
America Takes a Stand for the Rights of Western Christians
“It is common sense that standing silently and offering consensual conversation does not constitute harm,” a spokesman for the U.S. State Department said.

“It is common sense that standing silently and offering consensual conversation does not constitute harm,” a spokesman for the U.S. State Department said.

Overnight strikes killed one and wounded many, with Russia firing nearly 600 drones and missiles across Ukraine.

The Communist Party sees no need for repentance, insisting the only French victims of communism were “Nazis and their collaborators.”

Judges from Canada and France, along with deputy prosecutors from Fiji and Senegal, are barred from entering or doing business in the United States.

The unmanned aircraft crossed into Polish airspace overnight and detonated about 100 kilometers from Warsaw; no injuries were reported.

From fish suppers to Farage shirts, Labour’s scattergun attacks on Reform UK reveal more panic than policy.

The Merz government is moving forward with proposed legislation to restrict individual rights, without explanation for why that is needed.

Germany’s Buchenwald concentration camp site refused entry to a woman seeking to wear the Palestinian scarf at an anniversary event.

One barrister said that if one hotel is breaking the law, “every hotel is.”

Offshore Energies UK says Labour’s ban on new licences and windfall taxes will wipe out thousands of skilled posts and drive investment abroad.
Politicians warn the ruling could open the door to religious legal systems in Austria’s courts and weaken the rule of law.
Mediators say Hamas agreed to a 60-day pause, but Netanyahu insists any deal must secure all hostages and Israel’s security.
U.S. president floats security guarantees for Kyiv outside NATO while Europe demands a ceasefire and a seat at the table.
The Education Ministry ordered the ad withdrawn, calling it legally unclear.
The French MEP and her Italian husband called their survival “miraculous”
The demonstrations, sparked by a deadly station collapse last year, have morphed into a nationwide movement against president Aleksandar Vučić
Ukraine’s president told reporters he is willing to negotiate directly with the Kremlin while allies draft security guarantees.
Pierre Poilievre re-enters parliament after a convincing by-election victory, vowing to fight crime, inflation, and mass immigration.
Following the disastrous meeting six months ago, the two leaders met again to negotiate the principles of a peace deal.
As the crisis in the Channel deepens, the brains adjacent to the failing, flailing Starmer government present a new strategy document.
The selective application of the law once again raises questions about Germany’s double standards.
“Let’s not forget: a significant part of Ukraine’s electricity comes from Hungary,” FM Szijjártó pointed out.