Daniel Boone: The Man versus the Myth

Daniel Boone: The Man versus the Myth

By John Tiffany. Daniel Boone was a great American explorer and woodsman of Keltic ancestry—part Scottish, part Welsh. (And one odd and surprising thing about him that hardly anyone knows is that he was a Quaker.) He is a real American hero, but maybe not quite the way you have visualized him.

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Corrupt Secret Associates of Benedict Arnold

Corrupt Secret Associates of Benedict Arnold

By Henry Ford. Benedict Arnold was a hero… and then a traitor. The worst kind of traitor. One who would turn his back on his nation and his best friend. One who would turn on his own in battle, capturing and burning Richmond, Va. at the head of British troops after his defection. But Arnold’s…

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An Alternate View of World History and Global End Times Doctrines from an Indo-Aryan Perspective

An Alternate View of World History and Global End Times Doctrines from an Indo-Aryan Perspective

By Harrell Rhome, M.Div., Ph.D. The basic, primordial, traditional symbols and archetypes of the Indo-Aryan spiritual mythos are part of a body of knowledge, dating back eons, revealed to initiates and sometimes called the ancient mysteries. The deepest roots of these hoary traditions trace directly to the Indian subcontinent, the cultural-spiritual “hive” as Godfrey Higgins…

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The Scottish Contribution to Freedom in Revolutionary America

The Scottish Contribution to Freedom in Revolutionary America

By John Tiffany. Being a Scot is not all kilts and bagpipes, by any means. Often inaccurately portrayed as backward romantics, the Scots in many ways laid an essential foundation for today’s intellectual, commercial and political milieu. Each place they entered around the globe—North America, Australia, India—they left their mark. Most of it seems to have been of a distinctly positive nature. Here we focus on the contributions of Scotsmen to the culture of the United States.

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German WWI Naval Raiders

German WWI Naval Raiders

By Gene Flinter. A key part of the German war effort in World War I, little remembered today, was the role of so-called light or auxiliary raiding ships. For example, the Wolf, commanded by Capt. Karl August Nerger, destroyed 35 enemy trading vessels and two warships, for a total of some 110,000 tons of shipping.

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One Man’s Journey to ‘Holocaust Denial’

One Man’s Journey to ‘Holocaust Denial’

By Ray Goodwin, How does one go from believing the world is flat to accepting that it is really round? How does one cast off decades of what is assumed to be “gospel” and develop an entirely opposite worldview? And how does a layman resist and overcome the calumny associated with the acceptance and espousing of a very different and unpopular viewpoint?

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Bias in Academia and the Cases of Nat Turner & John Brown

Bias in Academia and the Cases of Nat Turner & John Brown

By Ray Goodwin. Too many professors indoctrinate their students with establishment and anti-truth ideology. Institutions of higher learning should not teach students what to think but how to think. Students are not paying for the subjective opinions of uninformed professors. Students cannot get a good education if professors are only telling half the story.

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Fables of Ancient Israel Now Being Dissected

Fables of Ancient Israel Now Being Dissected

By John Tiffany. Researchers are weighing the accuracy of the reigns of King Solomon and King David against archeological and scientific data just recently discovered. These scholars are coming up with some very interesting conclusions. Many Christian religious scholars, such as noted author Thomas L. Thompson, think the history of Palestine and its peoples is…

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The Battle of Blood River

The Battle of Blood River

By Deirdre Fields. It was Boer versus Zulu in a life & death struggle for the survival of the ‘White Africans’… The 16th of December 2006 marked the 168th anniversary of the Battle of Blood River, an event that lies at the heart of Afrikaner nationalism. It is a story of courage, determination, sacrifice, suffering and of undaunted faith in God. It even has mystical aspects. But it is a battle that could have spelled the fate of the Boer nation—perhaps even should have been their end—but miraculously was not. It enabled an entire epic history of the whites of South Africa to unfold. Here, then, is the remarkable saga of the Battle of Blood River.

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New Evidence Indicates Legendary Greek Tales Took Place in the Baltic

New Evidence Indicates Legendary Greek Tales Took Place in the Baltic

By John Tiffany. When we read Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, (which just about every schoolchild in America has been asked to do for generations) we naturally assume them to be largely tall tales, set in the eastern Mediterranean area. However, while there are elements of the fantastical in these epics, there is also a solid historical core. That may not surprise TBR readers, but what is surprising is that the setting of the events is not in the modern areas of Greece and Turkey at all (forget about Heinrich Schliemann).

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