"My name is Max. My world is fire… and blood." For context, we note that as of today, 30 March, states like the Northern Territory are already in a grave crisis. Roads to Darwin are littered with trucks, that were taking food to these northern cities, but who ran out of fuel. The food now rots and drivers wonder how to save their trucks. YouTube ha...
What happens when Australia runs out of fuel? You should be concerned... The Albanese government wants Australians to believe that we have fuel security, but we really do not. There's no government owned reserve, there's no safety net and there's no plan that's really worth its salt. There's no secret stash of fuel waitin...
"The people we care about most, the undocumented Americans that are in this country." — Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT), in a 2024 MSNBC interview with Chris Hayes (widely resurfaced in 2026) There is so much wrong with that single sentence that it almost defies normal political critique. It doesn't merely misjudge priorities or stretch compassion too far...
It's hard not to feel a surge of frustration when you think of the $1.8 million Australian taxpayers spent in a recent year on offices, travel, and expenses for former Prime Ministers — many of whom were shown the door by voters precisely because of the messes they helped create. This isn't isolated to one country. It's a pattern across the West: l...
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz did the unthinkable in March 2026. In the middle of a debate on violence against women — both physical and digital — he stated the obvious: "We have an explosion of violence in our society… Then we also need to talk about where this violence comes from. And then we must also address the fact that a considerable prop...
From the Vigilant Fox. Com, this astonishing data, until now suppressed by the US CDC: The CDC never wanted you to see this COVID "vaccine" data. But their own vaccine monitoring safety system reveals that "safe and effective" was a lie. When people experienced more than a "sore arm," they could write what happened in a ...
In the heart of Europe, unelected bureaucrats in Brussels have spent more than a decade waging a quiet but relentless campaign against one of humanity's most fundamental rights: the freedom to speak, question, and dissent. What began as closed-door meetings with Big Tech has evolved into the Digital Services Act (DSA) — sold to the public as a tool...
Exercise has long been framed in public discourse as a matter of weight control, cardiovascular health, or general fitness, but its role in endocrine regulation — particularly in relation to testosterone — has increasingly become central to both clinical discussion and cultural interest. Testosterone, as a key hormone associated with male physiolog...
Orwell and Huxley are often cast as rival prophets of dystopia. Yet the trajectory of technological society suggests something more unsettling: both were right, and neither fully captured the scale of what is now emerging. In Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell envisioned power sustained through raw coercion, pervasive surveillance, fear, and the v...
There is a quiet structural asymmetry that governs most complex human systems, and once noticed it becomes almost impossible to unsee: it is generally far easier to enter a commitment than to exit it. The entry point tends to be voluntary, abstract, and framed in terms of manageable risk or opportunity, whereas exit confronts accumulated costs, ins...
For years, the relationship between users and social media platforms has been described in the soft language of engagement. Platforms "connect," "share," "recommend." Users "scroll," "like," "watch." A recent jury verdict in Los Angeles cuts through that euphemism with refreshing bluntness. In a landmark case, a U.S. jury found that platforms such ...
Five years after the world was told that vaccine passports were a temporary COVID-era measure to "get back to normal," the World Health Organization (WHO) has just announced a formal partnership with Temasek, a Singapore government-owned investment firm, to roll out "interoperable digital health wallets." These aren't optional apps or nice-to-have ...
The International Olympic Committee has made a long-overdue decision. Starting with the 2028 Los Angeles Games, eligibility for all women's events at the Olympics will be limited to biological females, determined by a simple, one-time SRY gene screening (a cheek swab that detects the presence of the male sex-determining gene). Transgender women (bi...
In March 2026, Britain's broadcasting regulator Ofcom performed a quiet but ominous U-turn. After initially dismissing complaints about climate-sceptic remarks on TalkTV and TalkRadio programmes from late 2025, Ofcom reopened investigations following lobbying by the Good Law Project. For the first time in nearly a decade — since 2017 — the regulato...
Patrick Christys' infiltration of the WhatsApp group "Migration from Iraq to Europe" (reported on GB News this week) is damning but sadly unsurprising. The group openly advertises weapons (AK-47s, pistols, shotguns, AR-15s), features profiles praising the Ayatollah, and coordinates illegal small-boat crossings into Britain via multiple routes. This...
In a televised press conference on 19 March 2026, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reached for a line that immediately lit up social media: "History proves that, unfortunately and unhappily, Jesus Christ has no advantage over Genghis Khan. Because if you are strong enough, ruthless enough, powerful enough, evil will overcome good. Aggressi...
According to reporting cited by the Financial Times, fifteen minutes before Trump announced these "productive conversations," hundreds of millions of dollars were already moving. Fifteen minutes. At the same time, accounts like unusual_whales flagged a $1.5 billion surge into S&P futures while oil was dumped hard. Orders four to six times large...
The FrankfurtMain District Court in Germany has recently upheld a German bank's decision to maintain the suspension of accounts belonging to Berlin-based journalist Hüseyin Doğru, who is known for his pro-Palestinian news coverage. The ruling rejected an urgent application by the journalist, who is currently facing the threat of homelessness due to...
There is something almost perversely scary about fertiliser becoming the next pressure point. Energy shocks we understand instinctively — cars stop, lights dim, industries slow. But fertiliser sits one layer deeper, upstream of the visible economy, embedded in soil chemistry and seasonal cycles. When it tightens, nothing dramatic happens at first. ...
The Australian reports, using terms that I often use: Australian farmers are warning the nation is racing towards catastrophe due to dwindling fertiliser supplies and no immediate federal government rescue plan, raising the prospect of multimillion-dollar crop losses and rising food prices and shortages. As grain growers...
