General
Five American Legends That Started With One Ordinary Person
There is a certain hour before sunrise when the world feels suspended. When the trees hold their breath, the sky is bruised purple, and even the wind waits for something to happen. America was built in these moments. Not by generals. Not by presidents. Not by famous names etched into marble.
By The Iron Lighthouse2 months ago in History
Glaucon on Morality
Most of us grow up being told to “be good,” “do the right thing,” and “treat others well.” But we rarely stop to ask a much deeper question: why do we actually choose to be moral? Is it because we want to be good… or because we fear what happens if we aren’t?
By MB | Stories & More2 months ago in History
Old Fashioned Hard Christmas Candy: The origin is not known
Hard Candy Christmas During the 1960s, everyone's grandma or aunt had a glass dish bowl or a metal tin with Old Fashioned Hard Christmas Candy. My great-grandmother and great-aunt both had these mixed-flavor candies every holiday season. The image above proves a picture is worth a thousand words and elicits fond memories.
By Cheryl E Preston2 months ago in History
The Final Trail
The mountains had always been a place of freedom—vast skies, whispering pines, and the kind of silence that made a person feel both small and alive. When thirty-four-year-old American hiker Ethan Ward walked into the backcountry one crisp January morning, no one thought it would be the last time anyone saw him. He was experienced, healthy, and familiar with the trails. The rangers logged his entry as routine. Nothing unusual. Nothing alarming. Just another man seeking peace in the wild.
By Izhar Ullah2 months ago in History
Taiwan May Reverse its Nuclear Phase-Out
May didn’t feel like just another month in Taiwan — it felt like a turning point. For anti-nuclear activists, it was the culmination of a fight they’d waged for decades. On May 17, the island shut down its last operational nuclear reactor, closing the chapter on a technology they associated with radiation threats, authoritarian echoes, and a past they wanted to leave behind.
By Lawrence Lease2 months ago in History
Yemen Is About to Break In Two
Yemen has lived through revolutions, foreign interventions, famine, epidemics, and one of the world’s most devastating civil wars. Yet somehow, the country has found itself lurching into crisis once more—only this time, it’s not the Houthis dragging the nation back into chaos. Over the past several days, a powerful southern faction known as the Southern Transitional Council has launched a stunning territorial blitz, sweeping across eastern Yemen, seizing key oil fields, and conquering cities with a speed and efficiency that blindsided nearly everyone watching. The internationally recognized Yemeni government, already fragile after years of war, now teeters on the edge of outright collapse. And in the shadows, the unmistakable fingerprints of the United Arab Emirates are shaping a conflict that is rapidly evolving into a major proxy showdown with Saudi Arabia.
By Lawrence Lease2 months ago in History









