In the fifth century BC, two of the most powerful states in the Greek world went to war. The conflict lasted nearly three decades, exhausted both sides, and ended the brief golden age of classical Athens. The historian who recorded it, an Athenian general exiled for military failure, produced a work of such ruthless clarity that it still shapes how...
Swirling in the grand theatre of modern activism, outrage is currency, and it flows most freely when the targets fit a preferred narrative. West African nations are pushing back hard against Western-style LGBTQ policies, enacting or strengthening laws that criminalise certain behaviours in line with local cultures, religions, and traditional values...
Look around, folks. The numbers don't lie, even if the mainstream media calls you a "racist conspiracy theorist" for noticing. Native European-descended populations across the West, from France to Sweden, the UK to the US, and yes, even here in Australia, are collapsing under sub-replacement birth rates while third-world migration floods in a...
Writing in the Telegraph, Sean Thomas says his 20 year-old daughter can't find a job – any job, stacking shelves, washing pots, bar work – because the state has allowed all the work to go to migrants at a shocking ratio of 27 to one. Here's an excerpt. Do you remember what you did during the long summer breaks from university? I'm ashamed I don't r...
Few books in recent years have done more to illuminate the bitter divisions of modern politics than Jonathan Haidt's The Righteous Mind (2012). At a time when political opponents increasingly regard one another not merely as mistaken but as morally defective, Haidt offers a provocative explanation. The central problem, he argues, is that human bein...
Sir Keir Starmer, you entered Downing Street in July 2024 on the back of a landslide, promising competence, stability, and "country first." Today, less than two years later, you resign as Labour leader amid party mutiny, dire local election results, and widespread disillusionment, and the grooming rape gang tragedy. Your tenure was marked by ...
Britain, the land that once built an empire on merit, industry, and fair play, finds that a new form of institutional discrimination has taken root. Britain's employment schemes, meant to help the unemployed find work, are reportedly locking out white jobseekers in favour of ethnic minorities, creating a blatant two-tier system that treats na...
It's a striking cultural symptom of our times:ZeroHedge highlights a growing trend: feminists increasingly turning to witchcraft communes and neopagan practices to fill the spiritual emptiness left by secular modernity. What was once fringe has gained traction in progressive circles, with covens, rituals, and goddess worship offering community and ...
In what should be a plot from a dystopian novel rather than a news headline from modern France, a sexual assault victim has been convicted for the crime of speaking uncomfortable truths about the perpetrators who targeted her and countless others. The case lays bare the perverse logic of Europe's ever-expanding "hate speech" regime: protect t...
When the cameras aren't rolling German police officers, on the front line of the migrant crisis, give their unvarnished account of the state of the nation, finding "the Germany we know is disappearing". A German investigative journalist has urged her fellow countrymen to "listen to police officers" and their experiences and "act accordingly"....
Jeff Costello's recent review in American Renaissance (June 12, 2026) of Greg Johnson's Loving Our Own: Nationalism, Populism, & White Identity Politics (Counter-Currents, 2025) captures the book's core strength: it is a clear-eyed philosophical defence of white identity politics against the dominant civic nationalist consensus. Johnson, a Ph.D...
Modern civilisation has performed a remarkable experiment on itself. For more than 99 percent of human history, our species lived immersed in nature. We evolved in forests, grasslands, river valleys, mountains, and coastal environments. The sounds of birds, the movement of water, the smell of vegetation, changing weather, and exposure to diverse ec...
Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs) have long been hailed as the gold standard of evidence for medicine. They promise objectivity: randomly assign participants to treatment or control groups, minimise bias, and let the data speak. Yet as scrutiny intensifies into how pharmaceutical giants actually operate, a more troubling picture emerges. Fa...
Failed Democrat presidential candidate Kamala Harris has repeatedly floated or been open to ditching the Electoral College, framing it as part of a broader "brainstorm" on structural changes (alongside court-packing and new state admissions). The partisan motive is transparent: Democrats have won the national popular vote in several recent cy...
The news that the United States plans a permanent weapons stockpile on Australian soil, as reported by Natural News (June 21, 2026), marks another step in deepening alliance cooperation amid rising Indo-Pacific tensions. For a nation like Australia, vast, resource-rich, but sparsely populated and strategically exposed, this development carries both...
City Journal gives a sobering look at the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and reveals not just policy preferences but a blueprint for transforming American (and by extension, Western) society along explicitly radical Marxist lines. Titled "Workers Deserve More," the piece dissects the DSA's rhetoric and agenda, exposing a movement that...
Yes, it was only a matter of time. As the dust barely settles from the COVID era's upheavals, lockdowns, mandates, economic scars, eroded trust, and lingering questions over origins, policies, and power, Australia now reports its first human case of H5N1 bird flu. According to reporting from Jon Fleetwood on Substack, authorities have confirmed the...
David Turver's recent essay "Everything About Net Zero is Fake" (published on Eigen Values, June 21, 2026) delivers a devastating critique of the foundational claims underpinning Net Zero policies. As someone long engaged with critiques of scientism, managerialism, and overreaching narratives in science and politics, I find this analysis aligns wit...
I'd like to use Father's Day [US version] to make a humble request: Let's bring back the patriarchy. Whatever we currently have just isn't working. Empowering an odd collection of feminazis, soy boys, pronoun people, emotional nutcases, women pretending to be men, and men pretending to be women has produced a dysfunctional world that makes no sense...
Mattias Desmet, a Belgian professor of clinical psychology at Ghent University, gained prominence during the COVID-19 period for his analysis of how societies descend into collective hypnosis-like states. His 2022 book The Psychology of Totalitarianism (and related discussions, such as a recent interview with Canadian Prepper, link below) provides ...
