A recent legal development in Australia signals a dangerous new front in the climate wars: the push for climate reparations. What began as symbolic virtue-signalling and international talking points is morphing into concrete legal and financial liabilities that could impose massive costs on Australian taxpayers, industries, and future generations. ...
Election seasons are filled with hyperbolic claims: "This is the most extreme candidate ever!" Both sides say it. But let's skip the rhetoric and run the experiment properly. Strip away the marketing, ignore the pragmatic compromises, and follow pure progressive ideology to its terminal velocity. What does the Ultimate Super-Duper Left Candidate ac...
The language of "betrayal" is common in critiques of globalist elites, who embody the transnational ruling class. It suggests a tragic fall from grace, as if these leaders once stood with their nations and peoples before selling them out. A clearer-eyed view recognizes something more fundamental: many of these elites were never truly on the side of...
Angus Taylor's recent speech attacking Pauline Hanson and One Nation frames the latter as the source of division and an "eternity of pain" for Australian politics. It is a familiar establishment line: paint principled dissenters on immigration, energy, and sovereignty as the real extremists while the major parties present themselves as sensible adu...
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's warm embrace of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, complete with major advances on trade, defence cooperation, and strategic alignment, marks another step in Australia's accelerating pivot toward India. Gifts on trade deals and security pacts sound pragmatic on the surface, diversifying away from China, tapping a...
A British lawmaker recently laid it out plainly on Joe Rogan's podcast: the systematic grooming, rape, and trafficking of thousands of vulnerable young girls in the UK was deliberately downplayed, ignored, and covered up for years, largely because confronting the perpetrators would upset the migrant vote and shatter the illusions of multiculturalis...
One of the oldest criticisms directed against US Founding Father, Thomas Jefferson, is that he was not an especially original political philosopher. His ideas, critics point out, were borrowed from John Locke, Montesquieu, the Scottish Enlightenment, classical republicanism, English common law, and a host of earlier thinkers. The implication is tha...
Public health authorities and manufacturers repeatedly assured the world that COVID-19 mRNA "vaccines" were safe and transient: the mRNA would degrade within days or weeks, spike protein production would be short-lived, and everything would clear the body rapidly. A new peer-reviewed case study just published in Medical Research Archives delivers a...
Forget the measured think-tank talk. The independent media channels and prepper channels sounding the alarm aren't exaggerating: they're ringing the bell while the so-called experts sleep. A recent Canadian Prepper "World War III" daily update lays it out with dramatic urgency: President Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio are enabling U...
The fragile ceasefires and memoranda of understanding between the United States and Iran have collapsed. Fighting has resumed with intensity, marked by extensive U.S. strikes on Iranian military targets near the Strait of Hormuz and Iranian retaliation with missiles and drones targeting U.S. bases and Gulf states. Michael Snyder and others describe...
President Trump recently issued one of his starkest assessments yet: the United States today faces greater danger than during World War I, World War II, the September 11 attacks, or Pearl Harbor. The threat, in his view, is internal: the creeping advance of communist and radical Leftist ideologies that, once entrenched, prove nearly impossible to r...
Australia's post-war transformation stands as one of the starkest demographic experiments in the developed world. The old White Australia policy, explicitly designed to maintain a British-descended cultural and ethnic core, was dismantled in stages through the 1960s and 1970s. In its place rose multiculturalism, high-volume immigration, and a...
For years, Australian policymakers from both sides have sold skilled migration as an unalloyed good: a technocratic solution to labour shortages, a booster for productivity, and a net fiscal positive that fills critical gaps without harming locals. The current Labor government has leaned especially hard into this narrative, ramping up the migration...
Every so often a story emerges that seems so extraordinary it sounds like internet folklore. This is one of them. According to multiple news reports, a cattle herder in Gujarat, India, was attacked by a lioness, knocked to the ground, and pinned beneath her for around half an hour. The incredible part is not simply that he survived. It is that, at ...
For the American imagination, the most aggressive assaults on free speech often feel imported: hate speech prosecutions in Europe, online safety bureaucracies in Australia and Canada, or campus cancellations where discomfort equates to violence. Texas, with its deep-seated culture of independence and constitutional reverence, was supposed to stand ...
Few things rank higher in the grand hierarchy of progressive sacred values, than "Black Lives Matter" (in all contexts, especially when contrasted with perceived Western or white culpability) and open borders / migrant compassion. Both are treated as near-non-negotiable moral axioms. The first frames Black people as perpetual victims of systemic fo...
Nick Cater's recent essay strikes at the heart of the matter. Pauline Hanson is right to demand an end to the bloated multicultural industry, but framing the alternative as "monoculturalism" risks handing the Left an easy weapon. Australia does not need enforced sameness, nor does it need the divisive, state-funded identity politics that has grown ...
Australia, a nation built on exploration, enterprise, and endurance, now finds a peculiar theatre unfolding with increasing frequency. Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and progressive institutions double down on "Welcome to Country" ceremonies, solemn acknowledgments of Indigenous custodianship that frame contemporary Australia as a proje...
Australia's economy has long been presented as a success story of resilience and growth. But as Deloitte Access Economics highlighted in its June 2026 Business Outlook report, much of that "growth" is illusory, driven by rapid population increases through immigration rather than genuine productivity gains, investment, or efficiency improvements. De...
Britain is a nation already strained by mass migration, housing shortages, and fraying social trust. But now fresh revelations strike deeper at the heart of fairness. The UK government stands accused of prioritising new housing for Muslim asylum seekers while native British families languish on waiting lists or in inadequate accommodation. This isn...
