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Walk through the heart of Paris and you will hear the Islamic call to prayer echoing across neighborhoods where church bells once rang. It is the sound of a new France rising, and the old France slipping into history.
Ask officials in the U.S. Department of Treasury's Bureau of Fiscal Service what America's national debt total is, and they will tell you around $37 trillion. Or to put it in a more personal perspective, every man, woman, and child in America owes about $110,000. But as daunting as those figures are, they don't tell whole story.
The consequences of avoiding sin in our pulpits are playing out across American society. If people do not see themselves as sinners, they see no need for repentance. If they see no need for repentance, they see no need for a Savior. And without a Savior, the cross becomes a symbol stripped of meaning, and the church becomes nothing more than a community club with hymns.
The headlines almost sound like science fiction-but they're real. A new report out of the Daily Mail reveals that scientists, faced with mounting evidence that life on Earth is far too complex to have emerged by chance, are now entertaining a shocking alternative: that aliens may have seeded life on our planet billions of years ago.
If New York-the largest, loudest, most visible city in America-elects a mayor on this platform, the ripple effect will be felt nationwide. And the message to Jewish Americans will be chilling: your safety, your voice, your connection to Israel can all be sacrificed on the altar of ideological purity.
The dramatic Israeli strike on Tuesday targeting a meeting of Hamas's senior political-terrorist leadership in Doha, Qatar, codenamed "Summit of Fire," represents a paradigm shift in the nearly two-year-long war, moving to strike the terror group on the territory of one of its chief patrons and decision-makers.
There are many in the scientific community that are deeply concerned that all of this seismic activity may be building up to some sort of a crescendo, but so far most people in the general population are not paying attention to the warnings.
A recent Rasmussen poll has sent shockwaves through political circles: 53 percent of likely voters under 40 say they want a socialist candidate to win the 2028 presidential election. Even more alarming, 76 percent of these young voters support nationalizing major industries, from healthcare to energy to big tech.
For decades, unwavering support for Israel was one of the few constants in American politics, bridging party lines and shaping U.S. foreign policy. That consensus is cracking. Today, we see deep divides emerging within both Democrats and Republicans -- and they are driven less by ideology and more by age, culture, and information trends.
In the swirl of Middle Eastern crises, the world has focused almost exclusively on Iran’s nuclear ambitions, Hezbollah’s rockets, or Hamas’s terror tunnels. Yet a far greater danger to Israel is quietly taking shape, one that could redefine the balance of power in the entire region.
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