recent posts
- An Anti-“Hate Crime” Scheme Fails — Again
- Is Our “Equality” Obsession Destroying Our Nation?
- Digital Stepford Wives? Men Are Falling in Love With AI-generated Female Influencers
- Mask Drop: Democrats Come Closer to Saying, “Let’s Just Ban All Guns”
- Wealthy Leftists: Stealing Is OK for Us — and Sometimes Murder, Too
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Category: The Enemy Within
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By Selwyn Duke See if you can finish this thought: If tea drinkers are more likely to vote for a given political party, that party will encourage tea drinking. If bicycle riders are more likely to vote for a given party, that party will encourage bicycle riding. If newly naturalized immigrants are more likely to…
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By Selwyn Duke If you think wokeness is dead, one Mr. Barry Neufeld might like a word. After all, the Canadian ex-education official has been ordered to pay $750,000 to sexual devolutionary (“LGBTQ”) teachers in his district. The reason? It’s for “injury to their dignity, feelings and self-respect.”
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By Selwyn Duke In 1968, British politician Enoch Powell warned that the U.K.’s immigration policies were akin to “watching a nation busily engaged in heaping up its own funeral pyre.” They would ensure the demographic transformation of British cities, he predicted. He later warned of “civil war,” too. In reaction, Powell was expelled from the…
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By Selwyn Duke “The dog is man’s best friend” the saying goes. Why, we humans argue about most everything, notes website History and Headlines. “If there is one thing most people agree on, though, it is dogs,” it continues. “How can you not love them?” Maybe one Nerdeen Kiswani can answer that question. After all, Kiswani,…
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By Selwyn Duke Is the cynical quip that “sooner or later you must pay for every good deed” actually true? One could wonder with how President Donald Trump’s first year accomplishments are routinely ignored. In fact, there’s an obvious theory as to why there’s incessant (and biased) reporting on the Epstein files. If the Democrats…
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By Selwyn Duke Whether or not the pen really “is mightier than the sword,” as Sir Edward Bulwer-Lytton wrote, words can move mountains. As with music, they have charms that can soothe or incense — or inspire opposition to the powerful. So it’s no surprise that the powerful want to control words via censorship. Enter Western Europe,…
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By Selwyn Duke
