The woke mob comes for Lincoln Follow Us
Question of the Day
Now that we know the military is investigating Unidentified Aerial Phenomena (UFOs), what do you think they might be?
Question of the Day
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
In the most biblically righteous inaugural address ever delivered by an American president, an exhausted Abraham Lincoln called upon his countrymen to care for those who had taken up arms in defense of the nation risking their all in battles that raged from Pennsylvania farm fields and the desert brush of the New Mexico Territory to the Caribbean and the English Channel.
In this, his Second Inaugural Address, delivered just weeks before his death, Lincoln closed his remarks with these words:
Mask on or mask off: Store owners facing difficult decision after mask mandate ends on June 11
and last updated 2021-05-18 18:33:11-04
LEXINGTON, Ky. (LEX 18) â When June 11 arrives and weâre all allowed to ditch the masks inside and outside, whether weâre vaccinated or not, store owners will be treading on a thin layer of ice. And in June, that layer will be
very thin.
âSome store may decide to keep the mask mandate beyond June 11
and thatâs their decision to make,â said Steve McClain from the Kentucky Retail Federation in Frankfort.
One shop owner tells LEX-18 she is dreading having to make this decision because as she said, there is no right or wrong answer. Either choice will anger one-half of her client base.
Saving Liberty One Child at a Time
Teaching our children and grandchildren to embrace good values begins at home
Aesop long ago told the story of the wolf and the dog.
The wolf is starving, thin as a rail, when he meets a well-fed, strong dog. When the dog learns the wolf is barely surviving, he invites him to come and live with him on the farm. “You’ll get plenty of food and treats of all kinds,” the dog says. “And all you have to do is bark at strangers and make a fuss over the farm’s owners and children. It’s an easy life.”
America really began on Lexington Green on April 19, 1775 Minutemen resisted the tyrannical impulses of a faraway, indifferent government Follow Us
Question of the Day
ANALYSIS/OPINION:
On a cold spring morning, 246 years and a few days ago, a military force duly empowered by the rulers of the nation scoured the countryside for weapons, fully intending to seize those weapons that they believed perhaps rightly were going to be used in hostile activities directed at the rulers.
Around 5 a.m., the military force encountered about 80 armed civilians in the center of a town about 10 miles from their base.
They ordered them to drop their weapons and disperse. The civilians hesitated, shots were fired, and eight of the civilians countrymen of the soldiers and marines who fired upon them were dead.
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Learn about the first battles of the American Revolution, which made famous Paul Revere and the minutemen
Overview of the Battles of Lexington and Concord, the opening engagements of the American Revolution.
Battles of Lexington and Concord, (April 19, 1775), initial skirmishes between British regulars and American provincials, marking the beginning of the American Revolution. Acting on orders from London to suppress the rebellious colonists, General Thomas Gage, recently appointed royal governor of Massachusetts, ordered his troops to seize the colonists’ military stores at Concord. En route from Boston, the British force of 700 men was met on Lexington Green by 77 local minutemen and others who had been forewarned of the raid by the colonists’ efficient lines of communication, including the ride of Paul Revere. It is unclear who fired the first shot. Resistance melted away at Lexington, and the British moved on to Concord. Most of the American military su