In South Africa, a new wave of anti-migrant violence and organised protests has erupted since late March 2026. What makes this surge remarkable is not the violence itself, tragic as it is, but who is driving it: Black South Africans, in townships and cities like Durban, Johannesburg, and Soweto. Groups such as Operation Dudula and March and March, ...
"The Titanic did not sink all at once," Pavel Durov told the 2026 Oslo Freedom Forum. "Most passengers remained calm because they did not yet understand what was happening. Today, we find ourselves in a similar situation. Our ship has already hit the iceberg. We have already begun to sink, and many people have not even realized it. I am talking abo...
For centuries, Socrates has been lionised as the noble martyr of Western philosophy: a principled seeker of truth executed by a fearful Athenian democracy for the "crime" of asking uncomfortable questions. His student Plato's accounts shaped this image, portraying the trial as a travesty of justice and a warning against mob rule. But as Adam Rochus...
For an age of rootless globalism and reflexive national self-loathing, few voices ring as clear and necessary as that of G.K. Chesterton. The great English essayist, poet, and defender of the ordinary man understood patriotism not as jingoistic bluster or blind allegiance, but as a deep, familial love for one's native soil, culture, and peopl...
Paul Craig Roberts, in his characteristically blunt assessment, argues that the collapse of Western civilisation is not a future hypothetical but an unfolding reality. Like the Roman Empire's long decline, it proceeds incrementally through internal erosion rather than a single cataclysm. The primary driver, he contends, is the systematic cultural a...
One of the recurring themes of Donald Trump's political rhetoric has been American energy abundance. For years, Trump has argued that the United States possesses vast oil and gas resources, often declaring that America has more energy than it knows what to do with. The promise of "energy dominance" became a central pillar of his economic and ...
Two decades after An Inconvenient Truth catapulted him into the role of global climate prophet, Al Gore remains unbowed. In a recent ABC News interview marking the film's 20th anniversary, Gore insisted that "the scientists were dead right on all the important elements." The data, however, tell a different story, one of exaggerated predictions, unm...
… Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced a near-total ban on social media for children under sixteen years old. Ten of the most popular social media platforms are now age-restricted, with the toxic-leftist Bluesky platform a notable exception. The government claims to be "protecting children" from online harm. That's a lie. If the British government...
As Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) famously observed: "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident." Actually, this often quoted maxim is just a paraphrase. The closest authentic text comes from the Preface to the First Edition of The World as Will and R...
The latest independent Rape Gang Inquiry Report, released on 16 June 2026 and led by Restore MP Rupert Lowe with survivor advocate Sammy Woodhouse, lays bare one of the most horrific institutional failures in modern British history. It estimates that at least 250,000 vulnerable White British girls, some as young as 11, were subjected to systematic ...
The systematic grooming, rape, trafficking, and torture of British children, predominantly working-class White girls, is arguably the worst sustained human rights atrocity and criminal scandal in modern British history. Recent inquiries and reports, including the latest from Restore Britain's Rupert Lowe, paint a horrifying picture: up to 250,000 v...
In the high-stakes arena of Middle Eastern diplomacy, few agreements have arrived with as much fanfare and inherent contradiction as the recent US-Iran Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) brokered under President Donald Trump. Pitched as a pathway to de-escalation, the deal has already exposed its fatal flaws. At its core lies the unresolved co...
There are a lot of them; a 9-page list from Pfizer. I don't know what most of them are, but that speaks for itself; how can there be so many ill effects from one vax? So many exotic effects, that probably a normal GP would not know. How then are adverse effects linked back to the mRNA vax, when our GPs may not even understand these illnesses?...
On June 17, 2026, One Nation leader Pauline Hanson finally stepped into the viper's den of the National Press Club for her first-ever address after three decades in politics. What the gallery expected was a gaffe-filled disaster. What they got was vintage Hanson: blunt, unapologetic, and utterly unmoved by the usual pack of sneering, hissing inside...
In her landmark National Press Club address on June 17, 2026, Pauline Hanson outlined a bold vision for reforming Australia's public broadcasters if One Nation gains the balance of power or influence in government. Central to this was a decisive break from the status quo: the complete scrapping of the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) and a signif...
Walk through almost any Melbourne street these days and you will hear a familiar refrain from cabbies, tradies, shopkeepers and families alike: something has gone badly wrong with Victoria's finances. The state carries the highest net debt in Australia, with debt already exceeding $167 billion and projected to climb further in coming years. Interes...
Nation First looks into One Nation's powerful new video, the anger it has tapped into, and why Pauline Hanson's rise is starting to look less like a protest and more like a political earthquake. The clip opens against scenes of grief after the Bondi Beach terrorist attack. People crying. People stunned. A country trying t...
George Orwell's Animal Farm remains one of the most powerful satires ever written, a razor-sharp allegory of how noble revolutions degenerate into tyrannies ruled by a new elite that declares "all animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others." Yet the novel's journey to publication in 1945 offers its own perfect real-world proof o...
Across the West, a grim contest is underway. Nations once confident in their borders and cultural cohesion are now locked in an unspoken battle over which can absorb the most dysfunction from unchecked third-world migration. Europe has long dominated the headlines with no-go zones, grooming gangs, and street chaos in Paris, Stockholm, and London. Y...
In 1943, sitting in a Nazi prison cell and awaiting an uncertain fate, Dietrich Bonhoeffer penned one of the most penetrating essays of the twentieth century. Entitled "On Stupidity," it was an attempt to understand how an advanced, educated, and culturally sophisticated nation could descend into collective irrationality. The question haunted him. ...
