Watching the SetsWatching the Sets
History doesn’t arrive all at once—it builds like an offshore swell. Watching the world today feels less like surprise and more like recognition, as long-forming waves begin to line up.
When Ezekiel describes Israel standing alone, it may not be betrayal that explains the silence. It may be shock, hesitation, and a world that didn’t see what was coming. This
The old saying “the customer is always right” was never meant to excuse abuse or erase accountability. When that mindset seeps into public policy—where scrutiny becomes taboo and enforcement turns
A reflection on why comparing tragedies isn’t about equivalence, but about speed, discernment, and our growing tendency to mistake certainty for truth.
In an age of instant outrage and incomplete facts, discernment has become a moral discipline. When emotion outruns truth and narratives harden before clarity arrives, the call is not to
When political scandals break, it’s tempting to cheer if it’s “the other side.” But biblical shaking isn’t about partisan victory—it’s about exposure, humility, and repentance. A reflection on justice, accountability,
America is a nation of immigrants—but only because it was built on a single unifying idea: E Pluribus Unum. Out of many, one. This essay argues that America survives not
One of the laziest attacks in modern politics is branding someone a coward for using a Vietnam-era draft deferment—especially when the accusers hail from the same “peace and love” generation
Wayne’s World View One of the most confused debates in America today pits two extremes against each other: those who insist the United States was founded as a purely secular
Fame Does Not Equate to WisdomFame Does Not Equate to Wisdom
January 12, 2026January 12, 2026| Wayne KraperWayne Kraper| 0 Comment| 3:10 pm
Fame can amplify a voice, but it cannot transform it into wisdom. As celebrities increasingly lecture the public on morality and righteousness, it’s worth asking whether visibility has been mistaken