Category: Truth

Age of Lies, Age of Truth

Commentary Have you been watching these fools at the World Economic Forum (WEF) go on about how they are going to control the world? It’s embarrassing, and the public in many nations has turned against them. Rightly so. The model people use is very simple: if you attended the WEF, you might enjoy hobnobbing, or…


Why Our Drive to Be Likable Is Making Us Exhausted

Society’s levels of emotional exhaustion are reaching epidemic proportions. Presenting as depletion, fatigue, dissatisfaction, burnout, anxiety, depression, or having a sense of emptiness—women are more likely to be affected than their male counterparts. Is it possible for a woman’s intuition to become a burden? Might our conditioning and proclivity to care for others supersede caring…


A Culture of Lies and the Healing Power of Truth

Commentary To a friend, I was trying to explain what made the Brownstone Institute annual conference and dinner in Miami this past weekend so very special. It was just fantastic that The Epoch Times covered it with a livestream, which is now up and ready to watch. The interviews were great all day but the…


Saint Nicholas: The Real Story | Documentary

Everybody knows the story of Santa Claus, but who was the real Santa? To answer that question, Mark Wilson travels not to the North Pole, but to Turkey and Italy to uncover the truth behind the legend. * Click the “Save” button below the video to access it later on “My List.” – Feature Films:…


The Story of Nellie Bly, the Brave 19th-Century Journalist Who Went Undercover to Exposes Abuses at an Insane Asylum

In 1887, Nellie Bly boarded the boat with the other patients bound for Blackwell’s Island, now known as Roosevelt Island. Their stay in the filthy cabin was mercifully short, and soon they crossed the East River and disembarked. After an ambulance ride, Bly and the others found themselves ushered into the stone buildings of the…


The Story of Nellie Bly, the Brave 19th-Century Journalist Who Went Undercover to Expose Abuses at an Insane Asylum

In 1887, Nellie Bly boarded the boat with the other patients bound for Blackwell’s Island, now known as Roosevelt Island. Their stay in the filthy cabin was mercifully short, and soon they crossed the East River and disembarked. After an ambulance ride, Bly and the others found themselves ushered into the stone buildings of the…


LIVE NOW: Panel Discussion: How to Fight for Truth Without Getting Burned?

In an environment where speaking the truth has extreme consequences, how do you get out the truth without being burned? Joshua Philipp, host of Crossroads and senior investigative reporter at The Epoch Times, moderates a panel at FreedomFest 2022 with James O’Keefe of Project Veritas; Eric Metaxas, author of “Is Atheism Dead”; and Rob Monster,…


Panel Discussion: How to Fight for Truth Without Getting Burned?

In an environment where speaking the truth has extreme consequences, how do you get out the truth without being burned? Joshua Philipp, host of Crossroads and senior investigative reporter at The Epoch Times, moderates a panel at FreedomFest 2022 with James O’Keefe of Project Veritas; Eric Metaxas, author of “Is Atheism Dead”; and Rob Monster,…


Rewind, Review, and Re-Rate: 2015’s ‘Truth’: Uncovering George W. Bush’s Alleged Vietnam Combat-Ducking ‘Strategery’

R| 2h 5m | Thriller | October 16, 2015 “Truth” is a newsroom thriller about the crack team of reporters who tracked the paper trail that determined whether George W. Bush shirked his Vietnam War military duties or not. It also depicts how much journalism has lost its teeth since ’70s superstar Robert Redford played Watergate…


The Disinformation Governance Board and the War on Truth

Commentary What is truth? For many, I’m sure, that’s an easy question to answer. For philosophers, not so much. Plato firmly believed that truth was something to be uncovered, unearthed, and examined. An absolutist in the extreme, genuine knowledge, he argued, was attainable. Other prominent philosophers, however, vehemently disagreed. Truth, they said, was subjective and…