Historical
I Preached an Entire Sermon Based on Only One Word
As an itinerant preacher, I was invited to preach at a church for its Missionary Sunday. I chose to preach on a practical subject in keeping with the occasion. Even though the sermon was geared toward missionaries, it was appropriate for everyone who heard it.
By Margaret Minnicks2 months ago in FYI
Freezing the War, Not Ending It. Why Trump’s Russo-Ukraine Peace Deal Will Break Down
Wars don’t end just because someone in a suit decides they should. The war in Ukraine is nearing its fourth year, and while diplomacy is accelerating, the battlefield is unmoved. Missiles still strike cities. The front line still grinds forward inch by inch. The war keeps its own tempo, no matter how fast envoys fly between Mar-a-Lago, Moscow, Paris, and Kyiv with draft agreements in hand.
By Lawrence Lease2 months ago in FYI
Virginia was once a mega-state until it gave up most of its land
The year 2026 marks the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. According to Cardinal News, Virginia was originally much larger than it is today. Virginia came out of the Revolutionary War much smaller than it was when it went in.
By Margaret Minnicks2 months ago in FYI
The Neuroscience of Ritual: Bridging Ancient Practice and Modern Science
The Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram (LBRP) traces its lineage to a Hebrew prayer for protection. Over centuries, this modest invocation transformed into a formalized practice within the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn in the late nineteenth century — a practice that now resonates in esoteric traditions and neuroscience.
By Vongani Bandi2 months ago in FYI
The Benefits of Writing
I am a writer. That is my affirmation because I write something every day. I have been writing almost all my life. There is always something inside of me that wants to come out through my writing. At night, I dream about what to write. As soon as I wake up in the mornings, I put my nighttime communications into an article and submit it to my writing sites so it can be read and hopefully enjoyed by millions of people worldwide.
By Margaret Minnicks2 months ago in FYI
The Timeless Title: “Olu of Warri” – A Pre-Colonial Legacy Rooted in History, Affirmed by Colonial Recognition Before 1952
The title “Olu of Warri” stands as an enduring symbol of sovereignty, predating colonial rule by centuries and embodying the unbroken monarchy of the Warri Kingdom. Far from being a modern invention, this title traces its origins to the late 15th century, when Prince Ginuwa, son of the Oba of Benin, founded the kingdom in 1480 as “Iwere” – the ancestral homeland of the Itsekiri people. Historical records, maps, and accounts from European explorers unequivocally demonstrate that the monarch was consistently referred to as the Olu or King of Warri long before British colonial interference. The temporary shift to “Olu of Itsekiri” in the 1930s was a colonial administrative concession tied to the creation of Warri Province, but compelling evidence from colonial documents reveals that the British authorities had already recognized and supported the historical validity of “Olu of Warri” as early as 1936 – well before the formal restoration in 1952. Through persuasive evidence from Portuguese decrees, ancient maps, literary accounts, royal narratives, and declassified colonial dispatches, this article affirms that the “Olu of Warri” has always been the rightful designation, reflecting a kingdom’s sovereignty and its king’s dominion, with pre-1952 colonial endorsements underscoring its legitimacy.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun2 months ago in FYI
How Trial and Error Built the Foundations of Aviation . AI-Generated.
When we think about aviation today, it’s easy to picture sleek aircraft, precise engineering, and highly controlled systems that make flying feel almost routine. But the reality is that aviation was not born from certainty or perfect calculations. It emerged from trial, error, and relentless experimentation, often driven by individuals willing to risk failure again and again. The foundations of aviation were not built in laboratories alone they were shaped in open fields, improvised workshops, and moments of painful learning.
By Beckett Dowhan2 months ago in FYI
We Shall Never Surrender: The Speech That Turned Britain’s Darkest Hour Into Defiance
There are speeches that explain history, and then there are speeches that intervene in it. On June 4, 1940, Winston Churchill delivered one of the most consequential addresses ever spoken inside the House of Commons. Britain had just pulled off the miracle of Dunkirk—an evacuation that saved more than 330,000 Allied troops from annihilation. But make no mistake: this was not a victory. France was collapsing. Nazi Germany looked unstoppable. Invasion felt inevitable.
By Lawrence Lease2 months ago in FYI
How to Time Travel: 5 Methods According to Science
For a long time, the idea of traveling through time was tucked away in the "fiction" section of the library, right next to wizards and space monsters. But in recent years, the conversation has shifted. With mysterious "time traveler" photos popping up on the internet and physicists like Stephen Hawking weighing in, we have to ask: Is time travel actually possible?
By Areeba Umair2 months ago in FYI









