April 29, 2025
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The Most Significant Accomplishments of Trump's First 100 Days |
by Ben Johnson |
Since Franklin D. Roosevelt ushered in the New Deal in 1933 in just three months, historians have measured a president's success or failure by its first 100 days. As we reach President Trump's 100th day in office, the 47th president's second administration has taken a whirlwind of decisive actions to protect life, end artificial support for extreme transgender ideology, uphold religious liberty, secure America's southern border, restore national sovereignty, and return to a traditional America First foreign policy fostering peace and prosperity. |
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Study: Abortion Drug Complications 22 Times More Common than FDA Admits |
by S.A. McCarthy |
An explosive new study is revealing that the abortion drug is significantly more dangerous than government health agencies have previously admitted. The Ethics and Public Policy Center (EPPC) published a report Monday detailing the dangers associated with the use of the abortion drug mifepristone. The study found that, although the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) claims that less than half a percent of women experience serious complications, the actual rate of damage done by the drug is significantly higher. |
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Hill Leaders Hit Crunch Time on Trump's Agenda |
by Suzanne Bowdey |
Not everyone in Congress got a nice, long April break. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and members across 11 committees spent the last two weeks hashing through some of the major disagreements barreling toward Republicans in the "one, big, beautiful bill" Donald Trump is counting on to implement his agenda. And the hours are only going to get longer, the president warned. |
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Activist Judges and the Rule of Law |
by Joshua Arnold |
A currently popular narrative on the Left has one fatal flaw. With judges freezing Trump administration policies left and right, politically powerless progressives console themselves with the notion that Trump's actions are utterly lawless and will eventually be struck down in court. That notion was shipwrecked on the rocks of reality last week, when two judges were themselves charged with crimes for their impotent attempts to shelter criminal illegal immigrants from deportation. |
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DOJ Reverses Biden Administration Endorsement of Gender Transition Surgeries for Inmates |
by Joshua Arnold |
In new court filings, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) Civil Rights Division on Friday reversed the position it took under President Biden endorsing gender transition surgeries for inmates. The filings come as the Trump administration DOJ radically reforms its Civil Rights Division. |
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The Kennedy Center Scraps a Week of Pride Month Events |
by Sarah Holliday |
For years, the Kennedy Center has promoted LGBT-related material, causes, and events. In fact, this summer, they were slated to host a week chock-full of Pride-themed events for the biennial World Pride festival. But in a surprising turn, the center slammed the brakes last week, canceling the entire "Tapestry of Pride" week outright. |
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Faith Leaders Urge Trump Admin. Not to Deport Persecuted Afghan Christians |
by S.A. McCarthy |
As President Donald Trump pushes to increase mass deportation efforts, he and his team are weighing shielding some persecuted Christians from being shipped back to their home countries. Trump's Department of Homeland Security (DHS) declined to renew temporary protected status (TPS) previously given to nearly 10,000 immigrants from Afghanistan, opening up an avenue for many to be deported once their current TPS expires on May 20. But some administration officials are considering protecting Afghan Christians from deportation, according to a report from Politico citing unnamed sources. |
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Biden vs. Trump: What Netanyahu Says about Working with Each President |
by Virginia Allen |
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recounted multiple conversations, or lack of conversations, with the Biden and Trump administrations during a speech Sunday night at the Jewish News Syndicate International Summit in Jerusalem. The difference between the two presidents, many world leaders would agree, is stark. |
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