Villages: Human Scale Living Consistent with Douglas Social Credit Principles, By Brian Simpson

The recent study highlighted in Phys.org (from the "Summende Dörfer" or "Buzzing Villages" project at Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany) offers a fresh perspective on rural villages as vibrant, underappreciated ecological assets. Researchers examined 40 villages in the Würzburg region and the Rhön area, focusing on five key habitat t...

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Even if There was Global Warming (Which There is Not), it is Not “Unusual” or Human Caused: Study, Climate Change Dispatch, By James Reed

The article from Climate Change Dispatch (a great site known for promoting climate sceptic perspectives) highlights a recent 2026 analysis by Hatton: DOI: 10.53234/scc202603/05. It uses temperature reconstructions derived from the Vostok ice core in Antarctica to argue that the modern ~1.1°C global warming over the past century (roughly since the 1...

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The Camp of the Living Dead, By John Carter

A once-banned novel about migration and civilizational guilt reads today less like dystopia than prophecy—an unsettling mirror held up to a West losing the will to defend itself. "And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison and shall go out to deceive the nations which are in the four quarters of the Earth, Gog,...

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Flipping the Script on Heartburn: The Case for Low Stomach Acid as the Hidden Culprit, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

Heartburn, acid reflux, and GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease) plague millions — around 20% of adults in places like the US and increasingly worldwide. The standard medical line is straightforward: too much stomach acid splashes up, burning the oesophagus. So, doctors prescribe proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) like Prilosec (omeprazole), Nexium, o...

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The Superiority of Organic Farming Over Big Agri Farming, By Bob Farmer, Dairy Farmer

The article from NaturalNews.com (March 7, 2026) spotlights a study published in the journal Sustainability by researchers at Prairie View A&M University. This work synthesises six decades of data (1960–2021) from peer-reviewed sources to argue that organic farming surpasses conventional agriculture across key dimensions: nutritional and health...

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Goodbye to the Paperback! By James Reed

The mass-market paperback — that cheap, pocket-sized format that once flooded drugstores, supermarkets, airports, and newsstands — is indeed nearing extinction, as highlighted in the March 7, 2026, article from NaturalNews.com (republishing or echoing coverage from outlets like The New York Times and Publishers Weekly). Sales of these books have co...

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The Genocidal Implications of Race as a Social and Political Construct, By Frank Ellis

A state policy which disseminates and enforces assertions that race (and sex) is a social and political construct also promotes a policy with implications which are not immediately obvious. For, if race and race differences are social and political constructs, there is no obvious reason why race and race differences cannot be deconstructed and then...

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When the Kurds Go Marching In (to Iran), By Benjamin Bartee

The ultimate end of the current war in Iran remains opaque. One of the explicated goals, however, is regime change, per President Trump announcing the campaign on February 28: "The hour of your freedom is at hand. When we are finished, take over your government. It will be yours to take. This will be, probably, your only chance for generations. Ame...

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Nothing to See Here: Please Go Back to Sleep! By Mrs. Vera West (Satire of Sorts)

There are moments in public life when events line up so neatly that citizens might briefly feel the urge to ask questions. At such moments it is important for responsible institutions to step forward and reassure the public that everything is perfectly normal and that curiosity is unnecessary. Go back to sleep! The latest revelations surrounding th...

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Australia’s Fuel Crisis Didn’t Happen Overnight, Pauline Hanson's One Nation Party's Post

The Maritime Union of Australia released a statement this week warning that Australia's fuel security crisis has been exposed by the escalating conflict in the Middle East and the disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Their warning should be taken seriously, because the reality is that Australia has been drifting into this crisis for...

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The Iran War is Really About China, By James Reed

At first glance the war with Iran looks like another familiar Middle Eastern conflict. There are missiles, proxy militias, oil tankers getting hit, and the usual rhetoric about nuclear weapons and regional security. But when the geopolitical dust is brushed aside, the deeper strategic logic becomes visible. The real audience for the war is not Tehr...

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The Testosterone Crash: Why Modernity is Making Men Weaker — and What Young Men Can Do About It, By Mrs. Vera West and John Steele

Somewhere between the invention of the smartphone and the rise of soy-milk cappuccinos, something strange began happening to young men: their bodies began running on half a tank. Doctors are increasingly warning about a dramatic decline in testosterone among younger males. Studies comparing men today with men of the 1970s show a consistent trend: t...

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Biden, Trump, and Trauma Bonding, By John Leake

The Biden administration abused us, then Trump offered us hope for a better future, thereby reconstituting our bond with the federal government. Now the cycle of abuse is repeating. A Google search for "Trauma Bond" yielded the following definition. A trauma bond is a powerful, unhealthy emotional attachment that develops between a victim and their...

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The Yowie: Australia’s Bigfoot and the Cultural Frontier, By Tom North

       Here in Adelaide, where I dwell, it is a public holiday for the Adelaide Cup. As far as my 5-minute internet search went, Australia seems to be the only country that takes a day off for the horses. That said, for some readers in a holiday mood, we thought we would start the blog with a departure from the usual serious stu...

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The Malignant Narcissism Infecting Western Elites: From Washington DC to Canberra, By James Reed

In a recent piece for The Focal Points, John Leake diagnoses U.S. government officials — politicians, advisors, and would-be warmongers — with malignant narcissism, a toxic brew of grandiosity, lack of empathy, exploitation, rage when challenged, and pathological projection of one's flaws onto others. Drawing on Carl Jung's framework, Leake argues ...

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Placebo Politics, and Big Pharma’s Quest for Approving Drugs Without Proof, By Brian Simpson

Imagine a world where the FDA and other regulatory bodies in other jurisdictions like Australia could approve drugs without requiring robust evidence that they actually work. Sounds absurd, right? But if you squint at the incentives, it's not entirely incomprehensible. On the surface, the FDA et al. exists to protect the public from snake-oil and b...

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Unpacking the Controversy: An Analysis of "Gene Expression Alterations Induced by mRNA Vaccines," By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

In the ever-evolving landscape of vaccine science, few topics ignite as much debate as the long-term effects of mRNA technologies. On March 6, 2026, epidemiologist Nicolas Hulscher, alongside cardiologist Peter A. McCullough and naturopath John A. Catanzaro, published a paper in the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons (JAPS) titled "Gene Ex...

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The Twilight of Empires: Why Elites Turn to Decadence in Declining Civilisations, By Mrs. Vera West and Peter West

In the annals of history, empires rise like meteors, burning bright with conquest, innovation, and cultural splendour, only to fade into obscurity. But as they wane, a peculiar pattern emerges among the ruling class: an obsession with excess, particularly in matters of sex, alongside broader indulgences in luxury, corruption, and detachment from re...

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Here Comes an Anti-Muslim Hatred Tsar, By Richard Miller (London)

Recent UK political developments involve Labour's plans under Prime Minister Keir Starmer to address social cohesion and extremism. Based on leaked government documents,Labour isset to announce the appointment of an "anti-Muslim hostility tsar" (an independent advisor role) next week, alongside a new official definition of "anti-Muslim hatred" (oft...

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Sam Altman, AI, and the Energy Myth: A Sceptic’s Take, By Brian Simpson

Sam Altman recently waded into the perpetual storm around AI's energy use. Speaking to Goenka, he dismissed viral claims about ChatGPT consuming "17 gallons of water per query" as "totally insane" and insisted the real concern is total energy consumption, not some per-query metric. He then offered an analogy that has sparked more controversy than c...

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