In early 2026, something remarkable happened in Australian politics. Pauline Hanson's One Nation party, long dismissed as a fringe outfit, surged dramatically in the polls — hitting the mid-to-high 20s nationally in multiple surveys, occasionally level-pegging or even challenging Labor, and leading the Coalition in several states, including s...
Most people scanning the news in April 2026 are focused on the shaky ceasefire in the Iran war, fluctuating oil prices, or domestic politics. Few have noticed a fresh and dangerous threat coming from Yemen's Houthis that could quietly upend global trade and drive up costs for everything from fuel to consumer goods. On April 19, 2026, Houthi Deputy ...
British MP Liam Byrne's new book Why Populists Are Winning: and How to Beat Them marks a shift in how parts of the British political establishment think about the rise of populist movements. After years of trying to suppress the "demand side" of populism through policing, prosecutions, public shaming, and political exclusion, Byrne argues tha...
Emil Kirkegaard's recent Substack piece, "Leftism, mental health, and visual presentation confirmed," presents fresh evidence from a study he co-authored showing a consistent negative relationship between Left-wing political ideology and multiple measures of mental health. In a representative sample of nearly 1,000 American adults, researchers foun...
In a bold move straight out of the progressive policy playbook, New York City officials have once again demonstrated their unwavering commitment to sanctuary values — even when it means giving a guy who allegedly lit a random building on fire, sipped a beer while watching a three-year-old and three adults die in agony, a fighting chance to stay in ...
The Substack essay "Well Being: Eat your..." by Robert Malone (published April 20, 2026) makes a strong case for reintroducing offal (organ meats, especially liver) into the modern diet. Malone argues that organ meats are dramatically more nutrient-dense than conventional muscle meats and represent a "shame" that they've fallen out of favor in weal...
There is a recurring illusion in Western diplomacy: the belief that states behave like corporations, that negotiations are transactions, and that somewhere in every adversarial system there exists a rational counterparty waiting to be persuaded. It is the quiet assumption behind deal-making — that if only one finds the right interlocutor, the right...
The Substack post from Vigilant Fox ("China Makes Major Move as Iran Conflict Nears Tipping Point," appearing in their "Daily Pulse" seriesApril 21, 2026) focuses on escalating geopolitical tensions in the ongoing 2026 Iran war. The essay frames China as making a calculated, opportunistic "major move" amid the conflict, positioning itself as a dipl...
The Substack essay titled "Defining Energy Lockdowns and Forcing Behavioural Change" by Nicholas Creed (published April 21, 2026), argues that Thailand is serving as a practical testing ground for restrictive "energy lockdown"-style policies. These measures, in the author's view, aim to condition public behaviour away from fossil fuels (espec...
If modern war still has a low-tech king, it is not the missile, the drone, or even the nuclear deterrent. It is the naval mine — cheap, anonymous, and psychologically devastating. Nowhere is this more evident than in the current crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, where a handful — or perhaps hundreds — of unseen devices have brought a critical artery ...
Every few months, a study emerges that appears to transform some mundane aspect of daily life into a lurking medical hazard. This week, it is sleep posture. According to circulating reports, the way one arranges a pillow may influence the risk of glaucoma. The implication, delivered with the usual breathless certainty, is that something as ordinary...
This report has not been confirmed by mainstream sources. It is alleged, according to retired CIA analyst Larry Johnson, that during an emergency meeting Trump tried to "use the nuclear codes" on Iran and he was stopped by General Dan Caine. The nuclear football is intended for defensive use, and a military commander might refuse an order the...
The argument presented in the TrialSite piece (link below) — you don't need to be a psychologist to recognise certain truths about human behaviour — is, at one level, obvious. Anyone who has lived, worked, raised children, or simply paid attention knows that much of human behaviour is not mysterious. People lie. They rationalise. They avoid pain an...
The Strategic Culture Foundation article "Epstein, Western Decline and the Moral Collapse of the Elites" (February 3, 2026, by Lucas Leiroz) is a stark, anti-Western geopolitical commentary that elevates the Jeffrey Epstein saga from a lurid sex scandal to a symptom, and accelerant, of profound civilisational decay in the West. Published amid the J...
The Natural News article (March 4, 2026) delivers an enthusiastic, anti-establishment take on pecans as a powerful natural food for cardiometabolic health, framing them as a "God-given" alternative to processed junk and Big Pharma solutions. It spotlights a "new study" (actually a recent review) showing daily pecan consumption boosts insulin sensit...
Look at the polling numbers. Really look at them. Labor is clinging to a primary vote sitting in the low 30s. That's not dominance. That's a government surviving on preference deals and fragmented opposition. Meanwhile, the Coalition, once the default party of government, is barely holding together nationally in the low 20s. In some surveys, the Li...
Now former Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's made a stark warning that the ongoing U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran (referred to in context as "Epic Fury" strikes starting late February 2026) could ignite a mass migration crisis rivalling, or exceeding, the 2015–2016 European refugee influx triggered by Syria's civil war. Orbán fra...
For years, critics of elite academia have pointed out the obvious: American universities, especially the Ivy League, have become echo chambers of progressive conformity marked by rampant self-censorship, ideological bias, and a chilling effect on open debate. The predictable response from the ivory tower was denial, deflection, or accusations of "a...
Brian Cabana's recent essay in American Thinker offers a sharp diagnosis of a long-observed phenomenon: classical liberalism, with its noble emphasis on individual autonomy, equality, and the dismantling of arbitrary hierarchies, does not remain liberal for long, in centralised social structures. Once it becomes the dominant ethos in centralised ma...
The claim that "weaponised history distorts truth — turning grievance or nostalgia into a political tool" is often presented as a critique of one side of politics. In practice, it is a description of a much broader problem. The misuse of history is not the property of the Left or the Right. It is a recurring temptation wherever politics seeks moral...
