Socialism is Immoral: The Deeper Philosophical Problem Beyond Economics

 A recent Zero Hedge piece highlights yet another practical failure of socialism: its tendency to erode incentives, breed inefficiency, and concentrate power in the hands of bureaucrats. These critiques are familiar and well-founded. Central planning cannot match the knowledge and dynamism of free markets. Shortages, misallocation, and stagnat...

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Coming Soon; Socialism Overload — Too Radical Even for the Old Radicals!

The Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) have long pushed the boundaries of acceptable Left-wing politics. But even by their standards, the rise of Darializa Avila Chevalier (DAC) in New York City marks a new level of radical excess, one so extreme that it has left even Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC) and Bernie Sanders on the sidelines! Chevalier...

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More Than 8 in 10 French Voters Back “Negative Immigration,” Support Widespread Deportations, From Breitbart

 The overwhelming majority of the French public are in favour of a large-scale deportation effort, including the removal of significant numbers of foreigners who detract from society. A poll conducted by Consumer Science & Analytics (CSA) on behalf of Le Journale du Dimanche has found that 83 per cent of French adults are supportive of the...

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The Great Replacement in Globalist Advertising, By K. R. Bolton

The "Great Replacement" in referring to mass third world immigration into historically White nations, has gained wide currency among those who are called by certain types of journalists and academics "far right conspiracy theorists." That the same process is called a similar term — "replacement migration" — by the United Nations (U.N.) might be con...

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Declinism: Britain’s Enduring National Sport!

 "In Britain, declinism has long been a national sport." This observation captures something profound about the British psyche. For decades, a narrative of inexorable national decline has permeated politics, media, literature, and pub conversations. From the loss of empire to economic stagnation, cultural fragmentation, and fading global influ...

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Homeopathy Under Fire: When Peer-Reviewed Research Clashes with Establishment Orthodoxy

 A recent piece from Children's Health Defense highlights growing scrutiny of homeopathy studies, including retractions and attacks on published research. Critics dismiss the field as pseudoscience, water with memory, or placebo at best. Yet the pattern is familiar: peer-reviewed evidence supporting homeopathic efficacy or mechanisms repeatedl...

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Why Iran Will Almost Certainly Build a Nuclear Weapon

A media outlet linked to Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has openly declared that Tehran has "no choice" but to develop a nuclear bomb to secure "peace and calm." This comes despite a recent Memorandum of Understanding with the Trump administration and pledges regarding IAEA inspectors. The article explicitly draws parallels to Chin...

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AI’s Coming Reckoning: Why the Global Financial Crisis Will Look Like a Picnic — And What to Do About It

The Economist recently hosted a sobering piece suggesting that if you thought the 2008 Global Financial Crisis was bad, you haven't seen anything yet. The author (link below) is right to sound the alarm, but even that understates the scale. The GFC was a financial heart attack triggered by bad debt, leverage, and regulatory failure. AI promises som...

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Will Australia Collapse When Gen Z and Alphas Take Over? Demographic Destiny or Manageable Transition?

As Millennials edge into middle age and Gen Z (born ~1997–2012) followed by Alpha (born ~2013 onward) move toward dominance in the workforce, politics, and culture, a nervous question circulates in certain circles: Will Australia hold together, or are we staring at institutional and social collapse under younger generations? The short answer is no ...

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Migration: Eternal Human Reality or Modern Policy Failure? A Critique of Immigration Mania

The Conversation recently published a piece asking, "What is migration for?" framing it as a profound human desire clashing with national needs, while ultimately portraying managed openness as essential for prosperity, dignity, and liberal democracy. People move, it reminds us; they always have. This is true enough on the surface. Humans have wande...

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Sliding into the Abyss: The Iranian Conflict, Fuel Crises, and the Shadow of Wider War

We are witnessing not isolated flare-ups but the dangerous acceleration of interlocking conflicts that threaten to drag the world into a far broader catastrophe. What began as regional tensions has metastasised into direct confrontations involving Iran, the United States, Israel, and their proxies, with the fragile ceasefires collapsing almost as q...

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The Digital Dilemma: Navigating Surveillance, Erosion of Privacy, and the Path to Collective Resistance

 We stand at a profound crossroads in the West, one that Alex Klaushofer aptly terms the Digital Dilemma (links below). On one path lies the relentless march toward a technocratic system of surveillance and control: digital IDs, biometric data grabs, algorithmic governance, and the slow erosion of consent under the banners of "safety," "conven...

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The UK Government's "Watch This Space" Green Paper: State-Sponsored Algorithmic Tyranny and the Death Knell of Independent Inquiry

The latest UK government initiative on media regulation, quietly slipped into public view via the "Watch This Space" Green Paper (published 23 June 2026), represents a chilling escalation in the ongoing assault on open discourse. Framed as a benign effort to promote "trustworthy" news and protect audiences from "harm," it proposes rewiring social m...

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Proust in the Australian Everyday: Finding Lost Time in a Sunburnt Country

Marcel Proust's In Search of Lost Time (1913-1927)is a vast, slow-moving river of a book, seven volumes, thousands of pages, written in long, winding sentences that can feel as endless as the Stuart Highway. To many modern Australians it sounds like the last thing we need: another dense French novel from a century ago. Yet if you let it in, Proust ...

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Jared Taylor’s Banned Paris Speech, By Jared Taylor

 A French group called Les Natifs (The Natives) invited me to give a speech in Paris on June 3, 2026. However, police broke up the meeting, explaining that judging from my record, I was likely to say things that would "violate the penal code and threaten national cohesion as well as the principles enshrined in The Declaration of the Rights of ...

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Workplace Stress and Employer Duties: Lessons from Ackers v Cairns Regional Council [2021] QSC 342, Supreme Court of Queensland

In today's increasingly demanding workplaces, employers face difficult decisions about balancing performance expectations with their legal obligation to safeguard employee wellbeing. A significant Queensland Supreme Court decision provides an important reminder that performance management, however legitimate in principle, must always be exercised i...

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All Wars Are Banker’s Wars: The Coming Conflict with Russia and the Lessons of Berlin from Douglas Social Credit

There is a grim symmetry in visiting Berlin today, many say. The city that once stood at the heart of 20th-century catastrophe is again a symbol of looming confrontation. As tensions with Russia escalate and Europe prepares for potential wider conflict, the article "Visiting Berlin Before the Coming War" captures a city living on borrowed time: pro...

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Friedrich List vs. Globalism: Why the Nation Still Matters

Friedrich List, the influential 19th-century German economist and advocate of the National System of Political Economy, provides one of the most compelling intellectual challenges to the modern globalist consensus. Where many contemporary thinkers, including libertarian icons like Murray Rothbard, champion unfettered free trade and the primacy of t...

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The Sad Plight of Ownership: The West’s Quiet Surrender of Private Property Rights

Jessica Rose's recent piece "Ownership" (link below), cuts to the heart of a profound and under-discussed crisis in the modern West: the slow, systematic erosion of genuine private property rights. We are told we own our homes, our cars, our devices, and even our identities, yet in practice, these claims are increasingly illusory, conditional, and ...

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The Dangers of Third-Worldism’s Rise in the West

Zineb Riboua's recent essay "The Logic of Third-Worldism" is a sharp diagnosis of a troubling shift on the contemporary Left. What we are seeing is not simply renewed interest in foreign conflicts or economic anxiety finding political expression. It is the resurgence of Third-Worldism as an ideological framework, one that reframes Western societies...

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