
Are We the Baddies?
On free speech, Europe is increasingly an example—of what not to do

On free speech, Europe is increasingly an example—of what not to do

It is sobering to think that people living in a country infamous for its instability and tensions can be more optimistic about their country’s future than about the UK’s.

Hypersensitive teachers are treating playground insults and innocent misunderstandings as evidence of serious bigotry.

Under the Public Order Act, offenders can face up to seven years in prison.

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

As the crisis in the Channel deepens, the brains adjacent to the failing, flailing Starmer government present a new strategy document.

The Met Police recorded 32,000 cases of “theft from the person” in central Westminster between January and July.

Fake emotion has invaded family life, education, business, law, and, perhaps above all, politics, the very ordering of the nation and securing of its future flourishing.

The current cultural power—the LGBT movement—is on a collision course with the rising cultural power: Islam.

When it comes to monsters created in the homelands of other people, Britain is under no obligation to tolerate their presence or make petty attempts at reforming or liberalising them.