history
Past politicians, legislation and political movements have changed the course of history in ways both big and small. Welcome to our blast to the past.
World War 3 in 2025? Secret Predictions from Intelligence Experts
World War 3 in 2025? Secret Predictions from Intelligence Experts The wind of war doesn’t always begin with fire—it starts with whispers. Quiet leaks. Subtle shifts. Hidden alerts that most civilians never notice. But intelligence experts? They see the storm long before the clouds arrive. In shadowy corners of military rooms, encrypted emails, and confidential strategy documents, one chilling phrase has started to appear again and again:
By Ali Asad Ullah8 months ago in The Swamp
The World’s Most Powerful Bunker-Buster Bomb — Capable of Destroying Iran’s Deep Underground Nuclear Sites
🌍 The World’s Most Powerful Bunker-Buster Bomb — Capable of Destroying Iran’s Deep Underground Nuclear Sites The United States possesses a secretive and devastating weapon — one that has never been used in any war so far. But if it were ever unleashed, it could turn deeply buried nuclear bunkers into dust and rubble, even those hidden under rugged mountains.
By Ikram Ullah8 months ago in The Swamp
The Young Revolutionary Leader: Ibrahim Traoré and the New Face of Burkina Faso
“The Young Revolutionary Leader: Ibrahim Traoré and the New Face of Burkina Faso” Burkina Faso is a landlocked country located in West Africa, with a population of around 20 million. Its flag bears a resemblance to that of Pakistan’s Tehreek-e-Insaf party 🇧🇫, with red and green colors and a yellow star in the center. Formerly known as the Republic of Upper Volta, the country changed its name to Burkina Faso on August 4, 1984, which means “Land of the Upright People” — a title that reflects its people's desire for integrity and self-respect.
By Ikram Ullah8 months ago in The Swamp
Oikophobia, or How the Left Learned to Hate Its Own Reflection
Let us begin with a word that sounds like a Victorian sneeze and carries the diagnostic precision of a Freudian sideshow act: oikophobia. No, it's not an obscure Mediterranean allergy, though you'd be forgiven for imagining it's what afflicts aristocrats when confronted with the working class. Rather, it's the fashionable loathing of one's own cultural home—an ideological self-flagellation that has become the ambient theology of a disturbingly large segment of modern progressivism.
By Conrad Hannon8 months ago in The Swamp
What I Learned Growing Up in a Cult. Top Story - June 2025.
Earlier this week I was talking to a coworker about life. After a while, we somehow got on the subject of religion. I had to explain that I have an aversion to most organized forms of religion, having been raised in a church that at the time was very cult-like, and later after a split, the faction that stayed with the original leader went full cult. But that begs the question.
By Atomic Historian8 months ago in The Swamp
Just Following Orders
The tribunal hall is utterly silent, except for the sniffling and suppressed sobs. The uniformed soldiers keeping the peace are statuesque in their quiet survey of the defendants. Still, whether it was a trick of the light or just fanciful imagination, tear tracks carved down the stony faces as the horrific images played on the large plasma screen.
By CT Idlehouse8 months ago in The Swamp
The Anti-Black Blackness
Once again, I find myself with a topic that I cannot shake…and wish to avoid. Here it is, the end of June and we have the US involved in another war, ICE agents raiding and grabbing people off the streets, and my own concerns over money continue (where are all those contracts?). I thought that I could just observe and comment like a true Vocalist, and then move on with the rest of my summer.
By Kendall Defoe 8 months ago in The Swamp
The Fear That Shapes Us
“In times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.” — George Orwell e World on Edge It begins in silence. A mother turns off the news and looks at her child differently. A father locks the door, not from robbers, but from headlines. An elderly man walks past a newspaper stand and mutters, “They’re lying again.”
By Riaz Gillani Exclusive8 months ago in The Swamp









