Attention, WND newshounds! As it does every year, WorldNetDaily.com is inviting readers to submit their candidates for the most "spiked" stories of the year in our interactive forum, "Operation Spike!"
While most news organizations present year-end retrospective replays of what they consider to have been the top news stories of the previous 12 months, WND's editors have always found it more newsworthy to publish a compilation of the important stories most ignored by the establishment press.
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WND Editor and CEO Joseph Farah has sponsored "Operation Spike" every year since 1988, and since founding WorldNetDaily in May 1997 has continued the annual tradition. For the past six years, WND has invited its readers to join in and submit what they considered the most underreported stories of the past year in the site's "Operation Spike" forum.
Last year, WorldNetDaily's "readers' choice" picks for the 10 most underreported stories of 2002 were:
TRENDING: Capitol authorities on high alert Thursday over 'real inauguration' threat
- Saudi Arabia's funding of terror and hostage-taking of American citizens.
- Anti-American groups behind the anti-war movement.
- Planned Parenthood's cover-up of the ongoing molestation of underage girls by adult males.
- Sen. Patty Murray's comments about Osama bin Laden
- The spread of the homosexual agenda in the nation's public schools.
- The Islamic jihad against Christians worldwide.
- Militant Islam as a factor in the D.C. sniper case.
- The impact of the Total Information Awareness program in the Office of Information Awareness in the Homeland Security Department
- Congressional hearing proves questionable environmental science contributed to World Trade Center towers' early collapse.
- "We the People's" thwarted attempt to challenge the legality of the federal income tax.
So join in and speak your mind now. All suggestions submitted to the forum will be evaluated by WND editors, and the very best will be compiled into a Top 10-style report.
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Joseph Farah also will discuss the results on CNN International's "Q&A" program New Year's Eve.
Submit your choice for the most spiked story of 2003.
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Related stories:
Which stories got 'spiked' last year?
10 most 'spiked' stories of 2001
Most under-reported stories of 2000
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Most under-reported stories of '97