Author: Darnell Thompkins

Darnell Thompkins is a conservative opinion writer from Atlanta, GA, known for his insightful commentary on politics, culture, and community issues. With a passion for championing traditional values and personal responsibility, Darnell brings a thoughtful Southern perspective to the national conversation. His writing aims to inspire meaningful dialogue and advocate for policies that strengthen families and empower individuals.

HUD submitted a Feb. 19 proposal to stop illegal immigrants from accessing taxpayer-funded public housing by requiring proof of U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status for everyone living in HUD-funded units, including those in “mixed status households.” The Department of Housing and Urban Development unveiled a proposal on Feb. 19 that would require every resident in HUD-funded housing to verify U.S. citizenship or eligible immigration status. The move aims to prevent individuals who are in the country unlawfully from collecting benefits paid by taxpayers. It explicitly covers people in “mixed status households” where some members may be citizens and others…

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Team USA’s Olympic triumph in Milan became a moment of unity and a test of media narratives after players handed their new gold medals to service members before visiting the White House. Before they entered the White House on Tuesday, the U.S. men’s Olympic hockey team paused and let service members hold their gold medals. The hardware was warm from Milan and the team was still buzzing from a late-night celebration, yet the players chose to hand the medals to people who serve. That gesture was genuine and unscripted, not a staged photo op. NBC News covered it under the…

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The U.S. men’s hockey team beat Canada to take gold at the 2026 Winter Olympics, a moment of national pride that was met with uneven reactions in Congress during President Trump’s recent State of the Union. The gold medal win over Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics was a clear high point for Team USA and a deserved celebration of athletic excellence. Fans across the country cheered the players who skated, blocked, and scored to claim the top spot. That victory stood out as a unifying moment for many Americans tuned into winter sports. Yet the mood in Washington was…

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Newsom’s team reads a simple formula into Trump’s victory: insults plus rudeness equals electoral success, and that belief is shaping how they talk about politics and opponents. California’s governor and his communications staff appear convinced that the blunt, attacking posture associated with Donald Trump is a replicable playbook. They see a direct chain: Trump insults people and he’s rude, so he won the presidency, so being rude and insulting wins the presidency. That neat equation drives messaging choices and fuels internal debates about tone and tactics. From a Republican perspective, it’s true that Trump’s style changed the political weather, but…

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A 21-year-old man breached Mar-a-Lago’s secure perimeter in the pre-dawn hours with a shotgun and a fuel can, was confronted by Secret Service agents and a Palm Beach County deputy, and was shot dead after pointing the weapon at officers; investigators are probing his motives while family, co-workers and officials weigh in on a disturbing, unresolved incident. Shortly after 1:30 a.m. on February 22, Austin Tucker Martin drove up to the north gate of Mar-a-Lago carrying a shotgun and a fuel can. Two Secret Service agents and a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s deputy met him at the perimeter, and the…

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Homeland Security has now withdrawn the vast majority of immigration officers it had surged to Minnesota, leaving fewer than 1,000 ICE personnel still there. The federal pullback in Minnesota has drawn sharp attention from conservatives who argue the move weakens enforcement where it was urgently needed. Republicans say the original surge responded to specific problems, and removing those resources signals a shift in priorities at the Department of Homeland Security. The numerical reality is clear: under a thousand ICE officers remain on the ground. When the administration committed extra personnel, it was framed as targeted action to manage a spike…

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Federal records and emails show Jeffrey Epstein rented at least six storage units across the country to stash computers, photos, hard drives, and files, and some of those lockers may never have been found by authorities. Jeffrey Epstein kept a scattering of storage units for more than a decade, most in Florida and others near his New York mansion and New Mexico ranch. He paid thousands over the years, and investigators now face a messy trail of items that may never have been fully cataloged or seized. Documents built from credit card records and Department of Justice releases lay out…

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The Supreme Court undercut President Trump’s first tariff strategy but left language that preserves significant presidential authority, and Trump moved quickly to another legal route to protect American industry. The Supreme Court may have ruled against President Donald Trump’s first choice for validating his tariffs, but he wasted no time in pivoting to his plan B. The president focused on the Court’s language that suggested he retains the authority to impose higher duties than those applied in the previous year under the statute he invoked. That nuance mattered to the administration and to firms watching protectionist policy and global supply…

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A recent Roanoke College poll shows most Virginians reject the Democrats’ redistricting push, but translating that opposition into Republican votes will take organization, clear messaging, and capitalizing on public anger over unfair maps. A majority of Virginia residents do not support the Democrats’ attempt to gerrymander the commonwealth’s congressional districts, according to a new poll, but it remains unclear whether the Republican Party is organized enough to get those people out to vote. According to a Roanoke College survey taken from Feb. 9 to Feb. 16, 52 percent […] The poll number is uncomfortable for Democrats who are counting on…

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President Trump announced he will act unilaterally on tariffs and warned of tougher measures for countries he says manipulate trade, drawing a clear line on trade policy and executive authority. President Trump said Monday he had no plans to consult Congress on new tariffs, and threatened even higher levies on countries that “play games” with existing trade deals. That statement signals a clear intention to use presidential trade authority as a primary tool rather than seeking legislative buy-in for each step. Supporters see this as decisive leadership that prioritizes American jobs and markets over slow congressional debate. Critics will argue…

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