The Noble Savage: The Deep Crisis of Modern Civilisation

The article The Noble Savage by Sofia Karstens, published by the Brownstone Institute, cuts to the heart of the civilisational crisis we face today. It is not merely political, economic, or technological — it is existential. At stake is the very meaning of what it is to be human. Drawing on Eisenhower's lesser-known warning about the dangers of a "...

Continue reading

The Next Phase: The Empire Strikes Back — Taking Down the World’s Oil Infrastructure

The headline from The New York Times, relayed via The Gateway Pundit, (link below) is stark: Iran is reportedly preparing high-volume missile barrages targeting Gulf refineries, ports, and energy infrastructure if fighting resumes. This marks the next dangerous phase in the ongoing Israel-Iran conflict — a war increasingly defined not just by missi...

Continue reading

Against the Intellectuals: Too Smart for Their Own Good

Highly intelligent people are often admired as the natural rulers of modern society. Schools reward them, universities cultivate them, corporations recruit them, and governments increasingly rely upon "experts" to manage complex systems. Yet intelligence contains a strange paradox: people who are exceptionally smart are often too smart for their ow...

Continue reading

The Problem of Medical Gaslighting and the Flight from Truth

The article by the Vigilant Fox, (linked below), captures a telling moment in modern medicine: when challenged on systemic failures in medical publishing and research integrity, the response is often to blame the patient. Instead of addressing flawed incentives, suppressed data, or rushed science, institutions reflexively accuse patients of misunde...

Continue reading

Academia has Sold its Soul; What Little Soul it Had

There was a time when the university scholar was imagined as something close to a secular monk: poor perhaps, eccentric perhaps, but devoted above all to truth. The old academic ideal was not built around branding, metrics, impact statements, or grant capture. It was built around intellectual seriousness. Scholars pursued ideas because they believe...

Continue reading

Britain’s Dystopian Nightmare: Arrested for “Worrying” in the Emerging Police State

The latest headline from The Gateway Pundit paints a picture that feels ripped from a near-future dystopian novel: 20 people arrested every single day in the UK for "worrying" — along with a journalist banned from British airports and a cycling agency cracking down on dissent. Welcome to modern Britain, where expressing the wrong opinion, asking aw...

Continue reading

The Creeping Technocracy of the Great Reset: Accelerating Toward Total Control

Patrick Wood's latest assessment on Substack pulls no punches. The veteran critic of technocracy has been tracking these currents for decades, and his recent work highlights a sobering reality: the Great Reset is not a conspiracy theory, it's an openly declared elite project moving at record speed. What began as Klaus Schwab's 2020 slogan — "You'll...

Continue reading

The Face of Sharia Law: Feminism’s Uncomfortable Collision

There is a growing and increasingly difficult debate across the West about the relationship between multiculturalism, women's rights, religious freedom, and social cohesion. Much of this debate centres on conservative interpretations of Sharia law and the challenge liberal democracies face when cultural or religious practices appear to conflict wit...

Continue reading

The Selective Outrage Over Myth and Casting: Why Western Culture Alone Gets Rewritten in the Cultural Wars

In a recent Guardian opinion piece, Elon Musk's criticism of casting Lupita Nyong'o as Helen of Troy in Christopher Nolan's upcoming Odyssey adaptation is portrayed as unhinged Right-wing hysteria. According to the article, Musk's objections boil down to three main claims: the casting is historically inaccurate to a mythological poem; Nyong'o (Peop...

Continue reading

Postmodernism Killed the Humanities

The humanities once stood near the centre of Western civilisation. Philosophy asked what truth was. History preserved cultural memory. Literature explored the human condition. Theology wrestled with morality, suffering, and transcendence. Even when scholars disagreed, the humanities retained a civilisational confidence: there existed such a thing a...

Continue reading

Lessons from the Great Depression for Aussies Surviving Present Hard Times

Hard times are beginning to sweep across the Western world again. Australians feel it in rising food prices, energy costs, housing stress, insecure employment, collapsing trust in institutions, and the growing sense that the comfortable post-Cold War era is ending. Above all hangs the darkening international atmosphere: wars spreading across Europe...

Continue reading

Trump’s Lawfare Counterstrike: Fighting Fire with Fire

In a dramatic reversal of fortunes, Donald Trump is now reportedly preparing to use the legal system against those who spent years weaponising it against him. As detailed in recent reporting, the Trump administration and his legal team are exploring ways to hold accountable the prosecutors, officials, and political actors behind the unprecedented c...

Continue reading

One Nation and Social Media

One Nation has achieved something that most establishment parties still barely understand: politics in the social media age is no longer won simply through policy documents, press conferences, or carefully scripted talking points. Attention itself has become political currency, and humour is now one of the most powerful weapons in public life. For ...

Continue reading

Of Course, Joe Biden is Mentally Incapable of Standing Trial — And No Jury Would Convict

The latest revelation from a former prosecutor, as reported by The Gateway Pundit, is both obvious and damning: there is arguably more evidence of wrongdoing by Joe Biden than by his son Hunter, yet Biden is now being shielded by claims of mental incapacity. The same system that aggressively prosecuted Hunter Biden suddenly discovers that the forme...

Continue reading

The Manic Left Attack Senator Price on Immigration

A strong defence of Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price is straightforward: this is a blatant attempt by parts of the Left and media to manufacture outrage and enforce speech taboos on immigration. The core issue isn't some 30-second clip twisted out of context. It's that Australia is experiencing record-high net overseas migration under the current L...

Continue reading

Old School Resilience

There's a kind of resilience that now feels almost alien in the modern West. People born in the 1960s and 1970s often grew up in conditions that today would be described as "hardship," yet at the time were simply regarded as ordinary life. The recent reflections circulating online about this "old school resilience" strike a nerve because many young...

Continue reading

"Giggle v Tickle": When Courts Redefine Gender and Biological Reality

The latest chapter in Australia's most defining legal battle has concluded: Giggle for Girls v Roxanne Tickle. Sall Grover originally created a social media app exclusively for women; a digital space intended for connection free from male intrusion. Roxanne Tickle, a transgender woman, joined the platform, was subsequently removed based on gender-r...

Continue reading

Outline of Argument for a High Court Challenge to the Full Federal Court Ruling in “Giggle v Tickle”

The central vulnerability of the Full Federal Court's ruling in Giggle for Girls Pty Ltd v Tickle [2026] FCAFC 64 lies precisely here: the statutory silence of the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 (Cth) (SDA) on the meaning of "sex." By failing to define "sex" explicitly, the Act has invited the judiciary to assume the role of philosopher and linguist. ...

Continue reading

The UK Supreme Court’s Masterclass in Statutory Sanity: Why “For Women Scotland” (2025) Offers a Superior Path to the Australian Federal Court’s Approach in “Giggle v Tickle”

The contrast between the UK Supreme Court's unanimous decision in For Women Scotland Ltd v The Scottish Ministers [2025] UKSC 16 (16 April 2025) and the Full Federal Court of Australia's ruling in Giggle for Girls Pty Ltd v Tickle [2026] FCAFC 64 (15 May 2026) could not be starker. Where the Australian court embraced a fluid, multi-factorial, and c...

Continue reading

“Men Declaring Themselves Women”!!! A Legal Thought Experiment After “Giggle v Tickle”

The Full Federal Court's ruling in Giggle for Girls Pty Ltd v Tickle raises questions extending well beyond social media apps. The deeper issue concerns how institutions are now expected to define "sex" and "gender identity" under Australian anti-discrimination law. For decades, universities, corporations, and government agencies have operated wome...

Continue reading