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...

Continue reading

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...

Continue reading

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...

Continue reading

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...

Continue reading

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...

Continue reading

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...

Continue reading

Elites are Necessary — But the Type of Elite Matters, By Professor X

It is fashionable in modern politics to denounce "elites" as if the very existence of them were the problem. That instinct is understandable — people see arrogance, detachment, and at times outright corruption — but it is also historically naïve. Every functioning society has elites. The real question is not whether elites exist, but what kind of e...

Continue reading

The Fall of Trump: When the White Working Class Walks Away, By Chris Knight (Florida)

The single biggest pillar of Donald Trump's political success has always been the white working class — non-college-educated white voters who powered his 2016 upset, his 2024 comeback, and the realignment that made the Republican Party competitive again in the industrial heartland and rural America. By early 2026, that pillar is cracking. Recent po...

Continue reading

Epstein’s London Flats: The Smoking Gun of an International Abuse Network, By Mrs. Brittany Miller (London)

The latest BBC investigation, based on millions of pages from the released Epstein files, pulls back the curtain on something many have long suspected: Jeffrey Epstein didn't just run a sordid operation out of his New York mansion, Little St. James island, or Palm Beach residence. He operated a sophisticated, cross-border trafficking network with d...

Continue reading

Hungary’s Going Gay? TV Channel Dedicated to 24-hour LGBTQI Programs Will Soon Launch! ReMix News

Hungary will soon be getting a new government under Tisza's Péter Magyar, but the landscape is already shifting, with a new LGBTQ-themed online television channel called "Rainbow" ("Szivárvány") TV in the works to broadcast programs targeting the LGBTQI community 24 hours a day. The entrepreneur behind the project, whose identity is being kept secr...

Continue reading

“Lest We Forget” Means Preparing for What’s Coming: Peace Through Strength in a Fallen World, By John Steele

I write this on the evening of April 25, 2026 — ANZAC Day — when dawn services across Australia and New Zealand echoed with the familiar refrain: Lest we forget. I marched with a declining number of my Vietnam War buddies. Poppies pinned to lapels, the Last Post ringing out, families honouring the young lives lost at Gallipoli, on the Western Front...

Continue reading

When Medicine Closes Ranks: Why Dissent Must Be Protected, By Mrs. Vera West and Peter West

There are few areas of modern medicine as emotionally charged, and as socially contested, as the treatment of gender distress in young people. That alone should make it a field where caution, humility, and above all diversity of professional opinion are not just tolerated but actively encouraged. The recent case of Australian psychiatrist Andrew Am...

Continue reading

When Christian Preaching becomes a Police Matter: A Warning from Britain, By Richard Miller (London)

There is something deeply unsettling about watching a man speak in public about God and seeing police move in as if a crime has already been committed. The recent arrest of a street preacher in Watford is not an isolated curiosity; it is a window into a broader shift in modern Western societies, where speech itself is increasingly treated as a pote...

Continue reading

This Court Ruling Should Be Replicated in the West, By Mrs Vera West and Peter West

There are moments when a court decision cuts through years of ideological fog and restates something simple, even unfashionable: that law is not infinitely malleable, and that not every claimed "right" can be conjured into existence by judicial creativity. The recent decision of the Kenyan Court of Appeal does exactly that. In overturning a 2022 ru...

Continue reading

Gaslighting: The Way of Modernity, By Brian Simpson

The temptation is to treat political "gaslighting" as a pathology of one figure or one administration, an excess of personality, a kind of rhetorical bad weather that rolls in and out with electoral cycles. That reading is comforting, but it is also shallow. If anything, what we are seeing in controversies around figures like Donald Trump is not an...

Continue reading

Greater Love: The Light of Sacrifice on ANZAC Day, By John Steele

 Today, 25 April 2026, Australians and New Zealanders will rise before dawn across cities, towns, and remote communities. At war memorials, beaches, and cenotaphs, we will stand in silence as the first light breaks — remembering the ANZACs who landed at Gallipoli 111 years ago, and all who have served our nations in war, conflict, and peace. T...

Continue reading

Clouds of Contamination: The Hidden Pesticide Reservoir Above Our Heads, By Professor X

We have always looked up at the clouds with a sense of purity. They drift across the sky like innocent white sails, bringing rain that feels cleansing and life-giving. Yet an important new scientific study has revealed a far more troubling reality: those same clouds are acting as vast, moving reservoirs for pesticides, quietly transporting and conc...

Continue reading

The Young Won’t Fight: A Symptom of Deep Western Anomie and Alienation, By Richard Miller (London)

A new UK poll (John Smith Centre at Glasgow University, April 2026) of 2,000 people aged 16-29 delivers a stark verdict: 50% say they would never take up arms for Britain under any circumstances. Only 38% would consider it "under some circumstances," with the rest unsure. Top worries? Financial pressures, job insecurity, and housing instability. Op...

Continue reading

The Tankers are Stopping: What Europe and Asia Face When the Oil Runs Dry, By Richard Miller (London)

 In the shadow of the escalating crisis in the Strait of Hormuz, a quiet clock is ticking. The last oil tankers that departed the Persian Gulf before the conflict intensified are arriving at their destinations this month (April 2026). After that, the flow of Middle Eastern crude and LNG slows to a trickle — or stops entirely. Strategic reserve...

Continue reading

The Relentless Decline of Society: Signs of Decay, Data of Nuance, and a Ticking Time Bomb, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

Michael Snyder's recent Substack piece paints a grim mosaic of accelerating social breakdown in America: surging mass shootings (116 in early 2026, 36% ahead of pace), family executions, disabled perpetrators turning violent, brazen armored truck heists, cars rammed into police stations, teen street takeovers in upscale areas, cultural shifts towar...

Continue reading