The lawyer famous for his fraudulent claims and support from frauds in the media wants to make amends as he faces more jail time.
Year: 2025
Is the U.S. Vulnerable to a Drone Sneak Attack?
After Israel’s surprise drone attack on Iranian nuclear targets, many are concerned that China could be preparing for something similar in the United States.
China Caught Playing With Bioweapons Again
Two operatives of the Chinese Communist Party smuggled a biological pathogen into the U.S. in an attempt to make the University of Michigan the next Wuhan.
WEIRD Protesters Should Stay Home
Europe’s and America’s wannabe white messiahs find out they are not wanted or welcome to interfere in the policies of foreign countries.
What Really Happened to Pride Month
After a quarter century of bullying from the left, Americans welcome the relief.
Everything You Don’t Care to Know About ‘Your Friends and Neighbors’
From promising beginnings, AppleTV+ delivers a disappointing series that proves the whole can be much less than the sum of its parts.
Authorized and Unauthorized Riots
A helpful primer for confused citizens about the differences between sanctioned and unsanctioned political violence.
Trump Should Take Note of Italy’s Cultural Strides
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has promoted Western civilization through the arts in ways the Trump administration would do well to imitate.
ICE and the Screams of the Damned
There is no reasoning with the irrational souls who want nothing but for the rest of us to join them in their hell.
Bureaucratic Masters
A recent book by USAID Insider Mark Moyar shows how bureaucracy works in predictable and corrupting ways—especially when it came to sabotaging the agenda of President Trump.
Five Years Since the Death of George Floyd: The Damage Continues, Part 2
False narratives perpetuated by the George Floyd/BLM riots of 2020 feed attitudes leading to riots like those in Los Angeles and around the country today.
LA Is Proof Trump Was Right About Mass Immigration
The current round of LA Riots shows that importing masses of foreign-born migrants into our country was a recipe for disloyalty and disunion.
Confessions of a Bibliophile in the Twilight of Literacy
The capacity for self-government, which depends on a well-read populace, may die along with books.
Recapturing the Color-Blind Constitution
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s opinion and Justice Clarence Thomas’s concurrence in a recent discrimination case suggest that the Court is moving in the right direction.
The Anti-Biden Son of Scranton
Robert Casey, a champion of America’s most vulnerable minority, died without regrets—because Casey was everything Joe Biden was not.
American Intifada
Violence will keep expanding as long as it’s tolerated in the name of anti-colonialism and other progressive causes.
Mexico’s ‘Perfect Dictatorship’ and American Resistance
Mexico’s rule under what Mario Vargas Llosa labeled a “perfect dictatorship” has not been seriously challenged by anyone, until the rise of Donald Trump.
Senator Fetterman Humiliated in Wife’s New Book about ‘Radical Tenderness’
Mrs. Fetterman is right to explore the subject of vulnerability and tenderness, but her understanding—and her own practice—is weak.
BBB Is a Win For MAGA
Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” budget is as close to as good as it gets without departing from the realm of possibility.
What Happens if Russia Nukes Ukraine?
The June 1 Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian nuclear assets have invited, but not yet inspired, a nuclear retaliation. Who directed them?
Libertarian Grandstanders Target Trump’s Big, Beautiful Bill
President Trump never promised to eliminate the $36 trillion national debt that took us decades to accumulate. So what gives?
How Democrats Can Stop Alienating Young Men: Some Unsolicited Advice
When it comes to courting young male voters, policy matters more than syntax.
A Counterintuitive Source of Rising Anti-Semitism
When Jews support left-wing movements and causes, they should not be surprised by the resulting anti-Semitism.
Florida Delivers a Stunning Defeat to DEI
Santa Ono, the DEI fanatic and former president of the University of Michigan, was rejected by Florida’s Board of Governors in his bid to become University of Florida’s new president.
Five Years Since the Death of George Floyd: The Damage Continues, Part 1
There is no evidence that Floyd’s death had anything to do with race, but that fact doesn’t stop the narrative from being promulgated.
Shutting the Door on a Biden-Era Immigration Cheat Code
Trump has ended the Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela (CHNV) parole program with the blessing of the Supreme Court and the free rides resulting from Biden’s deception end now.
‘Bring Me Water’: An Appreciation of the Editor’s Art
As AI and a general lack of curiosity takes hold in our culture, we’d do well to remember that the editor’s art is to draw art out of his writers.
The Democrats’ War on Small-Town Values and Property Values
Democrats are taking aim at small-town living, calling it “segregated” and “snobby” and attempting to regulate it out of existence.
Why ‘Tit for Tat’ Lawfare Is Necessary
Public trust in the judiciary is collapsing. To restore it, conservatives need to stop restraining themselves in the face of leftist lawfare.
Fur Babies Are Replacing Actual Babies
Is America’s growing deep affection for pets correlated to increased abortions and birth rate declines?
Amid Courtroom Spectacles, Senate Should Confirm Emil Bove
Bove’s nomination should be embraced by conservatives and endorsed by Republican senators.
DEI: The Democrats’ Concrete Shoes
Young men of all racial and economic backgrounds know they’re the losers in DEI and are not interested in voting for it anymore.
Yes, President Trump’s Tariffs Are Legal
Congress long ago delegated to the executive branch much of its power to regulate foreign trade, and it is a good thing it did.
Futurism, AI, and the Destructive Power of Speed
With an indifference to all things that came before, AI Futurists seek to level and sever all connections with the past.
The Pope of the Singularity
Pope Leo XIV has signaled his intention to focus his social teaching on what is an emerging opportunity, and threat, to humanity: the development of artificial intelligence (AI).
Zionism Should Not Be a Conservative Sine Qua Non
The Zionist litmus test that the conservative establishment imposes on its members is improper and harmful. It's time the right end its Israel obsession.
What Trump Means for Europe
Donald Trump has prevailed by drawing his sword and confronting the mainstream media, the woke universities, and the the entire ideological edifice of the 20th century. European rightists should cheer him.
Rethinking Absolute Judicial Independence
Trump’s fight with the courts exposes a defect in our Constitution: a lack of judicial accountability. It's time we hold these Solons in black robes accountable.
Remembering Joseph de Maistre
Joseph de Maistre was a hardened realist, a counterrevolutionary, a Catholic, a defender of papal power, but most importantly, an illiberal theorist worth remembering.
What We Are Reading: June-July 2025
Short reviews of 'The Evolution of Human Sexuality' by Donald Symons, and 'Fool or Physician' by Anthony Daniels.
More Hysteria from Douglas Murray
'On Democracies and Death Cults' serves up neoconservative hysterics that are typical of its author. In Douglas Murray's narrow thinking, you either stand with Israel and democratic values or you belong to a death cult.
From the Finland Station
Sean McMeekin's 'To Overthrow the World' deftly traces the entire history of communism as both idea and governing policy—a feat not seen since Edmund Wilson's 'To the Finland Station.'
War Is With Us Forever
Richard Overy argues in 'Why War?' that war is an inevitable effect of causes deeply embedded within human nature.
Books in Brief: June-July 2025
Short reviews of 'Last Call for Bud Light: The Fall and Future of America’s Favorite Beer' by Anson Frericks, and 'The Cultured Thug Handbook: A Guide to Radical Right-Wing Thought' by Mike Maxwell.
War Is Hell, but ‘Warfare’ Tells It Like It Is
'Warfare' shows the brutal, on-the-ground reality of the Iraq War, which its author experienced firsthand.
The Second Indochina War Revisited
Its time to cut through all of the confusion and misinformation clouding the so-called Vietnam War.
Dispossessing America, Again
The outsourcing of American science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) is happening on U.S. soil thanks to the tech CEOs and their allies.
Soldier and Scribe of the Old West
James Warner Bellah was a wild risk-taking airman in both World Wars who went on to shape Hollywood's Golden Era with iconic Westerns.
The Mark Carney Paradox
Mark Carney fights with nothing but vague words and emoting but, somehow, he gets the best of Trump. This is a strange paradox.
Turbulent Times
Localized backlash over immigrant misconduct in Britain may be the prelude to nationwide turbulence—even civil war.

















































