Humanity
Humanity
Alabama’s Sunken Secret: The 60,000-Year-Old Forest Hidden Under the Gulf
Imagine diving sixty feet below the surface of the Gulf of Mexico, about fifteen miles off the coast of Alabama. You aren't looking for a shipwreck or buried pirate gold. Instead, as the bubbles clear, you see something much more haunting: the Alabama underwater forest. This is a prehistoric world of giant cypress trees, still rooted in the mud where they grew tens of thousands of years before the Great Pyramids were even built.
By Areeba Umair2 months ago in FYI
The Visionary Behind Modern Chhattisgarh
When Chhattisgarh was carved out as a separate state on 1 November 2000, the announcement marked only the beginning of a far more demanding journey. Creating a new state is not merely a political decision; it is an administrative test of the highest order. Systems must be built, institutions must be established, and continuity of governance must be ensured often under intense time pressure and public scrutiny.
By Muddasar Rasheed2 months ago in FYI
Downtown Memphis Is Having a Moment — And the City’s Soul Has Never Shined Brighter
Memphis has always been more than a dot on the map. It is a feeling, a rhythm, a lived experience rooted in resilience, creativity, and community. In recent years, downtown Memphis has reemerged as the heartbeat of that spirit—a place where history and progress walk hand in hand, where independent voices are being amplified, and where people are coming together to build something meaningful. For anyone paying attention, downtown Memphis is not just alive; it is thriving.
By The Blacksheepkid Collective by: El Pablo 1x2 months ago in FYI
Blame It on Your Heart. Top Story - January 2026.
I write a few poems, but not as many as some folks on Vocal. Most of my poems have to do with love. Either the desire for it, the tragedy of when it doesn’t work, or dealing with feelings of love. I am a big softie at heart, I guess!
By Calvin London2 months ago in FYI
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 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
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









