April 8, 2026

What do you have in common with New York City’s Mayor Zohran Mamdani?

The country has been on pins and needles in recent weeks, as the Supreme Court weighs a decision about birthright citizenship, which is a question that has persisted throughout every living American’s life, though it seems to me that it never should have been.

The Fourteenth Amendment is clearly directed toward ensuring that slaves born in America, whose forebears were of African origin, would be considered American citizens after the Civil War.  We know this to be a fact because many American Indians were also born on American soil, though they were not considered American citizens when the Fourteenth Amendment was ratified.

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Kentucky’s biggest Powerball winner is back in the headlines for all the wrong reasons: James Shannon Farthing, who hit a $167.3 million jackpot with his mother on April 26, 2025, has been arrested for the fourth time since that life-changing windfall, this time accused of unlawfully entering a Lexington home on March 28 and stealing $12,000 in cash during what police say was a burglary that ended with him fleeing in a black Porsche. Officers later found him in a parking lot and, after spotting a burnt marijuana blunt, allegedly discovered more marijuana and blunts in the vehicle, leading to charges of burglary and possession of marijuana. Farthing, 51, has pleaded not guilty, posted a $10,000 bond, and is due back in court April 27 — but for a man who won the state’s largest-ever lottery prize, the jackpot has come with a stunning trail of trouble.

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