For decades, conversations about UFOs and extraterrestrials were confined to science fiction conventions, late-night radio shows, and fringe conspiracy circles. Today, however, governments openly discuss UAPs—Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. Military pilots testify before Congress. Major news networks treat the subject seriously. Streaming platforms release documentaries weekly. Hollywood continues to normalize the idea that humanity is not alone.
At least 25 U.S. military surveillance missions have been tracked off Cuba's coast since early February, some passing within just 40 miles of the communist island. The buildup mirrors patterns seen before American operations against Venezuela and Iran.
A nonprofit organization led by a close associate of California's First Lady will receive $20 million in taxpayer money through Governor Gavin Newsom's newly announced diaper giveaway program, raising fresh questions about the tangled financial relationships surrounding the Newsom family.
Republicans in Oregon gathered more than three times the signatures needed to put a gas tax hike on the ballot, and now Democrats are scrambling as the referendum lands at the worst possible moment: with prices at the pump soaring past $5 a gallon statewide thanks to the Iran war.
Three people are dead, a cruise ship is under international scrutiny, and Americans are once again questioning whether public health officials learned anything from COVID-19. According to Dr. Deborah Birx, the answer is frustratingly simple: the technology to prevent this crisis was available all along.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has launched an investigation into Drone Nerds, a company with links to the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Drone Nerds is tied to Anzu Robotics, a known affiliate of the CCP.
A Somali-born man who pledged himself to the terrorist group al-Shabaab just months after swearing an oath to the United States is now facing the revocation of his American citizenship, part of a sweeping Trump administration effort to denaturalize individuals with terror ties and fraudulent backgrounds.
For generations, Christians have asked a sobering question: Is the Antichrist already alive and operating among us? In a world marked by deception, global instability, moral confusion, artificial intelligence, digital surveillance, and increasing hostility toward biblical truth, the question no longer feels like science fiction or fringe theology. It feels immediate.
There are moments in history when a single voice changes everything. A father speaks over a son. A mother declares hope in the middle of hardship. A leader proclaims truth in the face of chaos. Words—spoken with faith, rooted in conviction—don’t just describe reality; they shape it. And when those words align with God’s promises, they carry the power to alter not just a life, but generations.
The Bible is not silent about the East. In fact, it speaks with striking clarity about a future moment when global events will converge in a dramatic and decisive way. In Revelation, the Apostle John writes of a stunning development: “The number of the mounted troops was two hundred million. I heard their number.”
This question cuts through the euphemisms and forces a reckoning with reality. Pregnancy is not a pathology. It is the natural, healthy process by which a new human life; distinct in its DNA, developing according to its own genetic blueprint, grows in the womb. From the moment of conception, that life exhibits the characteristics of a living organism: metabolism, growth, and response to stimuli.
The Pentagon released never-before-seen files on Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP) as part of the PURSUE effort, or the Presidential Unsealing and Reporting System for UAP Encounters.
Florida taxpayers are still waiting on $608 million in promised federal reimbursements for a remote immigration detention center that the Trump administration may now shut down entirely.
The Virginia Supreme Court struck down the state's new congressional district map Friday in a 4-3 ruling, invalidating a voter-approved ballot measure that would have handed Democrats a dominant 10-1 edge in Virginia's U.S. House delegation.
The IRS paid out $213 million in Earned Income Tax Credits to roughly 67,000 tax filers using nonwork Social Security numbers, money the agency's own inspector general says should never have gone out the door.
President Trump met behind closed doors with Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva at the White House after reporters were barred from a session that was originally scheduled as open press.