We have been hailing the Civil Rights Era as a grand and universal success for decades. Desegregation is an unquestionable good in the eyes of all good Americans. So, let’s take a
In our first two installments (Part 1 here; Part 2 here), we have given a brief overview of the historical and current situations in South Africa, relating to the dangers faced by the Afrikaner population. We have stated our desire
Jamelle Bouie says it has nothing to do with what you own: With microwaves, air conditioning and cell phones, it’s clear that poor people aren’t nearly as poor as we think they
Editor’s note: The following is extracted from Heroes of England, by J. G. Edgar (published 1910). In the early part of the eighteenth century, there lived near Market Drayton, in Shropshire, a
Editor’s Note: The Starving Artist shares a narrative that explains how modern corporate culture is in need of reform. It’s 4 am and I am up in the dead stillness of
Editor’s note: The following article by S.Sgt. Bob Speer is extracted from Brief, a magazine published for Army Air Force personnel serving in the Pacific Theater (July 24, 1945). No one will
Every now and then, a nation goes crazy. For whatever reason – it might be collective humiliation or extreme poverty, it might be boredom or despair – an entire people becomes unmoored
By the early Nineteenth Century, the British Navy was the unquestioned leader on the seas. No other nation, or group of nations, was able to compete with their naval supremacy. “For almost
Editor’s note: The following is extracted from Poems of English Heroism (published 1882). YE MARINERS OF ENGLAND by Thomas Campbell Ye Mariners of England That guard our native seas! Whose flag has
Editor’s note: The following is extracted from One Damned Island After Another, by Clive Howard and Joe Whitley (published 1946). There were no famous pilots and no famous airplanes in the Seventh
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