Col (Ret.) Nate Slate: Iraq – Into the Biblical Wilderness
The Biblical Wilderness wasn’t some metaphorical idea anymore—it was a sand-scoured reality where time held its breath and ancient suffering walked barefoot beside us.
The Biblical Wilderness wasn’t some metaphorical idea anymore—it was a sand-scoured reality where time held its breath and ancient suffering walked barefoot beside us.
Memorial Day doesn’t mean a three-day weekend to me—it means carrying the weight of names I’ll never stop hearing in the silence.
A single RPG hit turned a routine mission into a desperate fight for survival, and Chief Warrant Officer Michael Durant lived to tell the harrowing tale of Super Six Four.
Edan Alexander’s story is about more than surviving a Hamas hellhole—it’s a brutal, bullet-pointed reminder that when hope is armed with grit, noise, and a ticked-off mom, even terrorists can be forced to blink.
Patrick Henry Brady didn’t earn the Medal of Honor by taking lives—he earned it by repeatedly risking his own to save them, one harrowing mission at a time.
Dr. Mary Edwards Walker broke every rule society tried to set for her, and in doing so, earned her place as the only woman to ever wear the Medal of Honor.
The violent ignorance on display at institutions like Harvard and Columbia stems from a deliberate failure to provide historical truth, protect Jewish students, and deliver the education these universities were founded to uphold.
Luigi Mangione didn’t just shoot a CEO—he lit a match beneath a healthcare powder keg that’s been smoldering for decades.
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.
Private Jacob Parrott, a young Ohio soldier, made history as the first-ever recipient of the Medal of Honor for his bravery during the daring Great Locomotive Chase of the Civil War.
Israel just took out one of Hamas’ top brass, Salah al-Bardaweel, in a precision strike that sent a clear message: no one in their leadership is untouchable.
Eli Sharabi didn’t just survive 491 days in hell—he walked out of it swinging, dragging the truth straight into the heart of the UN Security Council.