This short piece explains why a small but determined news apostolate is sounding the alarm in its summer campaign, outlines the funding gap it faces for 2026, and lays out why readers’ support matters right now to keep reporting on matters of faith, family, and freedom.
We are deep into a summer drive and the clock is ticking. The organization is nearly half a year away from when new budgets must carry them into 2026, yet they remain 49% short of the funds required to keep operating. That gap is not an abstract number; it represents staff, servers, reporting trips, and the daily work that keeps a niche but vital voice on the public stage.
Readers are asked to pause and remember what this outlet has meant to them and to their families. For many, it is a reliable source that focuses on issues other outlets ignore or treat as secondary. That kind of continuity matters when institutions shift and stories get lost in the churn of mainstream coverage.
The appeal is simple and direct: when a newsroom that centers faith, family, and freedom faces a budget shortfall, its capacity to report, investigate, and defend those angles shrinks immediately. Lost funding means fewer articles, less original reporting, and diminished ability to challenge narratives that matter to a committed audience. It also jeopardizes the long-term plan to remain online and accessible through 2026 and beyond.
Supporting an independent outlet is not just about keeping a website live; it’s about sustaining a mission. This organization describes itself as an apostolate committed to defending certain principles, and donations translate directly into operational stability. Those contributions pay for editors, writers, legal checks, web infrastructure, and the small but essential things that let a newsroom show up every day.
There is no mystery in how readers can help: consider giving what you can, and encourage others who value this perspective to do the same. Even modest monthly support compounds and creates predictability in a budget that otherwise runs on uncertainty. Reliable income lets the team plan longer investigative pieces instead of scrambling article to article.
Critically, the fundraising ask is framed not as a one-off transaction but as an invitation to partner in keeping a particular voice alive in the media landscape. That voice focuses on topics some outlets minimize and others ignore entirely. If you value a consistent, principled take on cultural, religious, and family issues, sustaining that voice is the practical step you can take.
The reality of nonprofit journalism today is blunt: passion and conviction do not pay the hosting bill or cover payroll. When readers step forward, they preserve the capacity for independent reporting and for a network of contributors who rely on this platform to amplify their work. Without sufficient funding, the site risks scaling back quickly, which would shrink the range of voices and coverage available to its audience.
Every donor matters because budgets are built from many small decisions as much as from big gifts. If this newsroom has mattered to you, now is the time to act rather than wait and hope. The team expresses deep gratitude to supporters past and present and asks simply that readers consider whether they can help keep the operation running into the next year and beyond.
