One Standard, One Fight: Inside the Army’s New Fitness Test
The Army just torched the “yeet” test and finally embraced a no-nonsense, gender-blind standard that actually measures whether you’re fit to fight—or just taking up space.
The Army just torched the “yeet” test and finally embraced a no-nonsense, gender-blind standard that actually measures whether you’re fit to fight—or just taking up space.
The collapse of the London talks isn’t just a diplomatic setback—it’s a clear signal that the war for Ukraine’s future is entering a darker, more dangerous phase with no end in sight.
In special operations, there’s a hard line between clandestine and covert missions—one’s a ghost story you tell after the blood dries, the other’s a lie you take to your grave.
When the chain-of-command board starts making national headlines, you can bet someone’s head is rolling—because in today’s military, the perception of loyalty matters just as much as the reality of leadership.
Staff Sergeant Travis Atkins did more than just wear the uniform—he lived the values behind it, choosing instinctively to shield his men with his own life in a moment that defined true American valor.
What stays with me most isn’t just the devastation we sifted through by hand, but the faces of those who showed up every day—bloodied, exhausted, unflinching—determined to do right by the dead.
Dakota Meyer already gave more than most men could in a lifetime—and now he’s laced his boots up again, proving once and for all that some warriors never leave the fight.
When students have to dive for cover in the same buildings where they’re supposed to build their futures, you start to wonder what kind of country we’re leaving them.
When the front lines shift to our own soil, it’s American troops who answer the call—not with speeches, but with boots, grit, and sacrifice.
Colonel Susannah Meyers’ removal from command at Pituffik Space Base was about more than a morale email gone wrong—it was a high-profile warning shot about loyalty, politics, and who really calls the shots in today’s military.
Dan Caldwell didn’t just get walked out of the Pentagon—he lit a bonfire under the military brass and left behind a smoldering mess of ideological warfare, national security panic, and a GOP tearing itself apart from the inside.
Colorado’s new Senate Bill 3 is more than a new law—it’s a warning shot fired straight at the heart of America’s gun culture, and every gun owner in the country ought to be paying close attention.