Here’s a mind-numbing, are-you-for-real-asking-this question that Donald Trump should not be asking, so of course he’s asking it—in all caps, naturally. “ARE YOU BETTER OFF THAN YOU WERE FOUR YEARS AGO?” he posted Monday on his Twitter-knockoff site Truth Social. Take a moment to check your calendar, do the math, count on your fingers and yes, that’s right: Four years ago was right smack dab in the middle of March 2020, when we—as in, every single literal one of us in the country—were locked...
Sarm Heslop’s best friend said she was ‘never going to give up’ looking for her
A pastor who gave blood for the first time alongside family and friends in memory of two loved ones is encouraging others.
On Thursday’s broadcast of the Fox News Channel’s “Special Report,” Biden Campaign Co-Chair Sen. Chris Coons (D-DE) responded to a question on whether President Joe Biden will issue executive orders on immigration by stating that while executive orders have “been
If Donald Trump is elected president in November, he will have assembled a coalition unlike any Republican nominee in my lifetime.
Michael RaineyMarch 25, 2024President Biden has called for raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy, but according to a new analysis by
More than 19 million users viewed the series of sepia-toned images.
After years of dishonesty, today the Biden administration admitted that the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act cut taxes for Americans of all income levels. Democrats have been dishonest about TCJA since its inception, repeatedly making false claims that the tax cuts only helped “folks at the top and corporations.” But today Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen […]
I am often asked whether President Biden is intentionally trying to dismantle the American economy with his imbecile energy, climate change, crime, border, inflation and debt policies.
Friday evening seems like a good time to ponder some of life's most interesting questions. It may even be a good time to see some answers to questions you've never asked.
There isn’t an American alive who’s seen a presidential election like the one taking shape this year. Every four years, the electorate confronts one of two kinds of elections: Either there’s an incumbent president facing a challenger, or it’s an open race in which there is no incumbent. With the former, voters ask whether to stick with the president they have or take a chance on his or her rival. With the latter, voters have to decide between contenders, neither of whom has served as the...