Author name: aharris47

Who Were the Gnostics? The Heretics Who Claimed to Know the Hidden Truth

Introduction Follow me—there was once a group that didn’t just question authority, they rewrote the entire spiritual narrative. They called themselves Gnostics, drawing from the Greek word gnosis, which meant knowledge, but not the kind you could memorize from scripture. This was secret knowledge—spiritual insight meant to wake the soul from its sleep. They didn’t […]

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How to Make an Annoying Person Look Foolish Without Losing Your Cool

Introduction We’ve all been there—someone rude, condescending, or downright annoying crosses your path, and you feel the urge to clap back. Maybe they insulted you. Maybe they made a slick comment in front of others. Either way, the temptation to argue, raise your voice, or “win” the exchange is real. But here’s the truth: real

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The “Force Family Act”: Trump’s Surprise Redefinition of Marriage Shocks the Nation

Introduction As of August 3, 2025, the United States woke up to an unprecedented legal shift. In a move that blindsided citizens, courts, and constitutional scholars alike, Donald Trump’s administration announced a sweeping redefinition of marriage: any romantic relationship lasting five years or longer now qualifies as a legal marriage under federal law. Dubbed by

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When the Slots Go Silent: How Fixed Incomes Are Crippling Las Vegas

Introduction Las Vegas is hurting, and not for the reasons you might think. It’s not just inflation or bad business decisions—it’s the quiet retreat of a group that once kept the whole city alive: elderly people. For decades, retirees with fixed incomes and free time poured money into the Vegas economy through penny slots, buffets,

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When Solidarity Isn’t Mutual: Black Advocacy, Immigration, and Selective Reciprocity

Introduction It’s hard watching families being torn apart by immigration raids—people losing homes they’ve built, communities they’ve helped grow, and lives they’ve nurtured over years. There’s real grief in that. But at the same time, for many Black people, supporting every protest, every cause, and every displaced group has begun to feel one-sided. Especially in

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Louisiana v. Supreme Court: The Case That Could Gut Voting Rights Nationwide

Introduction The U.S. Supreme Court has already heard arguments in Louisiana v. Callais, a major case that challenges congressional maps including two majority-Black districts. On the surface, it might seem like just another redistricting battle. But what’s really at stake here is the very heart of the Voting Rights Act. With a conservative majority on

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Selective Solidarity: When Black Pain Becomes an Afterthought

Introduction It bothers me—deeply—to see so many Black people passionately waving Palestinian flags and flooding social media with messages of solidarity, while staying silent about the struggles of Haiti, Sudan, the Congo, Somalia, and Ethiopia. This isn’t about denying the suffering of Palestinians. It’s about asking why our empathy gets so loud for others and

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Colored People” vs. “People of Color”: Stop Playing Dumb in 2025

Introduction It’s 2025, and somehow we’re still watching people—mostly white conservative influencers—act confused about the difference between “colored people” and “people of color.” Lately, with fitness influencer Joey Swoll resurfacing and casually using the term colored, that confusion has exploded across social media. But let’s be real: this isn’t confusion. It’s performance. It’s pretending to

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Say His Name: CLR James and the Power of Revolutionary Truth

Introduction What if one of the sharpest anti-colonial thinkers of the 20th century wasn’t American, wasn’t white, and didn’t care about being polite? Meet C.L.R. James—a Trinidadian intellectual, writer, and revolutionary who tore apart the myths of empire with sharp analysis and unapologetic truth. While history often glorifies Western voices, James made it clear that

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