Samantha Kamman has written about pro-life topics and social issues for years. Her articles have appeared in Live Action News, The Washington Examiner, and Human Defense Initiative. Samantha graduated from North Central College in 2018 with a Bachelor of Arts. Samantha re-converted to Catholicism after relocating to the D.C. area.
House Republicans are demanding answers from Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate, Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, regarding a $250 million COVID-19 fraud scheme, viewed as one of the worst relief scams during the pandemic.
An illegal migrant accused of raping a 14-year-old girl and repeatedly stabbing a man during a robbery was arrested in connection with the crimes only a few months after his release from custody at the southwest border, a congressional report alleges.
Chicago police received a call that over 30 Venezuelan migrants had shown up at a South Side apartment with guns, though one resident denied the report.
An archaeological study of an isolated Christian community in Spain shines light on the endogamous community that, despite its proximity to Islamic-controlled regions, had low levels of North African or Middle Eastern ancestries.
Victoria Sinis used to recruit women to sell their bodies on OnlyFans, but the strange fetish requests and pornographic content led her to question her career, an inner conviction that ultimately led her to Christ.
A Ukrainian-born physician who grew up during the Soviet Union’s rule over the country is trying to rebuild Ukraine’s healthcare system by offering a training program to medical professionals that exposes them to the Gospel.
Archaeologists in Israel uncovered a stone seal they believe to be around 2,700 years old from the First Temple period, a find that strengthens the biblical heritage of Jerusalem.
Recently released data points to a possible reason for the reported increase in abortions in the United States two years after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and ruled abortion is not a constitutional right.
A group of Jewish professors petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to free them from the representation of a union they view as antisemitic because it maligned Israel as an “apartheid state” and defended the anti-Israel protests at Columbia University, among other actions.
For over 20 years, Dale Sutherland ministered to youth in Washington, D.C., while leading a double life that led to various brushes with death. As an undercover narcotics officer during the height of the crack cocaine wars in the 1980s and early '90s, he would sometimes pose as a pimp, a drug buyer or someone involved in plotting murder. But despite the darkness, Sutherland never lost faith in God.