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Recent articles in Enter Stage RightA parting gift for Pelosi: Mark Alexander has a memo for Attorney General Pam Bondi: File a DoJ Criminal Complaint to Indict Rep. Nancy Pelosi for Destruction of Public Property Twenty years since A Scanner Darkly (2006): Mark Wegierski offers a retrospective review of this classic Philip K. Dick film The Democrats' sleazy redistricting is something the Founding Fathers never anticipated: Across the United States, reports Rachel Alexander, Democrats are using redistricting to elimate Republican seats -- and the only way to fight back is to use the same tactics U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham and the Lebanese paradox on Hizbullah: Hizbullah occupies a structural position within Lebanon's political order. Its sudden eradication is not an operational scenario but a systemic shock that would threaten the integrity of the Lebanese state itself, argues Col. (ret.) Dr. Jacques Neriah The government job eraser strikes again!: Judging by the jobs numbers that are reported each month, you'd think the American economy is chockablock with new jobs. The reality is a little different, says Mike Maharrey How many guns in the U.S.: All about America's firearms in 2026: In news that might not surprise, the United States is home to a lot of civilian firearms...but exactly how many? Cassandra McBride attempts to answer that question Can grid handle next Winter Storm Fern, solar flare or enemy attack?: The US mostly dodged disaster this time, writes Paul Driessen. But what if Net Zero mandates aren't adjusted or ended? Trump administration finally gets ICE right: Despite the mainstream media's constant churn about midterm elections as if they were tomorrow, there is time for Trump to refocus on the economy, writes Mark Alexander Twenty years since V for Vendetta (2006): Mark Wegierski says that the story of spirited personal heroism is undermined by the film's ridiculous, misconceived sociopolitical premises Here's the truth—and it's not Pretti: It wasn't an ICE agent that killed protestor Alex Pretti, argues Selwyn Duke, but rather a network of organizations that promoted violence Defying reform: Abbas's elections are a direct challenge to President Trump: New participation requirements are presented as a barrier to militancy but instead entrench political dominance, undermine reform commitments, and heighten tensions with international frameworks, writes Lt.-Col. (res.) Maurice Hirsch Hiding from shareholders: McDonald's and UPS: Esther Bouquet says UPS and McDonalds are refusing to engage in shareholders and provide explanations and justification for their sustainability and DEI practices DHS: Get the ICE mission and optics right: The DHS has focused its ICE efforts on deporting the "worst of the worst," but it has failed to make that clear, argues Mark Alexander The Democrats will support immigration control -- at this precise point: Selwyn Duke argues that Democratic support for immigration is a strategic, power-driven tool to destabilize and reshape American society through demographic change rather than a principled or humanitarian commitment Looking back fifty years at a 1976 game about U.S. civil conflict – exploring social alternatives through eclectic media (Part Three): Mark Wegierski looks at Minuteman: The Second American Revolution A skeptic contemplates some cautionary tales: Patterns within the archetype and sleeper: 1928's R-101 airship disaster was a historically documented failure driven by institutional hubris and suppressed dissent, writes Charlotte Cerminaro, and is a cautionary example for everyone Deportation: A changing standard?: Democrats weren't always against deporting illegal immigrants, says David Reintjes, and recent history proves that very neatly Is CVS daring Trump to defend biological reality?: US President Donald Trump signed an executive order a year ago with its definition of genders, but it appears that CVS isn't interested, writes Stefan Padfield The maritime siege: A baseline for neutralizing Iran's oil lifeline: Ella Rosenberg argues that neutralizing Iran economically depends on synchronizing U.S. maritime interdiction with European financial closure Federal Reserve puts rate cuts on pause: It was no surprise that the US Federal Reserve held the line on rate cuts last week, says Mike Maharrey, but that doesn't mean that there aren't still issues Poor nations won't follow Europe, UN in economic suicide: Or, says Paul Driessen, continue letting global elites set policies that impoverish and kill their people |
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