The Next Major Flashpoint: Why the Strait of Malacca Could Become the Decisive Battleground Between China and the US, By Chris Knight (Florida)

While the world's attention remains fixed on the volatile Strait of Hormuz, where naval blockades, tanker incidents, and Trump's threats continue to rattle energy markets, a quieter but potentially more consequential shift is underway further east. The Strait of Malacca, the narrow maritime chokepoint between Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore, is ...

Continue reading

The Chain of Command and the Burden of War: The Ben Roberts-Smith Case, By Ian Wilson LL.B

The recent discussion of the Ben Roberts-Smith case in Top Brasso, particularly the analysis attributed to Clegg (link below), raises a point that is both uncomfortable and necessary: war crimes cannot be properly understood without taking the chain of command seriously. This is not a matter of institutional defensiveness or military culture. It is...

Continue reading

The Strait of Hormuz Crisis: Escalation, Tanker Incident, and Trump’s Latest Threats – No Sweet Ending in Sight, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

The Strait of Hormuz — the narrow chokepoint through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil and LNG normally flows — is once again the flashpoint of a dangerous standoff between the United States and Iran. As of mid-April 2026, the waterway has been repeatedly blocked, partially reopened, and re-closed amid threats, naval blockades, and direct mi...

Continue reading

Two Years to Recovery? The Optimism Built into Economic Forecasting, By James Reed

 The claim that the global economy could recover from the present energy shock within two years carries a tone of reassurance. It suggests that, however disruptive the current Iran conflict may be, the system remains fundamentally resilient. Damage will occur, but repair is already scheduled. The machine will restart. That is the message impli...

Continue reading

The Disunited Kingdom: Racing Toward the Dustbin of History Under Leftism and Progressivism, By Richard Miller (London)

Mark Gullick's recent essay in The Occidental Observer paints a bleak but unflinching portrait of contemporary Britain. Titled "The Disunited Kingdom," it argues that the country — once the heart of a global empire — is deliberately being dismantled. Not through incompetence alone, but through decades of Leftist ideology, progressive multiculturali...

Continue reading

The Quiet Collapse: How States Fail Without Announcing It, By James Reed and John Steele

The popular imagination treats the collapse of a state as a dramatic event. Tanks in the streets, parliaments stormed, flags torn down and replaced. History, however, suggests something far more unsettling. Collapse is rarely announced. It arrives quietly, diffusely, and often invisibly, long before the final act. The recent blog discussion on subt...

Continue reading

Why Governments Lie About Vaccines: A Sympathetic Look at A Midwestern Doctor’s Latest Essay, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

This is an era where trust in public health institutions has plummeted to historic lows; a Midwestern Doctor's April 19, 2026 Substack post offers a refreshingly measured and insightful take on one of the most painful questions of the post-COVID era: Why did the government lie about the COVID vaccines? Rather than diving headfirst into grand conspi...

Continue reading

Red Hair, Nordic Resilience, and the Unacceptable Bigotry of the Chattering Class, By Brian Simpson (Once had Red Hair, Now … No Hair!)

A major new study published this week has delivered a quiet but powerful rebuke to the casual contempt often aimed at red-haired people, especially those of Nordic or Northern European descent. Researchers at Harvard, led by Dr Ali Akbari and Prof David Reich, analysed DNA from nearly 16,000 ancient human remains and over 6,000 living individuals. ...

Continue reading

The 60-Minute Myth: Why “Optimal Exercise” Advice Misses the Point, By Brian Simpson and John Steele

We are told, with growing confidence, that there exists an "optimal dose" of strength training, forty to sixty minutes per week; a claim recently repeated by Joseph Mercola (link below). Beyond that, the benefits diminish. Push further, and the narrative darkens: excessive lifting may strain the body, reduce longevity, even worsen mortality outcome...

Continue reading

How Civilizations Fall, By Kenneth Minogue

 How do civilizations fall? Islamic thinkers had an image for it. Consider a civilization based upon a court in a thriving city— Baghdad, for example. Arts and the intellect flourish. But over several generations, as the great Islamic philosopher of the fourteenth century Ibn Khaldun put it, the civilized become decadent with luxury. They lose...

Continue reading

Janine Fiamengo on Feminists Wrecking Western Civilisation, By Mrs. Vera West

 Another strong critique by Jan; note as a fellow woman under the rules of woke, she can say this about her "tribe'": The case of Matt Taylor and #Shirtstorm was the last straw for me. In 2014, a chorus of angry women and their male enablers roasted British astrophysicist Matt Taylor for wearing an "inappropriate" shirt for a historic occasion...

Continue reading

Sam Melia’s New Book about His Imprisonment for Making “Racist Stickers” Reveals Just How Harshly the Anti-White State Tries to Punish Those Who Dare Resist It, By Steven Tucker

 "The sentence would have been much longer had you actually committed a crime." Did a British judge really say this back in 2024 when sending an innocent man to prison? I have seen the quote reproduced online as fact, but it turns out it was in fact an attempt at satire; clearly, a British judge would never do or say anything as reprehensible ...

Continue reading

The Way of the Elites: Divide and Rule, By James Reed

The Focal Points article "Divide et Impera: Divide and Rule", by investigative journalist John Leake) is a sharp, conspiratorial critique of how modern ruling elites, particularly in the U.S. and allied powers, systematically employ the ancient Roman strategy of divide et impera ("divide and rule") to maintain control. Leake argues that whenever or...

Continue reading

“It Should Never Have Been Approved”: Former Pfizer Chief Toxicologist Dr. Helmut Sterz Testifies Before the German Bundestag, By Richard Miller (London)

In a striking moment during Germany's ongoing Corona Inquiry Commission (Enquete-Kommission) on 19 March 2026, Dr. Helmut Sterz, former Chief Toxicologist for Pfizer Europe, delivered blunt testimony that has reignited debate over the approval and rollout of Pfizer's Comirnaty mRNA COVID-19 vaccine. With decades of experience in pharmaceutical toxi...

Continue reading

Military Drone Over Geelong Refinery Just Before the Fire: Coincidence, Routine Patrol… or Something More? By Tom North

On April 15, 2026, a significant fire broke out at the Viva Energy Geelong (Corio) refinery, one of only two major refineries still operating in Australia and a critical supplier of petrol, diesel, and jet fuel for Victoria and beyond. The blaze, which took over 12 hours to bring under control, started in the mogas (motor gasoline) processing unit....

Continue reading

Paul Keating’s Classic Blah-Blah: “Racism!” Again — The Tired Old Smear as Liberals Finally (but Insincerely) Talk Australian Values! By James Reed

Paul Keating has spoken, and it's the same old script we've heard for decades. In a blistering statement, the former Labor Prime Minister has accused Opposition Leader Angus Taylor of "cowardice," "embracing racism," and defaulting to the Liberal Party's supposed "default political policy: racism." According to Keating, Taylor's new migration plan ...

Continue reading

UK Bracing for Food Shortages as Iran Conflict Threatens Supplies — And This Warning Should Echo Across the World, By Richard Miller (London)

Britain is quietly preparing for potential food shortages this summer if the conflict involving Iran drags on and the Strait of Hormuz remains precarious. A secret government assessment, codenamed "Exercise Turnstone," has modelled a "reasonable worst-case scenario" for June 2026. Officials from Downing Street, the Treasury, Ministry of Defence, an...

Continue reading

Cost of Living Crisis: Cheap Off Grid Living in Oz? By John Steele

The Australian dream was once a quarter-acre block with a Hills Hoist and a mortgage that could, at least in theory, be paid off before death. That dream has quietly mutated into something else entirely, something closer to the storylinked below: a woman disappearing into the bush with a few thousand dollars, some salvaged materials, and the stubbo...

Continue reading

Are the Globalist Elites Behind the Killing of the Scientists? By Chris Knight (Florida)

Short answer: maybe, maybe not. The modern internet has a peculiar talent for assembling patterns out of fragments and then presenting them with the force of revelation. A cluster of deaths, a handful of missing persons, a suggestive headline — suddenly we are invited to contemplate not tragedy or coincidence, but design. The recent circulation of ...

Continue reading

The Covidian Cult (Part II), By C. J. Hopkins

Back in October of 2020, I wrote an essay called The Covidian Cult, in which I described the so-called "New Normal" as a global totalitarian ideological movement. Developments over the last six months have borne out the accuracy of that analogy. A full year after the initial roll-out of the utterly horrifying and completely fictional photos of peop...

Continue reading