Aboriginal groups must pay the price for green activism

Andrew Bolt The Herald Sun December 19, 2024 Australians identifying as Aboriginals have used heritage laws to try to stop 30 mining and pipeline projects but just – surprise! – two green energy schemes. Let me put it this way. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Heritage Protection Act has been used against 30 projectsContinue reading “Aboriginal groups must pay the price for green activism”

‘Evil’ Covid ‘Vaccines’ Caused ‘Turbo Cancer’ ‘Explosion’

Frank Bergman Slay News December 17, 2024 A world-renowned professor of oncology has issued a chilling warning about Covid mRNA “vaccines” after concluding that the “evil” injections have triggered a global “explosion” in cases of deadly “turbo cancers.” The warning was issued by Angus Dalgleish, a professor of oncology at St George’s, University of London.Continue reading “‘Evil’ Covid ‘Vaccines’ Caused ‘Turbo Cancer’ ‘Explosion’”

Doctor Suspended for Criticising COVID Vaccines Wins Lawsuit Against Regulators

The Supreme Court of Queensland found there was no basis for AHPRA’s assumptions that Dr. Bay contravened any relevant legislation. 65 Save By Alfred Bui 12/16/2024Updated: 12/17/2024 0:00 6:34 An Australian doctor who was suspended for saying COVID-19 vaccines are dangerous has won a lawsuit against local medical regulators and regained his registration. Dr. WilliamContinue reading “Doctor Suspended for Criticising COVID Vaccines Wins Lawsuit Against Regulators”

Australia Day should be changed to the anniversary of the day Australians voted against the Voice

Andrew Bolt The Herald Sun December 15, 2024 We’ve had two flashing signs in the past week that Australians have had it with dividing us by race, even if Labor still doesn’t get that its game is up. The latest is the decision by the Melbourne Storm NRL club to drop regular Welcome to CountryContinue reading “Australia Day should be changed to the anniversary of the day Australians voted against the Voice”

Anti-nuclear Bowen is stuck in a fantasy world of his own

Judith Sloan The Australian December 17, 2024 Picture the scene. It’s a “town and gown” event being held at the University of Chicago. An entrepreneurial businessman approaches a well-known economics professor. He outlines his business proposition, describing the market, the potential demand, the technical requirements, the costs. The professor’s response is simple: if it’s suchContinue reading “Anti-nuclear Bowen is stuck in a fantasy world of his own”

Fake history is flourishing across the West. Just consider these three cases

Nigel Biggar The Australian December 16, 2024 Throughout the English-speaking world elites are falling over themselves to believe the very worst of their own countries. Let’s consider Canada. In May 2021 an Indian band in Kamloops, British Columbia claimed ground-penetrating radar had discovered “soil disturbances” that evidenced unmarked graves containing the remains of 215 “missingContinue reading “Fake history is flourishing across the West. Just consider these three cases”

I’m dreaming of a wet Christmas

Rebecca Weisser TThe Spectator Australia14 December 2024 May your days be merry celebrating dud climate change predictions. The snow is snowing, the wind is blowing, admittedly not in Sydney, but Seoul has been blanketed by the heaviest snowfall in five decades, an arctic blast has buried parts of the Great Lakes of North America, andContinue reading “I’m dreaming of a wet Christmas”

Joe Biden gets lost in Trump’s shadow

Peggy Noonan WSJ The Australian December 16, 2024 Like Donald Trump or dislike him, hate him or love him, doesn’t matter; you have to see that what we are witnessing now is truly remarkable, with no precedent. He is essentially functioning as the sitting president. In the past, a man was elected and sat inContinue reading “Joe Biden gets lost in Trump’s shadow”

Voters are furious, but don’t bet on change

Alexander Downer The Australian December 15, 2024 The year 2024 has been one of elections. More than 60 countries, containing around half of the world’s population, have been to the polls. The media will tell you it has been a tough time for incumbents. And 2025 also promises to be heavy going for them. We’reContinue reading “Voters are furious, but don’t bet on change”

A Christian revival is under way

Ayaan Hirsi Ali The Spectator Australia 14 December 2024 This is my second Christmas as a Christian. As an atheist, I had dismissed the bright lights and customs of Christmas as traditions that had evolved to keep our spirits up as the cold of winter creeps in. But the more I learn about, and participateContinue reading “A Christian revival is under way”

Regional tourist hotspot Byron Bay ‘at war’ amid spike in anit-Semitism

Jake McCallum The Saturday Telegraph December 14, 2024 Jewish families facing devastating doxxings and appearing on “mass-circulated boycott lists” are learning self-defence or fleeing the communities they call home amid a shocking rise in anti-Semitism in regional Australia. As NSW Police descend on Sydney’s eastern suburbs in a show of force to stamp out targetedContinue reading “Regional tourist hotspot Byron Bay ‘at war’ amid spike in anit-Semitism”

Cattle, methane and the disturbing questions over Bovaer

Brenda Baletti The Conservative Woman December 12, 2024 In a rambling article in yesterday’s Times, Daniel Finkelstein discussed the backlash against the announcement by the Danish dairy giant Arla that it is adding the chemical agent Bovaer to cattle feed to reduce methane emissions. The former adviser to John Major and William Hague, who nowContinue reading “Cattle, methane and the disturbing questions over Bovaer”

Opening the Overton window

Senator Babet The Spectator Australia December 10, 2024 Liberal leader Peter Dutton is winning in the polls as he continues to take his cues from the United Australia Party. Mr Dutton’s latest election promise – to drop the Aboriginal flag from government press conferences – is something I have been doing and advocating for sinceContinue reading “Opening the Overton window”

Striking a blow for men – and against media bias

Sarah Game The Spectator Australia December 10, 2024 Mainstream media often blithely dismisses viewpoints or ideas from what it considers unfashionable or undesirable sources. I experienced another example of it recently, when a successful initiative I have driven in South Australia was brushed off and disparaged, simply because of its connection to One Nation. ForContinue reading “Striking a blow for men – and against media bias”

From 1991, a prescient warning about the globalist agenda

John Ellwood The Conservative Woman December 9, 2024 AS A student of International Relations in the early 1970s I had no idea of the depths of my ignorance. The motto of my alma mater, the London School of Economics, is ‘rerum cognoscere causas’, an abbreviation of Virgil’s phrase ‘Felix, qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas’, meaningContinue reading “From 1991, a prescient warning about the globalist agenda”

Australia can’t wimp out on migration debate

Tony Abbott The Australian December 11, 2024 John Howard was right when he famously declared, in the run-up to the 2001 election: “We shall decide who comes to this country and the circumstances under which they come”. Immigration has such ramifications for the economy, for society and potentially for security too that it has toContinue reading “Australia can’t wimp out on migration debate”

Why Americans fear for Britain

Roger Kimball The Spectator Australia 10 December 2024 As an American Anglophile, I find it difficult not to look upon the news emanating from Great Britain and despair. ‘Terminally ill pensioners could end their lives earlier to spare loved ones six figure tax bills, experts have warned,’ says the Telegraph. A Christian preacher in WestContinue reading “Why Americans fear for Britain”

Guillotine orders: a constitutional aberration?

Gabriël A. Moens AM The Spectator Australia 11 December 2024 It has been widely reported that the Senate, on November 29, ramrodded 32 bills through the Senate without any meaningful debate. Some of the legislation was very contentious, if not controversial. For example, the Senate, with bipartisan support, adopted the under-16 social media ban. CommentatorsContinue reading “Guillotine orders: a constitutional aberration?”