Cheryl Chumley is online opinion editor, commentary writer and host of the “Bold and Blunt” podcast for The Washington Times, and a frequent media guest and public speaker. She is the author of several books, the latest titled, “Lockdown: The Socialist Plan To Take Away Your Freedom,” and “Socialists Don’t Sleep: Christians Must Rise or America Will Fall.” Email her at cchumley@washingtontimes.com.
One of the four pageboys tasked to carry the queen's train into Parliament so that she could deliver her annual State Opening speech interrupted proceedings a bit when — with a reportedly loud thump — he fell to the floor in an apparent faint.
A Michigan mother is outraged at a new state law posted at her medical provider's office that forced her to stand aside and let the nurse speak privately with her minor-aged child about STDs and birth control.
Perhaps President Obama's touted speaking skills are waning? Secretary of State John Kerry was caught taking a nap during the president's recent presser in Warsaw — and National Security Adviser Susan Rice wasn't exactly paying full attention, either.
Move over Arnold Schwarzenegger: President Obama traded his golf clubs for some light-weight dumbbells and took to the gym at his Warsaw, Poland, based five-star Marriott Hotel, as captured by photos taken on the sly from another man working out at the same facility.
Mirth Provisions, a Washington-based company, is putting a new product on the local market aimed at capturing the marijuana smoking crowd: A new coffee beverage that's infused with cannabis.
Former Florida Rep. Allen West said during a chat with "The Capitol Hill Show with Tim Constantine" that the House should draw up articles of impeachment against President Obama over his handling of the Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl affair.
President Obama admitted during a press conference in Warsaw on Tuesday that the five Taliban members he ordered to be released from Guantanamo Bay could very well turn around and harm Americans — but apparently, that it was a chance he was willing to take.
New Jersey law enforcement officers working an eight-week sting operation wrapped up with the seizure of almost 12,000 bags of packaged heroin and the arrest of 325.
Pop-sensation Justin Bieber is facing new fire for a second video that's emerged of him making racial remarks against blacks — this time, joking about joining the Ku Klux Klan.
Drivers that take the Interstate 495 bridge through Wilmington, Del. — and there are about 90,000 of them each day — will have to find a new route for who knows how long, after engineers discovered four tilting pillars and shut down access.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani adopted some tough talk during a recent address to his country, promising fellow citizens that he will stand strong in the face of Western sanctions and continue to pursue what he characterized as "nuclear rights."
Adm. Michael Rogers, chief of the National Security Agency, defended his agents' use of facial recognition technology and said that it wasn't often that U.S. citizens were swept up in the data collection.
President Ronald Reagan responded personally nearly 30 years ago to an 11-year-old girl's request for help with the homeless by sending a handwritten note and a check for $50 — both of which are now for sale for the price of $20,000.
The Virginia Flaggers, a group that seeks to honor the Confederate legacy of the South, has hoisted a massive, 20-by-30-foot battle flag along a portion of Interstate 95 near Fredericksburg, about 50 miles south of the nation's capital.
Marc Lamont Hill, a nationally recognized black political commentator, admitted during a panel discussion on CNN about pop star Justin Bieber's use of a racial slur that he's said the same himself — on more than one occasion.
Facebook has added a new menu of emoticons to its lineup aimed at giving the LGBT crowd a nod: A "Pride" rainbow-colored swash of options to show that "love is universal," the social-media site touted.
Family members ought to be given the lawful authority to confiscate guns from those they deem "unstable" and "violent, Sen. Barbara Boxer said, while pushing her new "Pause for Safety Act" bill that comes in response to the Isla Vista shootings and stabbings.