One of the foremost conservative members of the College of Cardinals has castigated mass migration, spoken of the danger of "civil wars," and called for greater recognition that "nations" and peoples have rights in an exclusive interview with europeanconservative.com. Faced with unprecedented demographic shifts, the former curial official insists t...
The big-business corporate model that Australian universities have embraced over the past two decades has been an unmitigated disaster for the nation, turning once-proud public institutions into revenue-chasing enterprises that prioritise profit over education, research integrity, and societal benefit. The Macrobusiness piece by Leith van Onselen (...
The recent uproar at Ghent University — where over 300 staff and students signed a petition (initially reported around March 12, 2026, via VRT NWS and Brussels Times coverage) demanding the removal of philosopher Nathan Cofnas from his postdoctoral research position in the Department of Philosophy and Moral Sciences — exemplifies a depressingly fam...
The article from The Vigilant Fox (link below) sounds the alarm on what it calls "COVID 2.0": governments rolling out restrictive measures — fuel rationing, driving limits with fines, and flight cuts — in response to tightening fuel supplies. It frames these as eerily similar to pandemic-era controls, with one unnamed industry executive noting the ...
In early March 2026, as the U.S.-led war with Iran enters its second month of intense airstrikes and naval operations in the Gulf, an Asia Times analysis by Grant Newsham posed a chilling question: Does the Iran conflict make a Chinese attack on Taiwan more likely? https://asiatimes.com/2026/03/iran-war-make-a-china-attack-on-taiwan-more-like...
For much of its history, the United States has seen war not as an aberration but as an instrument of policy, a default tool for securing interests abroad and projecting power. From the early conflicts with Indigenous nations and European empires to the global struggles of the twentieth century, war has been woven into the American narrative. ...
John Klar's latest book, The Coming Food Crisis: How Corporations, Activists, and Climate Alarmists Are Waging War on Farmers (released March 17, 2026, by Skyhorse Publishing), delivers a stark, urgent warning: America's, and the world's, food system is under deliberate, multi-front assault. What appears as abundant supermarket shelves conceals a g...
The question cut through the noise like a knife during the COVID years: If the vaccine works, why do they care if you're vaccinated? If it doesn't work, why do they care if you're vaccinated? On its face, it's devastating common sense. Either the shot protects you fully (so others' status is irrelevant to your safety), or it fails to protect you (s...
In the wake of the 2026 municipal elections, where the far-Left La France Insoumise (LFI) surged in key cities through its usual alliances of convenience, Left-wing journalist Isabelle Saporta dropped the mask on RTL. "We're not going to pretend not to see," she declared: "It's the new France against the White France." Just like that, the sacred re...
The article from The Gateway Pundit (dated March 17, 2026) mocks liberals who threaten to flee "Trump's America" due to policies like stricter immigration enforcement, pointing out the irony that most never actually leave and that other countries enforce borders far more rigorously than the U.S. ever has. It's classic partisan snark, suggesting the...
The death of Paul R. Ehrlich has prompted a familiar wave of tributes, describing him as influential, visionary, and ahead of his time. Influence, however, is not the same as being right, and it is precisely because Ehrlich mattered that his record deserves sober scrutiny rather than uncritical praise. In 1968, Ehrlich published The Population Bomb...
Michael Snyder's March 17, 2026, Substack post, titled "Fertilizer Shock: The Closure Of The Strait Of Hormuz Could Cause Widespread Global Food Shortages," delivers a stark warning: the ongoing U.S.-Israel war with Iran has effectively shut down commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most critical energy chokepoint, and this ...
The Macrobusiness.com.au article by Leith van Onselen (published March 15, 2026) makes a sharp case that high immigration has no place in a modern economy — especially one entering the AI and automation age. The piece (partly paywalled, but with clear free excerpts and tied to the author's recent series) dismantles the standard pro-immigration grow...
The lessons from Great Depression-era meals (roughly 1929–1939) remain strikingly relevant in times of economic pressure, such as rising food prices, inflation, supply chain issues, or broader crises. During the Depression, millions faced unemployment, scarcity, and uncertainty, yet families adapted by embracing extreme resourcefulness: wasting not...
Here in a world obsessed with speed, gadgets, and the illusion of control, there is a community that seems almost alien: the Amish. They live without electricity, without smartphones, without the constant chatter of social media — and yet, somehow, they survive — and often thrive — through hardship in ways most of us have forgotten. At first glance...
"I like to toss around the word chutzpah for my own comic relief. It's a word that never fails to make me laugh, largely because of the classic definition by the American humorist Leo Rosten: That quality enshrined in a man who, having killed his mother and father, throws himself on the mercy of the court because he is an orphan." https://www.thefo...
Social science often presents itself as the rigorous study of human behaviour, institutions, and societies, yet much of what passes for research is deeply flawed, prone to error, and resistant to correction. One reason is methodological overreach. Social phenomena are inherently complex, multidimensional, and context-dependent, yet many researchers...
"Today, Brussels is a city in the process of becoming a Muslim-majority city." Belgian politician Alian Destexhe says that there is a connection between an increased Muslim population and anti-Semitism. "So, synagogues and Jewish sites are already living in a state of siege. And I have to say that, unfortunately, the Belgian authorities are not at ...
Donald Trump might have implied the U.S. could "end Iran in an hour," what that might mean if interpreted as a nuclear option, and what the consequences could be if the United States actually launched a nuclear strike that devastated Iran into the Stone Age. It is important to start with clarity about the facts: in recent remarks about the ongoing ...
In the digital age, fear travels faster than news, and nowhere is that more evident than in the sprawling internet narrative about potential attacks on American soil targeting infrastructure like the electrical grid, data centres, and critical networks. The concern isn't purely fringe chatter or conspiracy theory — there are real vulnerabilities in...
