much worse. |
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| Independent Journalists First Reported Minnesota's Somali Fraud Scandal in 2018 |
| by Mark Tapscott |
| Nick Shirley's recent 42-minute video documentary on the federal benefits fraud generated more than 120 million internet views, prompting a massive wave of praise for the 23-year-old independent journalist for focusing national attention on what is preliminarily estimated to be a staggering $9 billion scandal. |
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| 'Let Justice Prevail': Sylvia Iriondo, Survivor of Castro Attack That Killed Americans |
| by Yoe Suarez |
| Approaching the 30th anniversary of the massacre, while former Cuban military pilot Luis Raul Gonzalez-Pardo awaits trial, Sylvia Iriondo reflected on her own survival and on the lives cut short between the clouds and the sea on February 24, 1996. |
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| U.S. Captures Venezuelan Dictator Maduro after Strikes |
| by Reuters Report |
| The U.S. attacked Venezuela and deposed its long-serving autocratic President Nicolas Maduro on Saturday, President Donald Trump said, in Washington's most direct intervention in Latin America since the 1989 invasion of Panama. |
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| A Biblical View of Government Promotes Political, Economic, and Religious Freedom |
| by Joshua Arnold |
| American mistrust of government continues, prompting many voters to the desperate choice of voting for whichever party or candidate is out of power, in hopes of stumbling over change for the better. In the 2025 off-year elections, this mistrust led voters in cities like New York and Seattle to elect openly socialist candidates - a strange irony, as these candidates propose to solve voters' problems with even more government intervention. |
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| Christian, Is Your Light on? |
| by Sarah Holliday |
| Leaving a light on is still one of the most common, simplest ways to thwart potential burglars. Most thieves are lazy opportunists - they want an empty house, not a fight. A glowing living-room window, maybe a TV flickering or radio humming, screams "someone's home." That one detail flips the risk: from easy burglary to messy home invasion, potential violence, a barking dog, and felony charges that can ruin their life. The oldest trick in the book still wins because it exploits the one thing most criminals hate: witnesses. |
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