Greg Maresca

Greg Maresca is a New York City native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran who writes for TTC. He resides in the Pennsylvania Coal Region. His work can also be found in The American Spectator, NewsBreak, Daily Item, Republican Herald, Standard Speaker, The Remnant Newspaper, Gettysburg Times, Daily Review, The News-Item, Standard Journal and more.

2026: No charge required

Republicans are famous for their ability to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory as those acquainted with history know all too well.

Eligibility, international intrigue and NCAA drama: The pro-to-college pipeline

College athletics has become the sports world’s “Where Are They Now?” nobody asked for, with storylines growing increasingly unhinged over time.

2025 Rear -View Awards

If hindsight is 20/20, then 2025 was a year where irony is produced by algorithms and politicians think diplomacy is a TikTok trend.

Power, wealth, and surrogacy: Biology’s international fault lines

“Life’s integrity, dignity, and mystery are gifts from God. When society forgets this truth, its foundation weakens and the burden of collapse touches all.”

Unheralded and autonomous

NIL money has turned recruiting into a financial arms race, where loyalty fades and players follow whoever writes the biggest check.

Importing chaos: The paradox of nation building

Did anyone in the State Department truly think an Islamic theocracy could be remade into a Western democracy? The idea was always laughable.
MAGA Business Central

It’s snow joke

Nothing says “global warming” quite like shoveling heavy, wet snow in the wee hours of a subfreezing morning weeks before the winter solstice begins.

The highway’s hidden hazards

America’s highways, already a patchwork of potholes and billboards, face a deeper crisis in illegal drivers.

Penny for your thoughts

The curtain fell quietly on a 232-year tradition as the U.S. Mint struck the last penny in Philadelphia. This ended one of the longest runs in American history.

The $40 million mulligan

Virginia Tech drew attention by hiring James Franklin as its new coach, a surprising move given he was fired just over a month ago.

The Dukes’ dark horse

In the grand bazaar of college football the true victors are the coaches who have engineered turnarounds at schools not traditionally known for gridiron glory.

The anti-wealth manifesto

Twenty-four years after 9/11, New York City elected a 34-year-old whose biography reads like a Marxist coming-of-age novel with a Brooklyn rewrite.