• Approaching the New Year with an Eye on the Past

    Approaching the New Year with an Eye on the Past

    Republicans campaigning for Trump in 2024 might benefit greatly by looking back to his earlier successes. Read more

  • Existential Overdose: America’s Crisis and the Call to Christ

    Existential Overdose: America’s Crisis and the Call to Christ

    The public lockdowns prompted Americans to halt distractions and confront the emptiness of their belief in an uncreated cosmos. This exposure unveiled the existential underbelly in America, paving the way to rediscovering one’s genuine purpose in God. Read more

  • Save Women’s Sports: Why Taking A Stand Matters

    Save Women’s Sports: Why Taking A Stand Matters

      Why is it important to protect women’s sports? What is all of the commotion about? It is more than commotion; it is a crucial step in protecting women from injury and injustice for all generations to come.    Imagine you have trained your whole life for something that you love and in hopes of accomplishing a… Read more

  • The Virtual Ballot Box: How Social Media is Reshaping Political Conversations

    The Virtual Ballot Box: How Social Media is Reshaping Political Conversations

    It is difficult to imagine a world without social media. From search engines providing up-to-date news and information to apps that connect us with family and friends, it seems like we have become utterly dependent on this powerful tool. However, many people overlook how social platforms affect our political discourse. How has the political discussion… Read more

  • Is the Rat Race all for Naught?

    Is the Rat Race all for Naught?

    Has the 2024 primary’s infighting between the neoconservative and populist factions of the GOP at all increased our chances of mending ideological divides? If not, for how long could it continue before more permanently debilitating the American Right’s electoral viability? Read more

  • On the Destruction of Beauty

    On the Destruction of Beauty

    The defining characteristic of the modern age, if one is to be found, is the erosion of objective truth. Students are taught, not how to think critically, but to be critical of established and proven ideas. Rather than further scientific thought, students are taught that basic biological axioms are actually “open-ended,” and truths found in… Read more

  • Save Women’s Sports: What is The Issue?

    Save Women’s Sports: What is The Issue?

    In the last few years, we have seen a horrific tragedy in women’s sports due to men identifying as women competing in the female category. Scholarships, titles, and spots on collegiate teams that female athletes have worked for their whole lives are being taken from them in a second. Read more

  • War Child: A Reflection on War

    War Child: A Reflection on War

    I was 11 when the war in my native Croatia started in 1991. It was a War for Independence from former Yugoslavia, known as the Homeland War.  Recently, seeing numerous comments on social media about the conflicts in Ukraine and Israel triggered some not-so-pleasant memories from my childhood. It’s easy for people to cheer for… Read more

  • Educational Mayhem: Your Kids, Their Battlefield

    Educational Mayhem: Your Kids, Their Battlefield

    American children are, without a doubt, lost. Thus, it is time to build lighthouses of truth, guiding the adrift American youth away from the deadly rocks of disastrous nihilism and secularism and toward the True, the Good, and the Beautiful. Read more

  • Egalitarian Paradox: a Better Elite

    Egalitarian Paradox: a Better Elite

    Aversion to elitism, particularly in education, has its drawbacks. The egalitarian approach to education can limit exceptional students, thereby diminishing the number of exceptional adults and, in turn, the caliber of future teachers. The progressive adoption of an egalitarian education model is inadvertently creating a ‘virtuous’ elite. However, movements like homeschooling and classical education promote… Read more