Ron Fraser

Pope Benedict’s aggressive move to garner the wayward Anglican daughter of the church back into Rome’s fold is the latest outcome of the Vatican’s strategy to dominate global Christianity.

The European Union is on a roll. Any resistance to its undemocratic methods is treated with impugnity.

America’s president joins doubtful company in receiving the Nobel Peace Prize.

The Battle of Arnham should be a perpetual reminder of the power of a militarized Germany. It can also be a reminder of the danger that lies ahead for those too blind to comprehend the reality of Bible prophecy.

A German paints a refreshingly realistic view of the direction in which his nation is headed.

A giant imperial power, destined to soon dominate the globe, is suddenly emerging from behind its benign facade!

In the unification of Europe, nothing really appears on the surface as it actually is.

An up-and-coming German politician to watch

Viewing the fields of Flanders is to remember that they, three times within one single lifetime, ran red with the blood of slaughtered millions.

G-20 leaders meeting in Pittsburgh herald submission to global regulator.

The current American administration has just enacted its most disastrous foreign-policy decision to date.

In two weeks, the German electorate will cast their vote for the government that will rule their nation over the next four years. The result of that election is now anyone’s guess.

September is jam-packed with events of significance to observers of Germany’s rise to global power.

Few commentators have picked up on the connection between the pope’s recent encyclical on the global economy and Nazi ideology.

It happened to ancient Rome—and all great world powers: You can track the moral descent of a nation by its cultural decline.

Appeasers and revisionists seek apologies for past history.

The last bastion of freedom in the world is caught in the vortex of entrenched and uncontrollable fraud and corruption.

The mass media would have us believe that Germany continues to remain a weak military power, dependent on the U.S. and NATO for protection. But, what is Germany’s true military potential?

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