News

Newark Advocate Faith Works columnist Jeff Gill discusses the Declaration of Independence and what inspired the Founders to ...
Yet, higher education has shaped the American experiment from the beginning. Enlightenment ideas studied in 18th-century ...
Drones flew overhead. ICE agents watched from the roof of a nearby parking structure. Signs waved, people chanted, cars ...
Fresno Survivors of Suicide Loss, a support program for people who have lost a loved one to suicide, reports that in 2022, about 13.2 million people in the U.S. seriously thought about committing ...
With hundreds of events still underway, today’s No Kings actions have already drawn more than 5 million participants—nearly 2 million more than the Hands Off protests on April 5.
No Kings Day is a line in the sand. Let’s meet the moment. Let’s honor the republic. Let’s remind each other — and the world — that in this country, power still flows from the people.
That’s the ethos animating No Kings Day of Defiance —a clear-eyed recognition that 250 years ago, our ancestors rejected a mad king. And today, we must reject another.
What if this right — to be free from an unjust confinement; to be free from arrest without trial — is one for which the Founders and the Framers fought the American Revolution?
What if the divine right of kings enabled the monarch to write any law, prosecute any person and impose any punishment he wished for real or fanciful or even imagined crimes?
David Sovka: A divine right to eat cake King Charles’ Great-Great-Great-Grandmother’s Day is a distinctly Canadian holiday ...
In case of abuse, Report this post. The Divine Right of Kings theology asserts that monarchs derive absolute authority directly from God, making their rule unquestionable by human authorities.