>
Can Two Hours Of School Really Be Enough? | MacKenzie Price #491 | The Way I Heard It
Tucker Carlson: "This World Is Not Run By Humans!" Trump Has Supernatural Powers
How They're Building an Off-Grid Community in the Private Realm (Trust + PMA + Ministry)
'Groundbreaking' Potential Lupus Cure Sends Patients into Remission, Allowing Dreams...
Speculations on What Could Show Physics Beyond the Standard Model
SpaceX Orbital Travel and Orbital Hotels Need Starfall – Getting Back Safe and Cheap is Exciting
Lizard-inspired wiggly wheels let Mars rover swim through sand
Fact Sheet: President Donald J. Trump Ushers in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation
Researchers at Johns Hopkins University just let an AI-guided robot remove a dead pig's gallblad
World's first consumer wing-in-ground effect aircraft takes flight
America's Military Readiness Depends On Deployable Nuclear Power
License Plate Cameras Are About To Start Tracking A Lot More Than Just Your Car
Heads up: Apparently the government is hiding cameras inside fake utility boxes

The largest renewable energy infrastructure project in US history is fully operational.
The SunZia project is expected to generate and deliver more power than the Hoover Dam and be a reliable energy to the western United States for the next 30 years.
The approximately 3,650-megawatt (MW) wind project and 550-mile high-voltage direct current (HVDC) transmission line that comprise SunZia generate power in New Mexico to Arizona and deliver it to customers across the western grid.
At full capacity, the project can deliver enough energy to power approximately one million American homes annually.
The wind turbines are located between Torrance and Lincoln counties in New Mexico, while the transmission line runs to a station in Pinal County just south of Phoenix.
At the center of that solution is SunZia's HVDC transmission system, which moves large amounts of electricity efficiently across long distances. With major converter stations at each end of the line converting power for delivery and then back for use on the grid, SunZia is deploying one of the first major HVDC systems built in the United States in a generation.