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On paper, Beijing’s massive crude stockpiling spree looks like smart economics — buying low while prices remain relatively soft. But in the language of geopolitics, stockpiles of fuel have always meant something more. They mean preparation. They mean insulation. And sometimes, they mean anticipation of conflict.
A new survey from Gallup reveals that only 27% of Americans rate clergy as "high" or "very high" in honesty and ethics--the lowest level recorded in the organization's half-century of tracking public perception.
By offering glitter ashes alongside traditional ashes, the church presents two competing visions of Christianity: one grounded in repentance and redemption, the other in affirmation of human identity and a secular moral framework.
The United States is speeding toward a debt crisis that will not be theoretical, political, or abstract. It will be personal. And when it arrives, it will reach straight into your wallet, your retirement, your job, and your family's future.
Across America and Canada, shocking acts of violence continue to be committed by individuals identifying as transgender or gender-fluid, yet much of the mainstream media seems unwilling--or unable--to fully report the reality.
Imagine opening your email as a parent and discovering that activists are organizing a campaign against your child's summer camp--not because of safety concerns, not because of misconduct, but because your child is Jewish and the camp celebrates Jewish heritage.
It sounds like something torn from the pages of dystopian fiction: a courtroom, a judge, and a citizen facing years behind bars--not for violence, not for fraud, not for theft, but for stating a belief about biology. Yet this is not fiction and it is happening now.
There are moments in technological history when a single product proposal reveals far more than a roadmap--it exposes a philosophy. The latest reporting about Meta's consideration of facial recognition in its camera-equipped glasses is one of those moments.
For decades, legacy media institutions held an almost sacred place in American civic life. Anchors were trusted voices. Newspapers were arbiters of truth. But the long arc of public opinion tells a different story. as trust in mass media has plummeted
Americans remain in a dour mood regarding the economy, with nine in 10 respondents believing the U.S. is "experiencing a full-blown cost-of-living crisis," according to a new survey. If that mood persists, it will spell major trouble for President Trump and the Republican congressional majority in the 2026 midterm elections.
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