General
Breaking Down the 'Two-State Solution'
In the annals of Middle Eastern diplomacy, very few events hold the significance of the 1993 summit in Oslo, Norway. Here a historic occasion unfolded as Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestine Liberation Organization Negotiator Mahmoud Abbas signed their names onto the Oslo Accords. This historical agreement supported the two-state solution, the goal of a peaceful coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians.
By Lawrence Leaseabout a month ago in History
The Stillness in the Clouds: Echoes of Flight 247
The storm was an ancient one, a howling beast of wind and ice that had scoured the peaks of the Andean Cordillera for centuries. It was in the temporary lull of such a storm, in a high valley that saw no human eyes, that a helicopter from a geological survey team found it. Not a wreck, not in the conventional sense. It was a tomb, sealed in glass.
By Izhar Ullahabout a month ago in History
Sudan: The Empire That Became a Battlefield
Sudan is one of the largest countries in Africa, blessed with gold, oil, gas and countless minerals. It should have been one of the richest Muslim nations in the world. Instead, almost seventy years of its independence have been marked by war, famine and millions of lost lives. The tragedy is so deep that it raises a painful question: why does the world barely pay attention to Sudan, even though its suffering matches the great humanitarian disasters of our time?
By Salman Writes2 months ago in History
The Five Lost Gold Legends That Still Haunt America...
There’s something peculiar about gold. People will cross deserts for it. Kill for it. Abandon families for it. Lose their minds for it. And sometimes, die clutching maps so weather-worn, the ink looks like dried blood.
By The Iron Lighthouse2 months ago in History
The Day I Became the Stranger Who Helped Someone Else
The Day I Became the Stranger Who Helped Someone Else Life has a quiet way of returning the kindness we once received—sometimes when we aren’t expecting it, and sometimes when we desperately need a reminder of who we are. Months after the stranger paid my café bill and helped me restart my life, something happened that made me realize how kindness moves through the world like a circle.
By Wings of Time 2 months ago in History
A Tale of Two Futures: What Hong Kong’s Fate Teaches Taiwan About Survival
In a world overflowing with geopolitical gray zones, no place embodies that ambiguity more profoundly than Taiwan — an island that has been tugged, traded, and ruled by competing empires for centuries. Today, it stands as a vibrant self-governing democracy caught between its own lived identity and the narrative Beijing desperately wants the world to adopt. Put less poetically: Xi Jinping really wants to control Taiwan. And most Taiwanese want absolutely nothing to do with that plan.
By Lawrence Lease2 months ago in History
The Night the Liberty Bell Broke Itself - And Other Patriotic Disasters That Accidentally Changed America
Night descends on old Philadelphia like a velvet curtain, soft and hushed. The kind of night that invites legends to whisper through cobblestone streets. Fog coils around the base of Independence Hall, clutching it like an old friend. And there, suspended in that stillness, rests the Liberty Bell. A national symbol so iconic we forget one important detail:
By The Iron Lighthouse2 months ago in History
The Last Lynx of Sindh
the silent deserts of Sindh, where the evening sun melts into golden dunes and the wind carries stories older than time, there lived a mysterious wild cat — the red lynx of Sindh. Locals whispered its name with respect, fear, and fascination. Some called it “Sindhi Lainks,” others knew it as the “Red Ghost of the Desert.” Sightings were rare… so rare that people began to believe it no longer existed.
By Ainullah sazo2 months ago in History
The Alien Guardians Unearthed Secrets of a Forgotten Civilization
Dust curled through the air in thin, dancing spirals as Dr. Samir Kaidan pressed deeper into the narrow chamber. The excavation site, located in a remote desert valley ignored by mainstream archaeology, had been silent for centuries—its secrets locked beneath layers of sand, stone, and time. But today, the earth seemed eager to speak.
By Izhar Ullah2 months ago in History









