Why Australia Needs Regenerative Agriculture, By Bob Farmer, Dairy Farmer and Brian Simpson

Australia does not have the luxury of treating agriculture as an abstract policy debate. This is a dry continent, an old continent, and a fragile one. Our soils are among the most weathered on Earth, thin in organic matter and easily degraded. Add to that a climate swinging between drought and flood, and the old industrial model of farming begins t...

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France, Poland, and the Dangerous Simulation: Practicing Nuclear Strikes Pushes Europe Closer to the Brink, By Richard Miller (London)

France and Poland are preparing joint military exercises over the Baltic Sea and northern Poland that include simulated nuclear and conventional strikes on targets in Russia and Belarus, including high-value sites near St. Petersburg. Polish F-16s will rehearse long-range reconnaissance and strikes with JASSM-ER cruise missiles, while French Rafale...

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The Last Two Popes as “Popes of Immigration”: A Traditional Catholic Lament, By Peter West

There is an increasingly common sentiment among traditional Catholics: the papacies of Benedict XVI and especially Francis have felt less like continuations of the historic Church and more like a pivot toward open-border globalism. For many who cherish the Church's ancient liturgy, doctrinal clarity, and emphasis on ordered charity, this shift is g...

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Memes are Not Jokes — They are the Politics Beneath Politics, By Paul Walker

The modern temptation is to treat memes as trivial, throwaway jokes, digital graffiti, the idle chatter of an over-connected world. But that view is increasingly untenable. What looks like humour is often something deeper: a form of communication that operates beneath formal politics, shaping how people interpret reality before they ever engage wit...

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Moral Diversity and the Erosion of Shared Norms: Why “Diverse” Multicult Groups Often Struggle to Enforce Standards, By Paul Walker

A compelling new study by researchers Merrick Osborne (Cornell) and Mohammad Atari (UMass Amherst) offers a data-driven window into a long-suspected social dynamic. Published in Social Psychological and Personality Science, the paper, based on seven separate studies, finds that morally diverse groups develop looser perceived norms, greater toleranc...

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Garlic and Walnuts for Seniors, By Mrs. Vera West

There is something quietly reassuring about the idea that the most powerful tools for health are not locked away in laboratories, but sitting in the kitchen. Garlic and walnuts, hardly exotic, certainly not expensive, have been part of traditional diets for centuries. Only recently has modern science begun to circle back and ask whether there was s...

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WHO’s Supranational Vaccine Power Grab – Sovereignty Surrender by Stealth, By Brian Simpson

The World Health Organization (WHO) is quietly constructing a supranational vaccine authorisation mechanism that threatens to bypass national regulators and erode the sovereignty of independent countries. What began as an "emergency use" workaround during COVID is evolving into a de facto global regulatory infrastructure — one that lets the WHO sha...

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The Grooming Gangs Were Never Just “Grooming” – They Were Organised Crime Networks, By Richard Miller (London)

For over a decade, Britain has been haunted by the grooming gangs scandal: Rotherham, Rochdale, Oxford, Telford, and countless other towns where organised groups systematically preyed on vulnerable young girls. The dominant narrative has focused on "on-street grooming," cultural attitudes, and institutional cowardice around race and "community rela...

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ANZAC Day and Welcome to Country – Incompatible by Design, By Bruce Bennett and John Steele

On ANZAC Day, Australians gather at dawn services, war memorials, and RSL clubs to honour the sacrifice of those who fought and died for our country. It is a day of solemn remembrance, mateship, courage, and national unity. The Last Post sounds, heads bow, and we reflect on the ANZAC legend, that spirit forged in the blood of Gallipoli and reinforc...

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Adam Smith’s Warning on Power and National Strength, By James Reed

Adam Smith is often invoked as the patron saint of markets, but that shorthand misses something essential. He was not writing a hymn to greed or empire. He was issuing a warning. When a nation shifts its focus from the "liberal plan of equality, liberty, and justice" toward the accumulation of power and commercial empire, it does not become stronge...

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The System They Built is Failing – Western Healthcare Collapse in Real Time, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

The title says it all. The system They built is failing. And nowhere is that failure more brutally visible than in the healthcare systems of the West — the United States, Australia, the UK, Canada, and beyond. While politicians and bureaucrats keep promising "reform," "more funding," and "modernisation," patients are left waiting hours in emergency...

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Starmer is Finished. But, More Importantly, Britain’s System of Government is Fundamentally Broken, By Mark Littlewood

We are about to witness an implosion in British politics with a real risk that we will reach entirely the wrong conclusion. Keir Starmer is already a lame duck Prime Minister but – like many who hold that office – he is stubborn and thus likely to stagger on until the untenability of his position is punched into him by his Parliamentary colleagues....

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The False Choice – Why Every “New World Order” Path Leads to Global Technocracy (And Why We Must Oppose It)! By Chris Knight (Florida)

For years, we've been sold a comforting illusion: there's a grand battle between the "globalist elites" pushing a one-world government and the brave "sovereign nations" or "multipolar world" fighting back. Pick your team, cheer your side, and freedom will triumph. James Corbett, in his recent discussion with The Vigilant Fox, cuts through this neat...

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Countries Where Homosexuality Still Carries the Death Penalty: Why No “Progressive” Leftist Protests in Australia? By Tom North

In much of the Western world, debates around sexuality centre on recognition, rights, and identity. But globally, the legal landscape is far more uneven. In a small but significant number of countries, same-sex sexual activity is not only criminalised — it can, at least in law, be punished by death. This is not a claim drawn from advocacy rhetoric ...

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Australia’s Fertiliser Crunch Hits Right as Winter Planting Kicks Off on ANZAC Day, By Bob Farmer, Dairy Farmer

Today when I write this (but you read it probably 27 April) — ANZAC Day, April 25, 2026 — marks the traditional start of the winter crop sowing window for many Australian grain growers, especially in southern states like South Australia, Victoria, and parts of New South Wales and Western Australia. Winter crops (wheat, barley, canola, pulses) are t...

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The Ingredients of a Food Crisis are Set: Farmers Facing Across the Globe Fertiliser Shortages, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

The food crisis isn't some distant future threat, it's already baked into the 2026 planting season. As highlighted in a Vigilant Fox piece and Chris Martenson's ongoing analysis (shared via his X profile and Peak Prosperity digests see links below), the warning signs are flashing red. A major new survey from the American Farm Bureau Federation reve...

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Thailand: Electric Vehicle Bait and Switch, By Nicholas Creed

   The government wants 300,000 electric vehicles on the roads, incentives include consenting to location tracking for cash handouts, and car trade-ins. A quick overview on the latest propaganda framed as altruism out here in the tropics of Thailand. Whilst those not living under a rock will be acutely aware of the green agenda, including...

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When the Family Model Breaks: Churches and the Rise of the Single Person, By Mrs. Vera West and Peter West

For generations, churches, synagogues, and mosques have been built on a quiet assumption so basic it often goes unnoticed: most adults will marry, form families, and raise children within a religious community. That assumption once reflected reality. Today, sadly, it increasingly does not. The rise of singleness, whether through delayed marriage, p...

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Shakespeare was Not an Open-Borders Advocate — He Was Arguing for Order and Humane Treatment, By James Reed

There is a recurring habit in modern debate: take a fragment of William Shakespeare, lift it out of context, and recruit it into whatever contemporary cause happens to be fashionable. Immigration is simply the latest battleground. But the attempt to turn Shakespeare into a spokesman for "open borders" collapses under even modest historical scrutiny...

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California: Leading America’s Descent into Third-World Conditions! By Charles Taylor (Florida)

California was once the golden beacon of the American Dream — Hollywood glamour, Silicon Valley innovation, fertile Central Valley agriculture, and a lifestyle envied worldwide. In 2026, that image is fading fast. Under decades of one-party progressive governance, the state is exhibiting classic symptoms of third-world decline: rampant property cri...

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