“Study the Past if you would define the future.” ~ Confucius, per Core, and Oxford Academic. Per Books that can change your life, Confucius also said, “Knowledge is the key to power, to wisdom.” Hold those thoughts in mind as you explore the timely, timeless and practical thoughts that follow.
Part I
“For he lives twice who can at once employ,
The present well, and e’en the past enjoy.”
~ Source: The complete poetical works of Alexander Pope.
“Where an excess of power prevails, property of no sort is duly respected. No man is safe in his opinions, his person, his faculties, or his possessions.” – James Madison
“A well-instructed people alone can be permanently a free people.” – James Madison. This is why easy access to accurate information is important, and at times, vitally important.
“If men were angels, no government would be necessary.” – James Madison. That’s a theological statement with pragmatic insights. Angels are defined as ‘messengers’ from God who are perfect being. Angels have not fallen into the error of sin. To those reading Madison, they knew what those words meant. Millions today may think that an ‘angel’ is merely a cute lawn ornament or some sweet or appealing soul.
“The people are the only legitimate fountain of power, and it is from them that the constitutional charter, under which the several branches of government hold their power, is derived.” – James Madison.
“Americans have the right and advantage of being armed – unlike the citizens of other countries whose governments are afraid to trust the people with arms.” – James Madison Keep this and the other thoughts of founding father Madison in mind whenever someone tries to convince you that a disarmed citizenry is a good idea.
“Knowledge will forever govern ignorance; and a people who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the power which knowledge gives.” James Madison. The phrase “scientia potentia est” is a Latin maxim that means “knowledge is potential power”, commonly attributed to Sir Francis Bacon. When Warren Buffett spends ‘most’ of his day reading, it is because “scientia potentia est” – “knowledge is potential power.”
“The happy Union of these States is a wonder; their Constitution a miracle; their example the hope of Liberty throughout the world.” – James Madison
“The advancement and diffusion of knowledge is the only guardian of true liberty.” – James Madison. Look again at the two quotes from Confucious, at the top.
“As long as the reason of man continues fallible, and he is at liberty to exercise it, different opinions will be formed.” – James Madison. One way to look at this remark is that flawed thinking leads to confusion. By contrast, clear thinking, well and consistently expressed, often leads to authentic consensus.
“If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land, it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy.” – James Madison. Madison lived generations before World War I, World War II, the Vietnam War, or the various Middle Eastern Wars of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Those wars and others were explained to the public as ‘necessary’ to fight a foreign enemy. Restated, Madison understood how the public can be manipulated into war. The insights of Madison and the founders are worth learning from.
“I believe there are more instances of the abridgement of freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments by those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations.” – James Madison. Compare American liberty today to what it was in 1910. Or what it was in 1985. Or in 2000. If liberty is slipping away – and there is evidence for that claim – then it is often done gradually. Once more, Madison had a point. Younger generations of Americans have often been robbed of the proper understanding and knowledge of their true rights, history, and thus their true potential in a free society that operates under a dependable rule of law where justice is equal for all. Think of the quotation from Confucius cited above: “Study the Past if you would define the future.” Third-party research reveals that our industry is being limited in good measure because there is unequal justice at work in the U.S. on housing issues.
“The essence of Government is power; and power, lodged as it must be in human hands, will ever be liable to abuse.” – James Madison, known by several historians as “the father of the Constitution.” The above quotations are from BrainyQuotes, and the following are from AZ Quotes.
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” – James Madison. Only Congress at the federal level (or at the state/local level, a duly elected legislature) is supposed to be able to create laws in the U.S. In the U.S.A., the law can’t compel enforcement of one religion over another. People are free to choose what they believe.
“It is the duty of every man to render to the Creator such homage…Before any man can be considered as a member of Civil Society, he must be considered as a subject of the Governor of the Universe.” – James Madison. Madison, like George Washington and other founding fathers thought religion and morality were essential in a ‘civil society.’
“Because we hold it for ‘a fundamental and undeniable truth’, that religion or ‘the duty which we owe to our Creator’ and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence.” – James Madison. This quote confirms the observation made by MHProNews above: “In the U.S.A., the law can’t compel enforcement of one religion over another. People are free to choose what they believe. ”
“…Freedom arises from the multiplicity of sects, which prevades America and which is the best and only security for religious liberty in any society. For where there is such a variety of sects, there cannot be a majority of any one sect to oppress and persecute the rest.” – James Madison. The word “sect” here means a religious group, like one of the branches of Christianity, Jewish, Islamic, Buddhist or other thoughts, creeds, and denominations.
Yesterday, MHProNews published a report that dealt with Constitutional, economic, and historic aspects of “the money issue.” While some are exposed to the concerns over ‘fiat’ currency and what risks are associated with the looming “digital dollar.” Meanwhile, many and perhaps most others have little or no clue that fiat currency has been a hotly debated topic for centuries. Reading the next two linked reports will shed light on why these matters to professionals in MHVille, and all other businesses and professions.
The article below and this one will be part of our ongoing, periodic series of reports historic issues. That includes manufactured housing (MHVille) history, but also the roots of American liberty and prosperity. When more Americans properly understand those foundations, amazing opportunities and understanding can arise. Something similar could be said about people in some other countries too.
A Rare Book…Provided Below Free…
This report and commentary features a rare book provided below in a digital format. You can read it online here, or download it to your own device(s). That book is called: “Documents Illustrative of the Formation of the Union of the American States.” Instead of reading second- or third-hand sources and their ‘interpretations’ of the foundations of American Constitutional law, “Documents Illustrative” gives you and your circle the opportunity to read that for yourselves. Again: “Knowledge is the key to power, to wisdom.” said Confucious.
“Documents Illustrative” was authorized and published by Congress and carries the following explanation under the next MHProNews subheading. The full text of the book is available further below, but this introduction is also a bit of American history. Note that the following introduction stated in part that: “The wide dissemination of these documents…will do incalculable good and will foster a better understanding of the principles upon which our government is founded.”
About:
Documents Illustrative of the Formation of the Union of the American States
“THE publication of this collection of documents on the origin and development of our constitutional history is due chiefly to the active interest manifested by Representatives Robert L. Bacon, of New York, and R. Walton Moore, of Virginia, and to Senators George Wharton Pepper, of Pennsylvania, and Simeon D. Fess, of Ohio. Its purpose is to present under one cover the most significant documents relative to the formation of the American Federal States. The only comparable collection of documents published by the Government of the United States is the Documentary History of the Constitution, which was brought out some thirty-two years ago.” That’s from page v of the historic “Documents Illustrative of the Formation of the Union of the American States” or “Documents Illustrative” for short. Continuing from that point in he same source are the following remarks.
Two other publications have since appeared which bring together some of these documents. In 191 1 Prof. Max Farrand, of Yale University, brought out a new edition of the Records of the Federal Convention in three volumes. This work included Madison’s journal and the supplementary material by Yates, McHenry, and others. He also included certain significant correspondence of the members of the Federal Convention. This important publication was not only quite expensive but is now difficult to acquire at any price. In 1920 the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace published the debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 reported by James Madison. This also included some preliminary and supplementary material.
In the present document greater emphasis has been placed upon the evolution of the Constitution in the Constitutional Convention of 1787. The documents necessary for a complete study of the development of the Federal Constitution have been scattered so widely in different publications, many of them inaccessible to the ordinary reader, that it is a real service to collect all relevant materials and publish them in one volume.
Until a few years ago our chief source of information with regard to the proceedings of the Federal Convention was the journal kept by James Madison, of Virginia. Since the publication of this in the Documentary History of the Constitution, the notes and papers kept by other members of the convention have come to light and have been published. In the proposed volume the notes of Robert Yates, Rufus King, William Pierce, William Paterson, Alexander Hamilton, and James McHenry have been reproduced. These documents not only give a new insight into the personal characteristics of the members of the convention, but they present valuable supplementary material with reference to the arguments presented in and the actual decisions of the Federal Convention.
In no previous publication has any attempt been made to publish the variant texts of the plans presented to the convention by Edmund Randolph, William Paterson, and Alexander Hamilton. It has usually been assumed that the texts of these plans as published in Madison’s journal were authentic. Recent investigations have shown, however, that the texts of these plans as actually presented to the convention were in many particulars widely different from the plans as given by Madison. Although it is practically impossible to determine the exact text of these different plans that were presented to the convention, it has been deemed of great importance to publish for the first time in one volume these variant texts.
No more appropriate memorial of the hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the proclamation of American independence could be produced. It is also a memorial to Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, and his colleague in many patriotic undertakings, John Adams, both of whom died one hundred years ago. It also commemorates James Madison, the “Father of the Constitution,” who was born one hundred and seventy-five years ago.
No argument is necessary to point out the value of having these historical papers made available in one volume. The wide dissemination of these documents, dealing with those momentous and Prefatory Note on stirring questions associated with the birth of our country, and its subsequent constitutional development, will do incalculable good and will foster a better understanding of the principles upon which our government is founded.
The table of contents shows a list of the documents in chronological order. The analytical subject index and index of names adds materially to the usefulness of the volume as a book of reference.
We gratefully acknowledge the assistance given us by Dr. James Brown Scott and by Dr. J. Franklin Jameson with regard to the reproduction of documents first published under their editorship.
H. H. B. Meyer, Director, Legislative Reference Service.
The table of contents for the book: “Documents Illustrative of the Formation of the Union of the American States” are as follows. Note that the “Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 as reported by James Madison” are insightful as part of the “intentions” of the founders, useful in understanding the reasoning behind various aspects of the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights (i.e.: the first ten amendments).
CONTENTS – on page number(s)
Declaration and resolves of the First Continental Congress, October 14, 1774. . 1-5
Resolves adopted in Charlotte Town, Mecklenburg County, N. C, May 31, 1775 . 6-9
Declaration of the causes and necessity of taking up arms, July 6, 1775 10-17 Resolution of secrecy adopted by the Continental Congress, November 9, 1775 . . 18
Preamble and resolution of the Virginia Convention, May 15, 1776, instructing the Virginia Delegates in the Continental Congress to “propose to that respectable body to declare the United Colonies free and independent States” . . 19-20
Resolution introduced in the Continental Congress by Richard Henry Lee (Virginia) proposing a Declaration of Independence, June 7, 1776 21 Declaration of Independence, July 4, 1776 22-26 Articles of Confederation, March 1, 1781 27-37
Resolution of the General Assembly of Virginia, January 21, 1786, proposing a joint meeting of commissioners from the States to consider and recommend a Federal plan for regulating commerce 38
Proceedings of commissioners to remedy defects of the Federal Government, Annapolis, Md., 1786 39~43
Report of proceedings in Congress, Wednesday, February 21, 1787 44-46
Ordinance of 1787, July 13, 1787 47_S4 Credentials of the members of the Federal Convention 55-84
List of delegates appointed by the States represented in the Federal Convention . 85-86
Notes of Major William Pierce (Georgia) in the Federal Convention of 1787: a. Loose sketches and notes taken in the convention, May, 1787 87-95 b. Characters in the convention of the States held at Philadelphia, May, 1787 96-108
Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787 as reported by James Madison …. 109-745
Secret proceedings and debates of the convention assembled at Philadelphia, in the year 1787 , for the purpose of forming the Constitution of the United States of America. (From the notes taken by the late Robert Yates, Esq. , Chief Justice of New York (Albany, 1821)) 746-843
Notes of Rufus King in the Federal Convention of 1787 844-878 Notes of William Paterson in the Federal Convention of 1787 879-912
Notes of Alexander Hamilton in the Federal Convention of 1787 913-922
Papers of Dr. James McHenry on the Federal Convention of 1787 923-952
Variant texts of the Virginia plan presented by Edmund Randolph to the Federal Convention, May 29, 1787: Text A 953-956
Text B 957-959
Text C 960-963
The plan of Charles Pinckney (South Carolina), presented to the Federal Convention, May 29, 1787 964-966
Page Variant texts of the plan presented by William Paterson (New Jersey), to the Federal Convention, June 15, 1787: Text A ” 967-970
Text B 971-974
Text C 975-978
Variant texts of the plan presented by Alexander Hamilton to the Federal Convention, June 18, 1787: Text A 979-980
Text B 981-982
Text C 983-984
Text D , 985-986
Text E 987-988
The Constitution of the United States 989-1002
Letter of the president of the Federal Convention, September 17, 1787, to the President of Congress, transmitting the Constitution 1003-1004
Resolution of the Federal Convention submitting the Constitution to Congress, September 17, 1787 1005-1006
Resolution of Congress, September 28, 1787, submitting the Constitution to the several States 1007
Circular letter of the Secretary of Congress, September 28, 1787, transmitting copy of the Constitution to the several governors 1008
Ratification of the Constitution by the several States, arranged in the order of their ratification 1009-1059
Resolution of Congress, July 2, 1788, submitting ratifications of the Constitution to a committee 1060-1061
Resolution of the Congress, September 13, 1788, fixing date for the election of a President, and the organization of the Government under the Constitution. . 1062
Resolution of the First Congress submitting 12 amendments to the Constitution 1063-1065
The first 10 amendments to the Constitution 1066-1067
Subsequent amendments to the Constitution 1068-1072
Documents Illustrative of the Formation of the Union of the American States
Some may find it easier to navigate the PDF of the book, which is found at the link below. Click the link and follow the prompts to open and navigate.
https://www.manufacturedhomepronews.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/documentsillustr00libr.pdf
The book was authorized by Congress under the following resolution, which is per the digital version of the book itself, shown above.
HOUSE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 23 [Submitted by Mr. Bacon] Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That there shall be compiled, printed with illustrations and bound as may be directed by the Joint Committee on Printing, ten thousand copies of the Madison Debates of the Federal Convention, together with the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, the Constitution, the instructions to the Delegates to the Federal Convention, the instruments of ratification of the States, and the texts of the amendments to the Constitution, and other relevant and pertinent historical documents for distribution in the year 1926 in commemoration of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America, to the end ” that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth,” of which three thousand copies shall be for the use of the Senate and seven thousand copies for the use of the House of Representatives. Adopted, May 10, 1926.
SELECTED, ARRANGED, AND INDEXED BY CHARLES C. TANSILL
PREPARED UNDER THE GENERAL SUPERVISION OF H. H. B. MEYER Director, Legislative Reference Service Library of Congress
Additional Information, MHProNews Disclosures and Editorial Notes.
As is stated in the footer of hundreds of articles on MHProNews, this writer is a multiple award winner in history during my academic years. One of my favorite quotes was this.
“He lives twice, who enjoys both the past, and the present.” (correctly or not attributed to) Marcus Aurelius. Note how similar it is to the quote from Alexander Pope, near the top of this article?
As with any field of study, history requires a form of discipline. Anyone can attempt to force a view from the past onto the present and seek to call the insight ‘relevant.’ But a level of immersion into history can yield powerful lessons, which is why Buffett and others have spent so much time studying it. MHProNews provides general and manufactured housing history in part because it is potentially valuable to our readers. The fact that several historic articles are popular on MHProNews (and MHLivingNews, for that matter) are evidence that people want to learn more about that history.
Perhaps the best-selling non-fiction author in our times are Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. “Bill O’Reilly and historian Martin Dugard’s Killing Kennedy and Killing Lincoln, page-turning works” have “thrilled” millions, said Green Tree Mall in a plug for the bestselling duo. Dan’s Papers said on 5.8.2022 that Bill “O’Reilly’s series has now sold over 19 million books in print — quite a feat. He has published 17 No. 1 bestsellers.” History well told can be popular.
But more important than popularity are the potential lessons of history. Again, think about what Confucious said, cited above. Consider these quotes about the value of history from Alpha History.
“If you want to understand today you have to search yesterday.”
Pearl S. Buck, American novelist (1892-1973)
“A generation which ignores history has no past and no future.”
Robert Heinlein, American author (1907-1988)
“History is a vast early warning system.”
Norman Cousins, American journalist (1915-1990)
“Study history, study history. In history lies all the secrets of statecraft.”
Confucius, Chinese teacher and philosopher (551-479 BC)
“History is instructive. What it suggests to people is that even if they do little things, if they walk on the picket line, if they join a vigil, if they write a letter to their local newspaper… Anything they do, however small, becomes part of a much larger sort of flow of energy. And when enough people do enough things, however small they are, then change takes place.”
Howard Zinn, American historian (1922-2010)
“Those who do not remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
George Santayana, American philosopher (1863-1952)
“If you don’t know history, it’s as if you were born yesterday. If you were born yesterday then any leader can tell you anything.”
Howard Zinn, American historian (1924-2010)
“Study the historian before you begin to study the facts.”
Edward Hallett Carr, British historian (1892-1982)
“A historian ought to be exact, sincere and impartial, free from passion, unbiased by interest, fear, resentment or affection. And faithful to the truth, which is the mother of history, the preserver of great actions, the enemy of oblivion, the witness of the past, the director of the future.”
B. R. Ambedkar, Indian politician (1891-1956)
“The good historian… must be fearless, uncorrupted, free, the friend of truth and of liberty. One who calls a fig a fig, and a skiff a skiff, neither giving nor withholding from any, from favour or from enmity, not influenced by pity, by shame, or by remorse. A just judge… a stranger to all, of no country, bound only by his own laws, acknowledging no sovereign, never considering what this or that man may say of him, but relating faithfully everything as it happened.”
Lucian, ancient Greek writer and satirist (c.125-185)
While one must separate the wheat from the chaff with all mere mortals and their various organizations, with the next quote it may be particularly true.
In the following quotation, the often-mentioned notion that “the winners” write history is used. While ‘winners’ do write history, so do ‘losers,’ the marginalized, and the oppressed. The reason that an understanding of news or history can be debated at all is precisely because there are multiple viewpoints. Some perspectives are more accurate than others. Some people are more precise than others and give more wheat than chaff. Some histories and historians will be more faithful to the facts than others. Dan Brown wrote the controversial, fictional and arguably misleading novel, The Da Vince Code. That said, Brown’s hardly unique and arguably errant view of history is as follows. Still, it has some insight to it.
“History is always written by the winners. When two cultures clash, the loser is obliterated, and the winner writes the history books-books which glorify their own cause and disparage the conquered foe.”
Dan Brown, American novelist (1964- )
“The more I study history the more I realise how little mankind has changed. There are no new scripts, just different actors.”
Richard Paul Evans, American author (1962- )
Some people try to manipulate, dominate, and control others. That is an obvious lesson of history. That has been true for thousands of years. What potentially makes America unique is the notion that “We the People” are the rulers of ourselves. To the extent that America is ‘off track’ the fix includes a need for American citizens to learn their own national history accurately enough to properly inform our decisions. We may agree or disagree with anyone, friend or foe, but we may still have the opportunity to learn something valuable from them.
The founders were intelligent and routinely successful people by the standards of their times. George Washington, for example, would have been one of the wealthiest presidents when his holdings are adjusted for ‘inflation.’ Yet, Washington was humble enough to hand over the reins of power when his second term in office ended. “When told by the American artist Benjamin West that Washington was going to resign, King George III of England said “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.” (per Maryland State Archives).
Part II. Daily Business News on MHProNews Markets and Headline News Segment
Headlines from left-of-center CNN Business – from the evening of 8.4.2023
- Fear & Greed Index
- Greedis driving the US market
- Latest Market News
- Nikola CEO is leaving the company after just 18 months
- Judge narrows Trump-era Google antitrust case brought by states and the Justice Department
- The US job market continues its cooldown, adding just 187,000 positions last month
- Tupperware revival
- Tupperware Modular Mates.
- Tupperware
- The 77-year-old company may not go out of business after all
- Nikola CEO is leaving the company after just 18 months
- Judge narrows Trump-era Google antitrust case brought by states and the Justice Department
- The US job market continues its cooldown, adding just 187,000 positions last month
- Customers report missing deposits from Wells Fargo bank accounts
- Google update makes it easier for US users to remove some unwanted search results
- FCC issues historic $300 million fine against the largest robocall scam it has ever investigated
- Global food prices bounce following collapse of Black Sea grain deal
- Oil prices are up 20% and energy stocks are rebounding
- People make their way near the Stock Exchange in New York City on June 14, 2023.
- Larry Summers: Wage growth could fuel ‘real acceleration’ of inflation
- Mattel wants to pay you $277 an hour to play Uno
- ‘Bitcoin Bonnie and Clyde’ plead guilty to money laundering
- How extreme heat is making your gas more expensive
- India restricts laptop, PC imports to boost local manufacturing
- Amazon’s stock surges as Q2 earnings show profit and sales jump
- Dark and sinister rhetoric drenches right-wing media amid Trump indictments
- JPMorgan says it expects to pay about $3 billion to help refill FDIC fund
- NYC passes bill to make pandemic-era outdoor dining program permanent, with more specific guidelines
- Apple’s sales fall for the third consecutive quarter
- You’d have to work five lifetimes to make what your boss makes in one year, report shows
- Taylor Swift urged to postpone LA shows as hotel workers strike
- Papa Johns’ prices are driving some customers away
- Taylor Swift gives ‘life-changing’ $100,000 bonuses to Eras Tour truck drivers
- Saudi Arabia extends oil production cut even as US gas prices hit nine-month highs
Notice: the graphic below can be expanded to a larger size.
Headlines from right-of-center Newsmax 8.4.2023
- Trump’s Legal Team to Put 2020 Election on Trial
- New Trump Indictment
- Alina Habba: Trump Has Right to Question 2020 Results
- Trump Campaigns in Friendly Territory After Court Appearance
- Kerik: Trump Indictment Is ‘Terrible’
- Trump: Supreme Court ‘Must Intercede’ in Legal Fights
- Asa Hutchinson: Talk of Pardoning Trump ‘Inappropriate’
- Judge in Trump Documents Case Erred Twice in June Trial
- Ex-Capitol Police Chief Called Jan. 6 Events a Cover-Up | video
- Magistrate Cautions Against Witness Tampering | video
- Del Beccaro, Nunes: Challenging Elections is the Norm | video
- Post-Plea, Trump Calls It a ‘Very Sad Day for America’
- Trump Pleads Not Guilty of Trying to Subvert Election
- Trump Lawyer: Huge Case May Take a Year | video
- More New Trump Indictment
- Newsmax TV
- Byron Donalds: Impeachment Inquiry Likely in the Near Future
- Van Drew: Archer Showed Bidens’ ‘Tag Team’
- Country Star Craig Morgan: Reenlisted to Boost Recruitment
- Texas Rep. Harrison: Sanctuary Cities Hypocritical
- Franklin Graham: Left ‘Scared to Death’ of Trump | video
- Donalds: Influence Peddling an Impeachable Offense | video
- Boebert: DOJ Is New Biden Campaign HQ | video
- Stitt: Dems ‘Refusing to Secure Our Borders’ | video
- Newsfront
- Cyberattack Hits Hospitals, Healthcare in 5 States
- A cyberattack has disrupted hospital computer systems in several states, forcing some emergency rooms to close and ambulances to be diverted, and many primary care services remained closed on Friday as security experts worked to determine the extent of the problem and…… [Full Story]
- Wall Street Slips After Mixed Jobs, Big Tech Reports
- Stocks closed lower following mixed reports about the U.S. job market [Full Story]
- Pentagon Warns of Leaderless Army, Marines
- Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned that troop readiness and [Full Story]
- Newsmax’s July Ratings Zoom as Fox News Sinks
- Newsmax’s surge in the cable TV ratings continued through July, as [Full Story] | video
- Rasmussen: Newsmax Among Most Trusted News Sources
- Pro-life Activist Arrested by FBI to Run for Congress
- Pro-life Activist Arrested by FBI to Run for Congress
- Mark Houck, the anti-abortion activist who was acquitted earlier this [Full Story]
- Tim Scott: Will Finish Border Wall if Elected President
- Tim Scott said Friday that if he’s elected president, he’ll [Full Story]
- RNC Unveils Criteria for Second Debate
- Pence Quotes Trump in New Campaign Merch
- DeSantis: I’ll Debate Newsom, but it’s ‘Already Over’ |video
- Trump Campaigns in Friendly Territory After Court Appearance
- Archer: Ukrainian Prosecutor Was ‘Threat’ to Burisma
- The Ukrainian prosecutor that Joe Biden bragged about getting fired [Full Story]
- VP Harris: Government Should Stay Out of Abortion Decision
- Vice President Kamala Harris answered a question about abortion by [Full Story]
- Jeff Bezos Just Got $11 Billion Richer
- Amazon Executive Chairman Jeff Bezos got $11 billion richer Friday, [Full Story]
- Ukraine Drones Hit Russian Black Sea Navy Base
- Ukrainian sea drones attacked a major Russian port on the Black Sea [Full Story]
- Related
- Global Food Prices Rise After Russia Ends Grain Deal
- Blinken Accuses Russia of ‘Assault’ on Global Food System
- Russia Fines Wikipedia, Apple for ‘False Information’ About Ukraine Conflict
- GOP Lawmakers Seek to Ban Official TikTok Accounts
- Ronny Jackson, R-Texas, on Friday was expected to introduced a [Full Story]
- Leprosy, Plague, Polio: 5 Diseases Reappearing in US
- Several diseases that many Americans believed to be a thing of the [Full Story] | Platinum Article
- Derailments, as Train Safety Regulations at Standstill
- Six months after a train derailed in East Palestine, Ohio, sending [Full Story] | Platinum Article
- Actor Mark Margolis of ‘Breaking Bad’ Dies at 83
- Emmy-nominated actor Mark Margolis, who played murderous former drug [Full Story]
- Authorities ID ‘Jane Doe’ Victim of Gilgo Beach Killings
- A woman whose remains were among discoveries that became known as the [Full Story]
- July Hiring Slows to 187K; Unemployment Dips to 3.5%
- S. employers added 187,000 jobs last month as the labor market [Full Story]
- Mexican Cartels Exploit Hacking of CBP App
- Mexican cartels have hacked the Custom and Border Protection’s phone [Full Story]
- Reuters/Ipsos Poll: Trump Lead Up Despite Legal Woes
- Former President Donald Trump maintains a large lead over the rest of [Full Story]
- Trump’s Legal Team to Put 2020 Election on Trial
- Former President Donald Trump and his legal advisers see his latest [Full Story]
- Judge in Trump Documents Case Erred Twice in June Trial
- The judge in former President Donald Trump’s upcoming trial over his [Full Story]
- Navalny Sentenced to 19 Years for Extremism
- A Russian court convicted imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny [Full Story]
- 2 US Navy Sailors Charged With Spying for China
- Two U.S. Navy sailors have been arrested and accused of providing [Full Story]
- Newsweek Poll: Trump Leads DeSantis in Florida
- Fifty-one percent of eligible voters in Florida say they believe [Full Story]
- Transgender Player Leads Wyoming Tennis Official to Resign
- Jackie Fulkrod, president of a Wyoming tennis Association, has [Full Story]
- Feinstein Cedes Power of Attorney, Clings to Senate Seat
- Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., has ceded power of attorney to her [Full Story] | video
- US Credit Downgrade Caught WH Staff Flat-Footed
- Following a meeting with senior Biden aides last month, analysts at [Full Story] | video
- Appeals Court Allows Biden Asylum Restrictions to Stay in Place
- An appeals court Thursday allowed a rule restricting asylum at the [Full Story] | video
- Ex-Capitol Police Chief Called Jan. 6 Events a Cover-Up
- Former Capitol Hill Police Chief Steven Sund called the events of [Full Story] | video
- Court Upholds Indiana Transgender Students’ Bathroom Access
- A federal appeals court this week upheld the decision of a lower [Full Story] | video
- Justice Kagan Supports Ethics Code but Says Supreme Court Divided
- Justice Elena Kagan publicly declared her support for an ethics code [Full Story]
- Anheuser-Busch Down Nearly 30 Percent in US
- Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev SA/NV reported a 28.2% drop in core [Full Story] | video
- Workers’ Mistakes Rise on Friday Afternoons
- Workers may sense it intuitively but their mouse clicks prove it: Friday afternoon is the least productive time of the work week. It’s also when workers make the most typos. A Texas A&M University team studied this using the computer usage metrics of 789 in-office employees…… [Full Story]
- New Jersey Far Offshore Wind Power Project Planned
- Credit Downgrade Means Bidenomics Just Got ‘Fitched’
- Tim Cook Refuses to Showboat on AI
- DOJ Trump Assault, Biden Protection Show Broken System
- More Finance
- Health
- Extreme Heat Increases Risk for Summer Depression
- The record-breaking heat that’s smothering parts of the U.S. has many healthcare experts worrying that as millions of Americans are forced to stay indoors, they could be at risk for summer seasonal affective disorder, or SAD. According to the Mayo Clinic, SAD is a type… [Full Story]
- Cases of Flea-Borne Typhus on the Rise
- Workers’ Mistakes Rise on Friday Afternoons
- Why We Get Motion Sickness and How to Prevent It
- Experimental Drug Eases Pain Without Addiction Risk