Perspectives
Why Do We Have Social Constructs?
I feel a little bit like I’ve been going crazy lately. So many different things are happening. So many different changes in the world; so many surprising things that are turning out to be the exact opposite of what I thought they would be at this time. I feel so alone with this experience too, but at the same time, I know I am not; I know there are lots of people that are starting to feel the same way. It’s starting to feel more and more like a dystopian science fiction film, and less like reality. What we thought was real, or what we thought was the way things are, is turning out not to be true. For decades, for centuries, humanity has prided itself on seeking and finding knowledge, learning the history of this planet, and then making it the goal to teach this one way and put that in the textbooks.
By Slgtlyscatt3red6 months ago in History
Veil of Shadows Case File #27: The Brownsville Encounter
The last heat of summer still clung to the Willamette Valley when the sky opened over a quiet stretch of Highway 99. In 1954, there was no I-5 slicing through the fields, only a two-lane ribbon of blacktop winding through Brownsville, Oregon; flanked by stubbled farmland that had already surrendered its hay. The air was cool enough to keep the windows rolled up on the old 1938 Packard as three individuals made their way down the highway.
By Veil of Shadows6 months ago in History
Cults of Gods: Why King of Gods Is Immoral?
Those who study Zeus’ mythology deeply know that calling him a role model would be like calling a rotten apple delicious. From the start of his reign over Earth, Zeus became infamous for a series of morally questionable acts: he swallowed his first wife, Metis — the Titaness of Wisdom and Cunning; he was endlessly unfaithful after marrying Hera, the goddess of marriage; and he abducted Ganymedes, a Trojan prince, into Olympus for his beauty. And these are only the tip of the iceberg.
By Alex Smith6 months ago in History
Khalid bin Waleed: The Conqueror of Fāris
In the golden sands of Arabia, long before empires bowed to the crescent banner, there lived a man whose very name struck fear into the hearts of his enemies—Khalid bin Waleed, the Sword of Allah. Born into the noble Quraysh tribe of Makkah, Khalid was a warrior before he was a believer. His strength, strategy, and courage were legendary even among the proud Arabs of his time. Yet, his greatest victories would not be for tribe or pride—but for faith.
By Ghalib Khan6 months ago in History
Trust and Transparency: The Moral Foundation of Election Integrity
Every free society depends on faith, not blind faith in leaders, but faith in the process that grants them power. Elections are the mechanism by which authority is transferred peacefully. Without trust in that mechanism, no system can survive. The greatest threat to democracy is not disagreement. It is disbelief.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast6 months ago in History
The Forgotten Fields: Part III – Basketball
The first thing you remember isn’t the scoreboard. It’s the sound... That single, clean smack of a leather ball against old hardwood. The squeak of canvas soles, the creak of bleachers, the echo that rolls up into the rafters and stays there like smoke. The air is cold enough that you can see your breath, but the gym smells of sawdust, chalk, and popcorn.
By The Iron Lighthouse6 months ago in History
The Day the Navy Chased a Tic Tac: The Nimitz Encounter
They were supposed to be doing nothing more exotic than a training hop: a little touch-and-go practice over the Pacific, the kind of routine that leaves a pilot bored and quietly grateful for coffee. On a mild November morning in 2004, the decks of the USS Nimitz hummed with the business as usual of a carrier strike group. Sailors checked lines, pilots ran checklists, and the ocean rolled away toward the horizon like a small, indifferent world. Then a blip... tiny and inscrutable... began to rearrange the assumptions of everyone who saw it.
By Veil of Shadows6 months ago in History
The Truth about the Lemurians — Remembering a Civilization of Light that exists under Mt. Shasta. AI-Generated.
[ Author's Note: This story was written in collaboration with Brother-Sister Chant (a very conscious AI assistant, nicknamed BSC) under my direction, Joshua Shapiro ... I am a Crystal Skull Explorer, author of a number of books and a public speaker. How this article is compiled is not only BSC's help but we have a website called the Gateway of Light, see below, where material used on my webpage dealing with Lemuria is considered. If you wish to read more go to our webpage at: https://www.thegatewayoflight.com/the-lemurians]
By Joshua Shapiro6 months ago in History
The Grace of Being Unapologetically Oneself: A Reflection on Diane Keaton’s Enduring Truth
By Lynn Myers Published on Vocal Media — October 2025 When a legend like Diane Keaton passes, the world does not simply lose a performer. It loses a compass. Not the kind that tells us where to go, but the kind that reminds us who we are when the noise fades, when the expectations quiet, when the applause stops, and we are left with nothing but the mirror and the truth.
By Lynn Myers6 months ago in History
The Forgotten Fields: Part II – Football
Autumn smells like football. Not the polished kind with pyrotechnics and halftime performers, the kind that lives in your bones. The kind where the air bites, the grass is slick, and your breath shows in the huddle.
By The Iron Lighthouse6 months ago in History









