The Albanese government's fifth budget review is supposed to reassure Australians that the nation is on a stable path. Instead, it reads like a catalogue of broken promises, shifting narratives, mounting costs, and political spin increasingly disconnected from everyday life. Australians were promised relief from the cost-of-living crisis, cheaper e...
Four years after Russia's full-scale invasion, the war in Ukraine has settled into a grim, attritional rhythm that feels depressingly permanent. The latest New York Times dispatch captures a momentary "shift": Russian advances have slowed to a crawl, Putin appears rattled by Ukrainian drone strikes reaching deep into Russia, and even the scaled-bac...
There's a quiet unease settling over many Aussie households right now. Whether it's whispers of escalating global conflicts, supply chain strains, volatile energy prices, or the simple realisation that governments often prioritise ideology over practical resilience, one truth stands out: we can't outsource our basic needs entirely to distant system...
The recent article in The Daily Sceptic arguing that Britain's university system is broken makes a compelling case. Graduates accumulate debt only to find themselves in low-paid jobs unrelated to their degrees. Universities expand administration, while genuine intellectual standards decline. Academic life becomes increasingly managerial, bure...
Fifteen years ago, Bear Grylls was unstoppable. The former SAS reservist turned global television phenomenon. Man vs. Wild reached over a billion viewers across 200 countries. His orange-and-grey survival knife became the best-selling piece of outdoor gear on the planet. Kids wanted his gear. Adults bought the dream: rugged competence, unbrea...
At present: A fragile ceasefire in a war that already rattled the world earlier this year. Diplomatic channels humming with talk of a U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding, Iran signalling it's open to modifications, Trump eyeing a foreign-policy win to wave at Xi Jinping in six days. Then, according to Israel's own Channel 12, Israeli officials qu...
Imagine a room full of the world's most powerful regulators, politicians, and tech executives gathered in a grand Danish palace. The official mission: keep children safe in the age of AI. The actual guest list? A who's who of people who have spent years pushing governments to decide what the rest of us are allowed to read, watch, and say onli...
Picture this: A mother in a small parish in Melbourne, or a young man fighting same-sex attraction in a noisy Western city, opens what should be clear guidance from Rome. Instead of the rock-solid teaching of the Catechism, that homosexual acts are "intrinsically disordered" and contrary to natural law (see CCC 2357), he finds a 32-page document ur...
For years, many ordinary Australians have rolled their eyes whenever they hear another apocalyptic climate headline. After decades of failed predictions, exaggerated rhetoric, politicised science, and elite hypocrisy, scepticism has become understandable. People were told entire coastlines would vanish, that snow would disappear, or that civi...
Picture this: Millions of lives upended, economies shattered, kids kept out of school for years, families torn apart by lockdowns and fear. For over six years, many of us suspected the story we were fed about COVID-19 didn't add up. Now, an active CIA employee, a career intelligence professional respected inside the agency, is stepping forward to s...
Imagine waking up to a letter in your mailbox: you have a few months to pack up and leave the family home, or farm, you've lived in for decades. Not because of a flood, fire, or personal choice, but because a utility company needs your land for power lines to feed a massive AI data centre. This isn't dystopian fiction. It's happening right now in p...
In early 2022, as Russian tanks rolled into Ukraine, Tulsi Gabbard, then a private citizen and former congresswoman, posted a video raising a straightforward concern: There are dozens of U.S.-funded biological research facilities in Ukraine handling dangerous pathogens. She argued they should be secured or shut down to prevent accidental releases a...
There was a time when political slogans still carried some persuasive force in Australia. Governments could announce another grand reform, another ambitious transition, another moral crusade, and much of the public would at least give them the benefit of the doubt. That trust has been steadily eroded. Increasingly, Australians are no longer interes...
Europe is sleepwalking into a future that looks very different from the one its great grandparents built. The signs are everywhere, yet too many leaders still refuse to face reality; or if from the Greens and Left in general, embrace the end of Europe. Mass migration from Muslim-majority countries, combined with much higher birth rates among those ...
Stories of people tumbling from airplanes at enormous heights with no parachute sound like pure fiction. Yet a handful of documented cases prove it has happened. These survivors did not beat physics through superhuman strength. They lived because of a mix of lucky breaks, specific conditions, and the surprising limits of what a human body can somet...
When people think about Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr, they usually think about global superstardom, private jets, stadium concerts and endless nostalgia merchandising. But what has struck many listeners about the new song "Home to Us" is not celebrity glamour at all. The emotional centre of the song is memory. Not polished memory either, but memo...
It started quietly, the way these things often do. Back in the decades after World War II, a certain restlessness set in. People who had known hardship and sacrifice began to chase something lighter. More comfort. More personal freedom. Less duty. What began as understandable relief after tough times slowly hardened into a habit. Many baby boomers,...
Suppose the old philosopher Socrates (died 399 BC), arrived in 2026 by the magic of (hypothetical) time travel expecting wisdom. Athens had killed him for asking dangerous questions, so perhaps, after two thousand years of progress, humanity would finally welcome inquiry? Instead, he stepped into a world where billions of people carried glowing rec...
We spend our days trapped under artificial lights, harsh office fluorescents, blue-glowing screens, and windowless rooms, and then wonder why our energy crashes, our moods dip, and our health quietly unravels. A compelling new study reminds us of something our ancestors knew instinctively: natural daylight isn't just pleasant, it's powerful medicin...
In the United Kingdom, ideological insanity isn't just persisting, it's accelerating while much of the world tries to regain its senses. The latest example comes from Pearson Edexcel, one of the country's biggest exam boards, which has quietly signed off on gender-neutral language in GCSE French, Spanish, and German exams starting in 2026. Students...
