General
Book of Unsung Heroes Hidden in the Attic
It was a quiet Sunday afternoon when I decided to clean my grandmother’s attic. The air was thick with dust and old memories. I thought I would only find broken furniture and forgotten clothes. But instead, I found something that changed the way I looked at my family.
By LUNA EDITH5 months ago in History
Bahlool and His Friend – The Voice of Wisdom and the Sound of a Donkey
In the bustling streets of ancient Baghdad, during the reign of Caliph Haroun al-Rashid, there lived a man whose name became synonymous with wit, wisdom, and divine madness — Bahlool Dana. He was known throughout the city as the wise fool, a man who spoke in riddles yet revealed profound truths through humor and paradox. People laughed at him, but they also learned from him; even kings respected his insight.
By Amir Husen5 months ago in History
Anarcha Westcott
In the dusty medical archives of the 19th century, the name Anarcha Westcott appears quietly, not in headlines, but buried in surgical reports and footnotes. She was not a doctor. She was not a nurse. She was a young enslaved Black woman on a plantation in Montgomery, Alabama. Her body became the unwilling stage for a series of surgical experiments that would transform the field of medicine, at a devastating human cost.
By Stories You Never Heard5 months ago in History
The Movies That Shaped My Soul: How Five Stories Redefined What Cinema Could Feel Like
Cinema doesn’t evolve in a straight line. It lurches forward when a film arrives that audiences can’t stop quoting, critics can’t stop arguing about, and other filmmakers can’t stop studying. These movies don’t just make money; they reset expectations for what stories can do, how images can move us, and where performance can go. They alter careers, reshape genres, and even tweak the way studios greenlight projects.
By Flip The Movie Script5 months ago in History
Jesse James
In every family, some names carry pride, sadness, controversy- men and women whose stories never stayed tucked away in the past. For me, one such name echoes with both pride and sorrow: Jesse Woodson James. To the rest of the world, he was an outlaw and a legend, immortalized in print and film, but through his wife, Zerelda “Zee” Mimms, he is family, remembered as a man, a husband, a father. His life was tangled in violence and rebellion, yet it was woven with loyalty, family, and resilience. To speak of Jesse is not to recite his legend, but to tell the story of a man who carried scars inside and out, and who walked a path too tangled for most men to survive.
By Carolyn Patton5 months ago in History
The Forgotten Fields - A 10 Part Series
By The Iron Lighthouse If you listen closely on a still summer evening, you can almost hear them... faint echoes carried on the wind. The crack of a wooden bat. The whistle of a coach with more spirit than players. The hum of a crowd huddled on splintered bleachers, wrapped in the kind of excitement that never needed a scoreboard to matter.
By The Iron Lighthouse5 months ago in History
Book of Unsung Heroes Hidden in the Attic
It was a rainy afternoon when I decided to clean out my grandmother’s attic — a task I had postponed for years. The ceiling groaned under my footsteps, and the smell of wood and old paper filled the air. I expected nothing more than forgotten furniture and boxes of clothes. But tucked beneath an old trunk, wrapped in a torn piece of linen, was a book that changed everything I thought I knew about my family — and about what it means to be a hero.
By LUNA EDITH5 months ago in History
Latest Developments: Government Shutdown 2025 — **Current Status & Outlook
# Latest Developments: Government Shutdown 2025 — **Current Status & Outlook** Since October 1, 2025, the U.S. federal government has been in a partial shutdown after Congress failed to pass appropriation bills to fund operations for fiscal year 2026. Below is a thorough, question-based update on the current state of affairs, the causes, and possible paths forward.
By America today 5 months ago in History
The Rock That Wasn’t a Rock: A Journey Through 724 Million Kilometers of Mystery
When we look up at the night sky, we see twinkling dots that seem calm and distant. But hidden among those stars are travelers ancient, silent wanderers that have been moving through the darkness for billions of years. This is the story of one such wanderer a story that began on Earth but ended 724 million kilometers away, on the surface of something that wasn’t what scientists thought it was.
By Izhar Ullah5 months ago in History
Who was Usama Bin Ladin
Introduction Osama bin Mohammed bin Awad bin Laden, commonly known as Osama bin Laden, remains one of the most infamous figures in modern history. As the founder and leader of al-Qaeda, he orchestrated some of the deadliest terrorist attacks in the world, including the September 11, 2001 attacks on the United States. His life story is a mixture of wealth, ideology, rebellion, and violence. From his privileged upbringing in Saudi Arabia to his transformation into a global symbol of jihad, bin Laden’s journey reflects the intersection of politics, religion, and extremism in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
By Fawad Khan5 months ago in History
Potawatomi. AI-Generated.
Where the Earth Still Speaks and the Sky Still Listens The morning mist rolled softly across the edge of the forest, carrying with it the quiet songs of the river. The Potawatomi people called this land Bodewadmi, “the Keepers of the Fire,” for they believed that the flame of life and wisdom must never be allowed to die.
By shakir hamid5 months ago in History
Roadside America & The Giant Fiberglass Statues
Somewhere out on Route 66, the sun is low, the asphalt hums, and the family station wagon’s AC isn’t quite keeping up. The kids are restless, Mom is flipping through the AAA TripTik, and Dad’s patience is hanging by a thread when suddenly... there it is! A massive, square-jawed Paul Bunyan figure looms on the horizon, clutching a hot dog the size of a telephone pole. Cameras click, kids scream, and Dad pulls over with a grin.
By The Iron Lighthouse5 months ago in History











