In the early months of 1980, I was working on a master’s degree at the University of Wisconsin. The University has had a Nobel prize between teachers, Dr. Howard Temin. I had already made the decision to fight for the Second Amendment. Although I thought that the cause was lost, could not, in good conscience resign. I could not live with myself if I did what he could to preserve the Constitution and the rule of law. I had just finished a tour of duty, he had taken an oath, and I had …
- Scrumptious 3D printed meals
- France tapping into strategic gas reserves – Reuters
- US to hurry up Ukraine tank deliveries
- Victor Davis Hanson: What Occurred To Stanford College? The checklist of serial embarrassments at Stanford reads just like the suicides of Greek tragedy
- Galaxy adjustments classification as jet adjustments course
5 recent posts for today:
- ‘$100m to beat up that fool once more? I do not suppose that is rational’ – Khabib on McGregor rematch (VIDEO)
- That is how UK media covers Britain’s Covid-19 response & that’s the way it covers Russia’s (is that this FAIR journalism?)
- Racism & homophobia in baseball: Ought to MLB gamers who tweeted abuse as teenagers be punished?
- Ex-UFC star turns to saucy new shoots on grownup website OnlyFans after dropping fitness center throughout coronavirus lockdown
- Russian synchronized swimmer Subbotina reveals off beautiful suppleness in lockdown kitchen exercise (VIDEO)