Freedom Project

Featured on The New American

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FreedomProject Education, the educational arm of the American Opinion Foundation, responded to requests by parents and teachers to create a curriculum that provides “a classical education in the tradition of America’s Founders.” On September 6, the FreedomProject will be launching its online curriculum through FreedomProject Education for students in grades 9 through 12. 

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FreedomProject Education Check it out!

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Classroom Sneak Peek - High School - Bible As Culture


Duke_Pesta  Take a Sneak Peek at one of FreedomProject Education's High School classes in action.

  Bible As Culture

  Teacher: Dr. Pesta


 

Learn more about FPE's classes by clicking How To Get Started

 

In The Post Office

Leon_A._Weinstein_Written by: Leon Weinstein

Today in the post office I witnessed an interesting conversation. There was a usual for afternoons long line and not enough postal workers to serve it. In the mornings there were not a lot of customers but plenty of help. In afternoons when customers would begin to come after work in herds, the post office employees were leaving to do their own chores. It always reminded me of the Soviet Union where all restaurants were closed for at least an hour during lunch time because as the head of the Union of Service Employees put it "all employees in the USSR have equal rights and the restaurant workers earned a right for lunch like anyone else."

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John Steele: The President's Comptroller

First_Congress.001John Steele (November 16, 1764 – August 14, 1815) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from the state of North Carolina between 1790 and 1793. Born in Salisbury, North Carolina in 1764, Steele attended Clio's Nursery and the English School, both near his hometown. Named assessor in 1784 and a town commissioner in 1787, Steele was first elected to the North Carolina House of Commons in 1787 and served again multiple times: in 1788, 1794, 1795, 1806, and from 1811-1813. He was a delegate to the state constitutional convention in Hillsborough in 1788 and to the 1789 convention in Fayetteville which ratified a new state constitution, and was a special commissioner from North Carolina to treat with the Cherokee and Chickasaw Indians from 1788 to 1790.

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