Australia is a constitutional monarchy. The King is formally the Head of State, yet in practice he does not rule. Virtually all governmental power flows through the Constitution, statutes, conventions, and the advice of elected ministers who are accountable to Parliament and the Australian people. This arrangement is often misunderstood, even by Au...
"Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and die." These immortal lines from Alfred, Lord Tennyson's The Charge of the Light Brigade have long been read as a tribute to military courage. They commemorate the disastrous charge of British cavalry during the Crimean War, when soldiers rode into almost certain death because...
The Economist (link below), recently highlighted a growing phenomenon in China: a vocal and increasingly influential manosphere pushing back against Western-style feminism. While the Chinese Communist Party promotes certain forms of gender equality for economic and demographic reasons, large numbers of Chinese men on social media are openly rejecti...
Interculturalism, the deliberate dismantling of the once-native culture, was a doctrine coiled in the heart of multiculturalism from the very beginning. It was never about harmonious enrichment or benign diversity. It was a slower, more sophisticated replacement strategy, dressed in the language of tolerance, but engineered for transformation. Like...
Multiculturalism told people to adapt to Australia. Interculturalism tells Australia to adapt to new ideas about diversity. Once you see the difference, the whole argument changes shape. This isn't really about whether people from different backgrounds can live peacefully in the same country. They can, of course. It's not about whether migrants can...
A recent column in The Blaze cuts through the glossy Instagram aesthetic of modern self-help to expose its darker core: the explosion of "manifesting" culture is not harmless positive thinking. It is rapidly evolving into a pseudo-spiritual new age religion, one that blends narcissism, magical thinking, and spiritual bypassing into something deeply...
The latest media or activist "freakout" over criticism of a particular ethnic or cultural group, while anti-Anglo or anti-Western commentary remains not just tolerated but often celebrated, highlights a growing problem with Australia's racial vilification regime. Under laws like Section 18C of the Racial Discrimination Act, certain criticisms are t...
Our sunburnt, beer-soaked outpost of the old crumbling Anglosphere, stands on the cusp of something magnificent. Thanks to visionary leadership in Canberra and New Delhi, combined with the unstoppable tide of history (and a few well-negotiated mass migration Great Replacement deals), we are poised to experience the profound joys of becoming, in all...
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was rightly criticised after his appearance on a comedy podcast in which he played a crude "shag, marry, date" game involving Kylie Minogue. Following public backlash, he issued an unequivocal apology, with critics arguing that his remarks were unbecoming of the office of Prime Minister and disrespectful to women. Ye...
[Bettina Arndt's latest Substack essay is a mixture of established fact, documented legal controversies, and strongly argued opinion. While some of her interpretations will be contested, many of the events she discusses are matters of public record. Her broader argument is that contemporary media and legal institutions often apply markedly differen...
A quiet but deeply concerning development slipped out of the UK Civil Service this week. According to reports, senior officials and insiders have been advancing ideas that would effectively make the country harder to govern by elected politicians. This is not some fringe proposal; it reflects a growing mindset within the permanent bureaucracy that ...
After years studying the medical industry, one pattern stands out more clearly than any other to me: ethical principles bend predictably toward whatever generates revenue. The industry's public image, altruistic healers guided by Hippocratic ideals, often clashes with its behaviour. Seemingly irreconcilable positions suddenly make sense once you vi...
In the 4th century BC, Aristotle wrote with clinical precision in his Politics: "Women should marry when they are about eighteen years of age, and men at seven and thirty; then they are in the prime of life, and the decline in the powers of both will coincide." For centuries this was dismissed as ancient sexism. Today, cutting-edge cellular researc...
The modern liberal-democratic state claims a monopoly on legitimate violence and a duty to protect its citizens, territory, and way of life. Yet across the West, from Europe to North America to Australia, it presides over policies that accelerate the demographic and cultural replacement of its historic populations. Is this competence, or something ...
Angus Taylor, the Liberal Opposition Leader, has delivered a pointed attack on Pauline Hanson's One Nation, framing its policies as a reckless plan to "fix" Australia by "blowing it up." In commentary and speeches, Taylor warns of trillion-dollar budget black holes, surging inflation, higher interest rates, and an "eternity of pain" for households ...
Western Australia's Premier Roger Cook has joined a growing chorus of politicians warning about an "increasingly hostile environment" for public figures, largely blaming social media for amplifying abuse, threats, and intimidation. In the wake of reported death threats and online campaigns, Cook is not wrong to highlight the problem. Credible...
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation, that bastion of multicultural relativism and taxpayer-funded progressive orthodoxy, has outdone itself with a recent piece claiming climate change is now a "major driver" of child marriages across Asia and the Pacific. According to the July 10, 2026, ABC report, the growing intensity of natural disasters, am...
In the classic James Bond films, the villains were never subtle. They were megalomaniacal billionaires and shadowy technocrats who operated from luxurious lairs, spoke in calm, condescending tones, and pursued grandiose plans for global domination. They didn't want mere wealth, they wanted control. They saw ordinary people as pawns, nations a...
Sweden has become the clearest case study of what Karl-Olov Arnstberg diagnoses in his book The Swedish Syndrome: How Elites Commit National Self-Destruction as an "identity-based social psychosis" or "cultural self-harm." A once highly homogeneous nation has been transformed through elite-driven multiculturalism into a society with dramatically hi...
Caitlin Johnstone argues that the cure for despair lies in recovering a sense of awe and wonder. There is much truth in that. A person absorbed by the beauty of a sunset, the immensity of the stars or the intricacy of a flower often finds their anxieties temporarily recede. Wonder reminds us that reality is larger than our immediate troubles. Yet a...
