In today’s Europe, evermore secular and unaware of its own history, dynastic orders act as custodians of centuries-old traditions of chivalry and the values associated therewith.
Historians will struggle to find another nation so thoroughly deceived by a small clique of people cocooned in taxpayer-funded NGOs or state employment.
An influx of Turks raises concerns about radicalization, sectarian divides, and political shifts.
Western governments must make the protection of religious freedom a non-negotiable part of their foreign policy.
Unity by the lowest common denominator is not something the Bride of Christ wishes for and must thus be carefully avoided.
Only with our collective strength can we preserve our cultural particularities, protect our streets, nightlife, and festivals from terror and crime.
Brigitte Bardot was more than just a beauty: she was an allegory of France.
When schools remove Christmas symbols, they are not making space for diversity; they are signalling that the majority’s culture is unworthy of being observed or continued.
Parisian feminists prefer wasting their energy defending the rights of a statue over preventing attacks on real women.
What is at stake is more than the survival of a population: it is the preservation of a living heritage that links Europe to its earliest Christian roots.
We have been told repeatedly to be reasonable, to compromise. But the new totalitarians do not seek dialogue with us; they seek submission. Every concession—every retracted tweet, every groveling apology, every updated syllabus—only emboldens them. What can we do? Alvino-Mario Fantini has some suggestions.
The star in the window, the candles of Lucia, and the breaking of the bread—these are not just old habits. They are anchors that keep us rooted in our history, our family, and our faith.
One of the most touching testimonies of Christian faith resists attacks, and that is a good thing.
Europe must become Christendom again. We have no other choice, but it’s a merry one. A bright star is in the sky, all we must do is follow it.
The loss of sacred form goes hand in hand with the erosion of authority, hierarchy, and meaning. Yet precisely because the decline is now so advanced, the conditions for a genuine restoration may be emerging.
The carols, the Nativity displays, the special services—all of it is a reminder of the Story that still has the power to transform.
A warning that censorship, mass migration, and ideological conformity are hollowing out Europe from within—and why Hungary matters.
UNESCO’s recognition of Italian cuisine is no coincidence but rather the crowning glory of Italy’s return to favour on the world stage.
This is a Commission that confuses moralistic fervour and emotional manipulation with legal authority and slogan-infested political theatre with actual power.
When political disagreement is reframed as moral deviance, democratic debate becomes impossible.
As a person living with treatment-resistant depression, the author asks, “Does the government have the right to determine what qualifies as a ‘good life’?”
The fierce protest by farmers and livestock producers in Brussels delivered an unexpected result: a last-minute delay to the EU–Mercosur agreement.
Post-Brexit, the British public is wise to the fact that attempts to delegitimise the popular vote are an attack not on Farage but on the electorate itself—a final Hail Mary from a dying establishment.
A paper co-authored by 25 academics is demanding the the West stops “stigmatising” child abuse to appease migrant communities.
As Christmas approaches, we should celebrate the resilience of normal people and defend a tradition that has become so important to millions.
Europe must acknowledge that agricultural diversity cannot be effectively governed through exclusively centralised instruments.
From climate rules to migrant quotas, Brussels is quietly retreating on policies once sold as non-negotiable—revealing how power, not principle, ultimately shapes EU decision-making.
The legacy media crisis is not entirely the fault of the loss of credibility of the journalistic class but it certainly helped.
While Spaniards count down the collapse of Sánchez’s unpopular, corruption-ridden government, a magazine has crowned him Person of the Year 2025.
CCTV and facial recognition technology is unethical at its core, and a planned expansion is bound to be deployed cheaply and disastrously.