Politicians Walk Away from Mistakes, While Voters Cannot

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...

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Europe’s Grim Future: The Quiet Great Replacement

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 ...

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Falling from the Sky Without a Parachute: The Rare Cases Where People Lived to Tell the Tale

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...

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Home to Us: Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr on the World We Have Lost

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...

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Adults Refusing to Grow Up: How One Generation's Choices Left the Next One Paying the Bills

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,...

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Socrates Time Travels to 2026!

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...

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Let the Sun Shine In! How Natural Light Could be the Simplest Tool for Better Blood Sugar and Overall Health, Especially for Seniors

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...

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Language Under Siege: How Woke Ideology is Rewriting Foreign Tongues in British Classrooms

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...

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The Next Wave: Half a Million Migrants Poised to Flood Europe from Libya — Because Weakness Invites It

Europe is staring down the barrel of another migrant crisis, and the warning signs couldn't be clearer. Greece's Migration Minister Thanos Plevris has sounded the alarm: more than 550,000 migrants are currently waiting in Libya, ready to risk the Mediterranean crossing as soon as the weather and smugglers allow. Other estimates, including from the ...

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The Demographic Eclipse of Great Britain: A Nation Replacing Itself

Great Britain once stood as the proud anchor of Western civilisation. From the Magna Carta to parliamentary democracy, common law, the Enlightenment, and the abolition of the slave trade, this small island exported ideas of liberty, individual rights, and tolerance that shaped the modern world. Today, that legacy faces an existential threat, not fr...

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Japan’s Risky Experiment: 300,000 Bangladeshi Migrants into One of the World’s Most Homogeneous Societies,

Japan has long stood out as one of the last major developed nations that remained remarkably racially and culturally homogeneous. Low immigration, strong social cohesion, low crime, and a distinct national identity helped it weather many modern problems that plague the West. That era may be ending. According to recent announcements, Japan is prepar...

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The Toxic Truth about Wind Energy: Not Green, Not Clean, and Definitely Not Needed!

We've been sold a beautiful lie. Wind turbines, those towering white giants spinning on ridges and across oceans, are endlessly marketed as the pure, sustainable future of energy. Eco-friendly. Bird-friendly. Essential for saving the planet. But a growing body of scientific evidence tells a darker story: wind energy is toxic to human health, devast...

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Reality Bites: Even Labor Admits the Net-Zero Bill is Unsustainable

 As Australia stares down another federal budget, a quiet but telling admission has slipped out from the heart of the Albanese government. Finance Minister Katy Gallagher has conceded that the "supercharged" climate spending of recent years simply can't last forever. After pouring tens of billions into renewables, green funds, and net-zero sch...

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The Smear Campaign Falls Flat: One Nation Reaches Migrants Tired of Mass Migration

For decades, the mainstream media and political establishment have painted Pauline Hanson and One Nation with one lazy brush: "racist." Every time the party raised concerns about unsustainable immigration levels, cultural integration, or the strain on housing, wages, and services, the same tired script rolled out. Yet here we are in 2026, fresh off...

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No Compromise: One Nation Doesn’t Need a Marriage of Convenience with the Liberals!

 The Liberals just got a brutal reminder in Farrer: the old political game is over. In a seat they'd held for nearly eight decades, their vote collapsed while One Nation's David Farley stormed to victory, delivering the party its first-ever seat in the House of Representatives. The message from regional Australia was loud and clear, voters are...

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The Diet Coke Shortage in India: A Bitter Taste of Global Fragility

 Recently something quietly absurd began happening on supermarket shelves across Delhi, Mumbai, and Bengaluru. Diet Coke, that fizzy, no-sugar caffeine-laden drink started disappearing. Not because Indians suddenly lost their taste for it, but because there weren't enough aluminium cans to put it in. There were empty shelves where the familiar...

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"They Will No Longer Be Laughing": Trump’s Stark Warning to a Defiant Iran

President Donald Trump didn't mince words. On Truth Social, after Iran's latest response to a U.S. peace proposal came back hollow on the nuclear question, he delivered a blunt message: Iran has been "playing games" with America and the world for 47 years, delay, delay, delay. Roadside bombs, crushed protests, the slaughter of innocents, and all th...

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The Darker Side of Australian Immigration: Exploiting the Vulnerable Migrant Workforce

Australia markets itself as a welcoming nation of opportunity, a "fair go" society that benefits from high immigration. Yet a landmark new survey reveals a harsher reality: systemic exploitation of temporary migrant workers, where two-thirds are underpaid, often in ways that entrench vulnerability and distort the labour market. A major 2024 survey ...

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Virus in the Dust: Why the “Person-to-Person” Hantavirus Panic Doesn’t Add Up

We live in an age of endless health scares, and now another one has surfaced, Andes orthohantavirus, the strain behind a recent cluster of cases linked to rodents on a cruise ship. Media headlines and some health officials are quick to highlight its supposed ability to spread from person to person, painting a picture of potential chains of transmis...

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To Those Who Hate Us By Ian Brighthope

How Australians Are Being Managed, Divided and Broken. Australia was once sold to its people as a fair country. A country of mateship. A country where a person could work hard, buy a home, raise children, speak freely, trust the doctor, trust the school, trust the bank, trust the news, and believe that government - however clumsy - was ultimately t...

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