Nuclear Gunslinging! By Chris Knight (Florida)

The suggestion has been made, that the United States might resort to nuclear weapons against Iran, perhaps after the cease fire ends, as they always do: https://www.theamericanconservative.com/yes-trump-might-use-nukes-in-iran/ https://www.zerohedge.com/political/tucker-carlson-urges-us-officials-defy-trump-iran-orders-say-no-absolutely-not https:/...

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China's Silent Gauss Gun: A Game-Changer in Electromagnetic Warfare? By John Steele

 In the shadow of global tensions — from energy shocks in the Gulf to nuclear rhetoric in Europe and Ukraine — a quieter revolution in weaponry is unfolding in China. State broadcaster CCTV recently showcased a next-generation handheld electromagnetic coil gun, also known as a Gauss gun. This weapon fires metal projectiles using electromagneti...

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Is Technology Making Us Retarded? The Hidden Cost of Convenience, By Mrs. Vera West

 We were promised a golden age. Technology would free us from drudgery, expand our minds, connect us to infinite knowledge, and elevate human potential. Instead, many of us stare at glowing rectangles for hours each day, struggling to remember a phone number without our device, losing the ability to focus deeply, and feeling strangely empty de...

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Europe on the Verge of Surrender to Islam? Enlightenment Values vs. Demographic Reality, By Richard Miller (London)

Will Durant observed that "a great civilisation is not conquered from without until it has destroyed itself within." As Europe faces energy shortages linked to the Gulf conflict, Russian nuclear rhetoric, and wider global instability, one internal trend continues to generate intense public debate: the rapid demographic and cultural changes driven b...

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Race Killed the Old Left: How Demographic Replacement Defanged Economic Radicalism, By Chris Knight (Florida)

 It wasn't long ago that leading Democratic politicians spoke with clarity and conviction against illegal immigration. They framed it as a threat to American workers, wages, and the rule of law. Today, the script has flipped. Open borders, mass migration, and rapid demographic change sit at the very top of the progressive agenda, often overrid...

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Wiping Civilisation Off the Map: Russia's Chilling Nuclear Threat and the New Era of Brinkmanship, By Richard Miller (London)

 As the world breathed a cautious sigh of relief over President Trump's two-week "double-sided" ceasefire with Iran — conditional on reopening the Strait of Hormuz — another shadow loomed large on April 7, 2026. On Russian state television, propagandists issued a stark ultimatum: give Ukraine a Trump-style deadline to accept Moscow's terms, or...

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The Trolley Problem in Real Time: Trump's "Civilisation Will Die" Threat and Iran's Human Shields: Philosophical Ramifications, By Professor X

With the two-week "double-sided" ceasefire now in place — conditional on Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz — the immediate danger of wider strikes has receded. Yet the hours leading up to the announcement exposed one of the oldest and most disturbing ethical dilemmas in a modern, high-stakes form: the trolley problem. In the classic thought exper...

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Iran's Biolabs and the Hidden Peril of Power Grid Warfare, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

As the fragile two-week ceasefire between the US/Israel and Iran holds — tied to reopening the Strait of Hormuz — one under-discussed risk lingers from the recent escalation. Even if full-scale strikes on Iranian power plants and infrastructure are paused or avoided, the broader strategy of targeting energy systems raises a serious biosecurity conc...

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Even if the War Ends Now, Global Energy Shortages and Rationing are Baked In, By James Reed

Just hours after President Trump announced a conditional two-week ceasefire with Iran — hinging on the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz — a sobering reality persists. The physical destruction from weeks of strikes across the Persian Gulf cannot be undone overnight. Even with diplomacy gaining traction in Islamabad and oil prices pulling back on ho...

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Technocracy: The Great Reset Endgame — Well Underway, and What Freedom Lovers Can Do, By Brian Simpson

In the shadow of ongoing global tensions — from energy disruptions to rapid AI advances — a deeper current runs beneath the headlines. The article "Technocracy: The Great Reset Endgame" argues that what the World Economic Forum (WEF) branded as the Great Reset in 2020 is not merely a post-COVID recovery plan. Instead, it represents the modern evolu...

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Stepping Back from the Abyss: Trump's Two-Week Ceasefire with Iran, By Paul Walker

In the early hours of April 8, 2026 (Australian time), the world exhaled — if only tentatively. Just hours before a self-imposed deadline that carried threats of devastating strikes on Iranian power plants, bridges, and infrastructure — rhetoric that escalated to warnings a "whole civilisation will die tonight" — President Donald Trump announced a ...

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The Fuel Crisis May Only be Just Beginning, By Paul Walker

 Australia's emerging fuel crisis has the peculiar quality of being both denied and visible at the same time. Official assurances insist supply is "secure into May," yet across parts of the country stations are already running dry, with dozens reporting no fuel at all and many more missing key types such as diesel. The contradiction is not acc...

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First Steps to Australian Fuel Self-Reliance, By James Reed

The sudden enthusiasm for Queensland's Taroom Trough is less a discovery than a confession. Australia did not stumble upon oil in 2026; it rediscovered a fact it had chosen to ignore. Beneath the rhetoric of transition, decarbonisation, and global integration lay a simple physical reality: modern economies run on liquid fuel, and those who do not p...

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From Climate Activist to Climate Realist, By Tom North

The article from The Free Press (April 2026) by Lucy Biggers, a former climate activist turned "climate realist," delivers a stark warning: rushing to net-zero emissions and 100% renewable energy before the underlying technologies (storage, grid flexibility, firm dispatchable power, and scalable alternatives) are ready risks severe real-world harm ...

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The Rise and Rise of One Nation: Queensland's Wake-Up Call to a Broken System, By Brian Simpson

In the sun-baked battleground of Queensland, something seismic is happening. According to the latest Newspoll analysis, Pauline Hanson's One Nation has surged to 30% primary vote — leapfrogging a tired Labor Party at 27% and a collapsing Coalition/LNP at just 23%. That's not a protest vote. That's a full-throated rejection of the political establis...

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The First Right Under Attack! By Darren Anderson

Rarely has freedom of speech on this island, or in the West, approached the precipice that it now teeters on. In the U.K., in 2023 alone, more than 12,000 people were arrested for messages they posted online, a figure that any tyrannical regime would envy but an abject disgrace for a democracy. A troubling share of these cases involved nothing more...

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The UK’s Decline Speeds Up with the Home County of Oxford Banning the Flag, Andrea Widburg

 The sun hasn't just set on the British Empire; the last remnant of the Empire is busy setting itself on fire, in an act of suicidal self-loathing. I won't say that Oxford, a town located in Oxfordshire County, England, is the first thing people think of when they think of England, but it's certainly one of the main things they think of. The c...

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Trump and the Art of the Apocalypse Deal, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

 There comes a moment in geopolitics when the mask slips and "art of the deal" morphs into something far uglier: the art of the apocalypse. President Trump's latest barrage of threats against Iran — delivered with Easter Sunday flair and laced with raw profanity — has crossed that line. "Tuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wra...

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Did Big Pharma Pay Bribes? A Closer Look at the Data and the Claims, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

A recent round of articles circulating online has revived a familiar and emotionally potent claim: that major pharmaceutical companies secured drug approvals and government contracts through bribery. The headline figure — $12.6 million in alleged bribes—has been repeated with confidence, often tied directly to well-known firms such as Pfizer and Jo...

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Diogenes Engaged with Alexander the Great; but What if He Met Donald Trump? By James Reed

 The Daily Sceptic article by Guy de la Bédoyère (April 5, 2026) makes a timely plea: in an age of elite vanity, political theater, media hype, and collective delusions, we desperately need a modern Diogenes the Cynic (c. 413/303 – c. 324/321 BC) — the ancient Greek philosopher famous for his shameless honesty, ascetic simplicity, and razor-sh...

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