Just in Case: Trump Admin Getting Nuclear Bomb Bunkers! By Chris Knight (Florida)

 The Trump administration's inner circle is reportedly digging in — literally. As the Iran conflict drags into its second month with no clear off-ramp, whispers from the bunker industry suggest that at least two senior Cabinet members have gone full doomsday prepper, snapping up private underground fortresses from Texas-based Atlas Survival Sh...

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Shadows of the Dragon: DHS Chief Mullin's Stark Warning on China's Belt and Road Path to Global Domination, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

 In the high-stakes arena of global geopolitics, where superpowers jockey for influence amid escalating tensions — from the Middle East war to trade wars — few threats loom as insidiously as China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Fresh off his nomination by President Trump to head the Department of Homeland Security, Sen. Markwayne Mullin (R-...

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Robots to Build Houses for Migrants? By Tom North

In the relentless Australian housing crisis — where median home prices in major cities like Sydney and Melbourne hover well above $1 million, rents devour incomes, and young Aussies increasingly feel locked out of the dream — the debate over mass immigration rages on. One side argues that high net migration (hundreds of thousands annually in recent...

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The Draft's Velvet Shadow: Conscription of Women/Feminists in the Age of Escalating Conflict, By Mrs. (Dr) Abigail Knight (Florida)

As the Middle East conflict intensifies — now a full-blown U.S.-led air campaign against Iran dubbed Operation Epic Fury — the spectre of conscription is creeping back into American discourse. In a recent Fox News interview on Sunday Morning Futures, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt addressed mounting fears head-on. When host Maria Bart...

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The Coming Seizure of Kharg Island, By Charles Taylor (Florida)

The ongoing war in the Middle East, now involving direct U.S. and Israeli military actions against Iran, has entered a phase where the Trump administration is actively exploring ways to accelerate its conclusion. Among the emerging options, one stands out for its potential economic impact: the seizure of Kharg Island, a small but extraordinarily vi...

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The Problem with Blaming the Gun: A Conservative Defence of Firearm Rights, By John Steele and Chris Knight (Florida)

 Jay Rogers' March 8, 2026, piece in American Thinker delivers a sharp, data-driven takedown of the Leftist impulse to scapegoat firearms — especially "assault weapons" — for America's violence problems. Titled "The Problem with Blaming the Gun," the article labels such rhetoric not merely disingenuous but outright dangerous, as it misdirects ...

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When the Army Asks Soldiers if They Want Nail Polish! By Richard Miller (London)

 Just when you think modern life couldn't get any stranger, along comes a news item that sounds like the plot of Black Mirror crossed with a Monty Python sketch: as war in the Middle East escalates and global tensions spike, the UK Ministry of Defence is reportedly surveying troops on whether male soldiers should be allowed to wear make‑up, na...

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How the Vatican has Betrayed Western Civilisation, By Peter West

 The Vatican's recent policies, especially under Pope Francis and his successor Pope Leo XIV, represent a profound betrayal of Western civilisation from a conservative, pro-Western perspective. Far from safeguarding the Christian heritage that built Europe and shaped the modern world, the Holy See has actively facilitated demographic transform...

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Whatever Happened to Morality? A Conservative Lament in an Age of Relativism, By Mrs. Vera West

In the whirlwind of modern life, where social media dictates trends and progressive ideologies reshape institutions overnight, one can't help but ask: whatever happened to morality? From a conservative perspective, the answer is stark and sobering — morality hasn't just faded; it's been systematically eroded by a culture of relativism, secularism, ...

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Ok Donald, Then What? By Charles Taylor (Florida)

 The Washington Post's March 7, 2026, report on a classified U.S. National Intelligence Council assessment delivers a blunt reality check amid the escalating U.S.-Israeli military campaign against Iran: even a large-scale assault is unlikely to oust the Islamic Republic's deeply entrenched military and clerical establishment. The regime's stru...

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Imagine … Imagine that the International Students Stayed Home! By Professor X

Imagine a scenario where, starting around 2027-2028, Australia's international students collectively decided to stay home. No more arrivals from China, India, Nepal, Vietnam, or elsewhere. The massive pipeline of overseas enrolments dries up overnight. Universities, which had come to depend heavily on these high-fee-paying students, face a sudden r...

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When War Hits the Pharmacy Shelf: How the Iran Conflict Threatens Global Medicine Supply, By Mrs. Vera West and Brian Simpson

 The ongoing war involving Iran and Western forces has exposed a vulnerability most of us never think about until it affects us personally: the fragility of the global pharmaceutical supply chain. With strategic maritime routes like the Strait of Hormuz effectively closed and global shipping in chaos, the consequences are now rippling far beyo...

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Iran War Exposes Australia’s Fuel Folly, George Christensen

As oil rockets past $100 a barrel and war in the Middle East threatens one of the world's most vital energy arteries, Australians are discovering an uncomfortable truth: our country has almost no fuel security. The Iran war has sent global energy markets into turmoil. Brent crude surged dramatically in the opening days of the conflict amid fears th...

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The Spiritual Battle Behind the Information War, By Peter West

 In an age when newsfeeds are curated by algorithms and every headline is designed to provoke outrage, it is tempting to believe that the greatest threat facing society is merely technological: fake news, deepfakes, and AI-driven disinformation campaigns. Yet for those with a Christian worldview, the conflict unfolding across our digital lands...

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How Can Women Trust the System Given the Failure of Judges to Enforce the Rule of Law? By Mrs. Brittany Miller (London)

The recent case highlighted by Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni powerfully illustrates why many women — and citizens in general — might struggle to trust the justice and immigration systems in countries like Italy. In early March 2026, Meloni publicly condemned court rulings that blocked the detention and deportation of dangerous foreign crimi...

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Doom in a Petri Dish: When Technology Forgets its Boundaries, By Brian Simpson

 In a development that sounds like it belongs in an episode of Black Mirror, an Australian biotech firm, Cortical Labs, has reportedly trained clusters of human brain cells grown in a laboratory to interact with the classic video game Doom. At first glance this may sound like little more than a bizarre scientific curiosity. But the experiment ...

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What Would Major Douglas Think of the AI Revolution? By James Reed

If the early twentieth-century engineer and economic theorist C. H. Douglas could step into the twenty-first century, the first thing that would strike him would not be the internet, smartphones, or even artificial intelligence. It would be something much more familiar: the same economic contradiction he identified over a century ago, now magnified...

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The Largest Oil Supply Disruption in History — And Why Australia Should Be Worried, By Paul Walker

Reports circulating in global financial media, including CNBC, suggest that the world may now be facing the largest oil supply disruption ever recorded. The cause is the rapidly escalating conflict involving Iran and Western powers in the Persian Gulf, centred around one of the most strategically important locations in the global energy system: the...

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Villages: Human Scale Living Consistent with Douglas Social Credit Principles, By Brian Simpson

The recent study highlighted in Phys.org (from the "Summende Dörfer" or "Buzzing Villages" project at Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany) offers a fresh perspective on rural villages as vibrant, underappreciated ecological assets. Researchers examined 40 villages in the Würzburg region and the Rhön area, focusing on five key habitat t...

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Even if There was Global Warming (Which There is Not), it is Not “Unusual” or Human Caused: Study, Climate Change Dispatch, By James Reed

The article from Climate Change Dispatch (a great site known for promoting climate sceptic perspectives) highlights a recent 2026 analysis by Hatton: DOI: 10.53234/scc202603/05. It uses temperature reconstructions derived from the Vostok ice core in Antarctica to argue that the modern ~1.1°C global warming over the past century (roughly since the 1...

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