In a stunning blow delivered on April 12, 2026, Viktor Orbán conceded defeat after 16 years steering Hungary as a bulwark of national sovereignty, border control, and traditional European values. With record turnout nearing 78-79%, opposition leader Péter Magyar and his Tisza party secured a decisive victory — early counts showing around 53% ...
In a political landscape still reverberating from the Hormuz blockade, global energy shocks, and mounting domestic pressures, Australian voters are delivering a blunt verdict: the traditional centre-Right has lost its way. A Spectator Australia piece published on 10 April 2026 by Vinay Kolhatkar poses the provocative question: Is One Nation n...
Michael Snyder's April 12, 2026, Substack piece delivers another stark warning in his signature alarmist style. As the US Navy begins enforcing a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz following the collapse of peace talks in Islamabad, Snyder asks whether the escalating confrontation with Iran, now framed as part of an ongoing World War III fought throu...
In an era where public figures often self-censor to avoid career-ending accusations, Monty Python legend John Cleese continues to speak with characteristic bluntness. On or around April 11-12, 2026, Cleese directly challenged a BBC framing that portrayed the UK's education system as inherently built for "whiteness" rather than for British chi...
Robert C. Davis, Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast, and Italy, 1500-1800, Palgrave Macmillan, 2003, 246 pp. As Robert C. Davis notes in this eye-opening account of Barbary Coast slavery, American historians have studied every aspect of enslavement of Africans by whites but have largely ign...
Here's my counterpoint to the bulk of the positions on the Iran War by Alor.org bloggers, drawn from Alex Armstrong's April 9, 2026, GB News opinion piece titled "America just triumphed on the world stage - and its haters are too blind to see how." This piece offers a starkly optimistic, pro-Trump interpretation of the Iran situation — framing rece...
The blog post from MadgeWaggy (published April 6, 2026) delivers a sobering meditation on a timeless human failing: warnings of systemic collapse are issued early and often by clear-eyed observers, yet they are routinely dismissed — especially by elites, drenched in hubris — until the consequences become unavoidable. The author, writing as an elder...
Talks led by Vice President JD Vance, involving figures like Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff, lasted over 21 hours but failed primarily over Iran's refusal to abandon its nuclear program (ending uranium enrichment, dismantling facilities, and surrendering buried highly enriched uranium). Additional US demands included halting support for regional p...
I was sent this Face Book link, and the info below on how we can monitor Australia's fuel reserves. I have not worked through it all yet, but it seems legitimate, what have checked. This will give us freedom over having to rely upon what comes out of the prime minister's mouth. https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61583517593512 One Nation Suppo...
There is a peculiar asymmetry in modern public life. Allegations arrive with force, speed, and amplification. Outcomes, by contrast, arrive quietly. And when they do, they do not restore what was lost. The case of Craig McLachlan illustrates this dynamic with uncomfortable clarity. A well-known performer, acquitted of all charges and even awarded c...
This blog essay outlines Judith Sloan's powerful argument in The Australian and defending its hard-headed realism against the ideological fantasies driving Western energy policy. Judith Sloan, one of Australia's most clear-eyed economists, cuts through the green rhetoric with a blunt observation: For nearly two decades, Australia (and much of the W...
There is something almost cinematic — darkly, absurdly cinematic — about where things now stand. The enemy is defeated, victory is declared, the credits begin to roll — and then, inevitably, the villain sits up again. Only days ago, the script seemed settled: a ceasefire, a tentative reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a narrative of decisive action...
The Strait of Hormuz right now is neither open nor closed. It behaves more like a revolving pub door—technically passable, but only if you're willing to push through uncertainty, pay the bouncer, and accept you might get thrown out mid-step. What has happened in the last 24–48 hours sharpens that metaphor into something almost literal. The story be...
Centralised digital identity systems represent one of the most serious encroachments on liberty in the modern West, not just in Britain, but across the Anglosphere, Australia and Europe. In September 2025, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced plans for a new digital ID scheme, billed as a way to "cut the faff" in proving identity for right-to-w...
In early April 2026, the Mises Institute published a sobering piece titled "The Economic Destruction of Trump's War Goes Far Beyond High Gas Prices." Author Connor O'Keeffe argues that the US-Israeli strikes on Iran and Iran's blockade of the Strait of Hormuz are doing far more damage than headline oil prices suggest. By hammering higher-order good...
One of the most gaping holes in pretty much the entire "crisis of masculinity" literature—with books like Jordan Peterson's 12 Rules for Life and Richard Reeves' Of Boys and Men—is biology, and in particular hormones. And by "hormones," I mean one hormone in particular: testosterone, the master male hormone, the one that's responsible for men being...
The April 8, 2026, article from The New American, "Demographic Realists Rise: Immigration, Long an American Addiction, is Finally Being Challenged," marks a notable shift in the immigration debate. Author Selwyn Duke argues that the near-religious reverence for high levels of immigration, long treated as an unquestioned American virtue, is eroding....
Ben Roberts-Smith is one of Australia's most decorated soldiers. Awarded the Victoria Cross for Australia and the Medal for Gallantry for his service in Afghanistan, he embodied the values Australians are taught to respect: bravery, loyalty, and an unwavering commitment to his mates. For years, he stood as a symbol of national pride. Yet after a de...
The April 10, 2026, Daily Sceptic essay "Degrees of Delusion: How to Fix the UK's Broken Universities" by Dr. Roger Watson, delivers a blunt diagnosis of Britain's higher education sector. Drawing on a new HEPI Debate Paper, it describes a system warped by reckless expansion — from roughly 40 universities pre-1990s to over 160 today — fuelled by th...
The April 2026 Gateway Pundit piece highlights the sentencing of former NYPD Sergeant Erik Duran to 3–9 years in prison for the 2023 death of Eric Duprey, a 30-year-old drug suspect. During an undercover Bronx buy-and-bust narcotics operation, Duprey sold $20 worth of cocaine to an undercover officer and fled on a motorised scooter along a sidewalk...
