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  • He has risen: An Easter celebration

    Happy Easter. This is the most blessed weekend of the year for Christians, and one we anticipate all year long. While Christmas is of course a holy season, Easter is the most meaningful one of all.
  • Senators introduce Not One More Inch or Acre Act
    Senator Katie Britt (R-Ala.), the ranking member of the Homeland Security Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, joined Senator Tom Cotton (R-Ark.), in introducing the Not One More Inch or Acre Act, legislation that will prevent any Chinese national or entity from owning American land.
  • Setting the record straight on recent bank failures
    A combination of excessive spending, skyrocketing inflation, rising interest rates, mismanaged interest rate risk, failed supervision and management, and a social media-fueled bank run led to recent bank failures. As Congress and regulators analyze what went wrong, one thing is clear: S. 2155’s targeted reforms did not contribute to bank failures.
  • An Easter sermon
    There is a quote that reads, "Earth’s saddest day and gladdest day were just three days apart." Invite Him in. Jesus won't wait long to make you happy. Happy Easter.
  • Rep. Massie: Trump is wrong about DeSantis
    “I know DeSantis can win,” Rep. Massie said, “because I’ve seen him up in the polls just four months ago over Trump in Kentucky, which is Trump Central. He’s got a great chance. People want somebody who can drain the swamp.”
  • Trump pushes legal envelope post-indictment
    The fever dream finally broke when former President Trump was arrested Tuesday, April 4. Minus handcuffs, his New York arraignment happened almost exactly like “the Resistance” long hoped and dreamed. And then, Trump returned to Mar-a-Lago; all but called the Manhattan district attorney, as well as the judge overseeing his case, a crook; said “the country is going to hell;” took shots at the other prosecutors investigating him; and declared he had “no interest” in plea deals.
  • American carnage: Trump indictment reflects left’s bottomless cynicism
    The historic indictment of Donald Trump on weak, politically motivated charges underscores how far Democrats have knocked our country off the rails. Their incessant attack on the pillars of our society is creating a nation of cynics who no longer believe in anything. When the rule of law is dead, everything is permitted.
  • Calling all consumers: It’s time to recall our failing energy policies
    It’s time for consumers everywhere – families, farmers, truckers, organized labor, manufacturers, retailers, environmentalists – to demand a consumer recall for any idea that makes energy less affordable, available, reliable or environmentally responsible.
  • Don't live there, just visit once
    I heard this said recently, and it stuck. “Seems to me the past isn’t a great place to live, just a place to visit once, to learn from it.” Don’t waste your life in regrets of what you’ve done wrong. Visit there just once, long enough to learn differently. And then use your gray matter to live life better and happier.
  • Lowering energy costs
    On his first day in office, President Joe Biden rescinded the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, and followed that up by suspending new oil and gas leasing and drilling on federal lands and waters. Americans have unfortunately felt the effects of these actions through record-high energy prices.
  • Another COVID fail: School budget cliffs with gaping holes
    A recent Rand study found that 77% of school districts used the federal money on exactly what numerous other fiscal hawks cautioned against: beefing up staffing with little regard for the future. “Roughly half of district leaders see a fiscal cliff looming after coronavirus disease (COVID-19) federal aid expires,” Rand researchers reported. The study noted that over three-quarters of public school districts have “increased their number of teaching and non-teaching staff above pre-pandemic levels.”
  • The can-do spirit of America's small towns
    Special thanks is extended to two area residents – Bob Hodson and Jim Lukens – for recently sharing a bit of local history with The Highland County Press.
  • Where’s Waldo at Club Fed?
    Despite empty government cubicles, President Joe Biden tucked a 5.2-percent pay raise for the 1.4 million employees of executive agencies into his proposed budget. That would be the single largest pay hike for the Swamp since 1980. They don't call it Club Fed for nothing.
  • Official: China perpetrating ‘greatest transfer of wealth in human history’
    With red flags flying, and with the stakes at American universities, laboratories and businesses high, Biden’s indifference to the Chinese entering illegally – and virtually at will – proves his callous disregard for the nation he’s sworn to defend and the citizens who trusted him.
  • The sweet taste of buckeyes?
    On yesterday’s walk along the creek, I noticed that the buckeye trees were just beginning to wake up. Fat, red buds were swelling at their branch ends. I could see that some of the buds had even unfurled into close clusters of tiny, feathered leaves, and I was reminded of a story from several years ago when Greg and I drove east to visit my brother and his wife in the far northeastern mountains.
  • The warnings unheeded now threaten our fundamental freedoms
    Will the information age be an era of informed, empowered citizens – or an era of a dominant, information-controlling elite? Stay tuned. That’s the question we need to answer.
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