Article • January 25, 2018
Feature • December 1, 2005
Article • May 10, 2022
Radical leftists don’t want a may-the-best-facts-win debate. They want power.
Article • April 14, 2022
Feature • October 21, 2020
Democrats are encouraging social media giants to censor conservatives.
Article • February 25, 2010
It’s not as far-fetched as it sounds.
Article • October 7, 2019
Iran is not letting go of North Africa without a fight. And it’s going to get one.
Article • January 17, 2019
The world’s most powerful military has a weak spot.
Article • May 18, 2021
Jews around the world find no peace.
Article • January 26, 2016
Russian mind games with nuclear weapons mean that NATO has to step it up, write top German think tanks.
Article • September 24, 2024
The Islamic Republic of Iran wants to keep Donald Trump out of the White House.
Article • June 28, 2021
More evidence implicating the Chinese government in the covid-19 pandemic
Article • December 24, 2019
‘China’s maritime transformation’ is one of this century’s ‘most significant events.’
Feature • March 1, 2017
Trumpet Daily Radio Episode • January 10, 2020
Feature • August 1, 2017
It was deeply significant—but not for the reasons people think.
Article • July 16, 2019
The European Union is besieging Switzerland—and it will have global implications.
Trumpet Daily Radio Episode • April 25, 2019
Article • October 29, 2025
President Trump and Pope Leo may be working toward a common goal.
Article • December 29, 2016
Trumpet Daily Radio Episode • September 9, 2016
Near the end of World War ii, America and Britain promised to keep the German war machine down. Not even a decade later, America made the mistake of thinking the enemy had been defeated and that Germany could be trusted as an ally. Now Germany and Europe are arming again, largely thanks to America and Britain. On today’s show, Stephen Flurry explains how America’s misplaced trust in former enemies is going to suddenly lead to its downfall.
Feature • March 1, 2020
Article • May 24, 2021
Article • April 12, 2018
The big question in the looming trade war is, Could China use its economic ‘nuclear option’? Which raises another big question: Which nuclear option?