
Climate, Gender and Queer Agenda Dominate German Catholic Days in Würzburg
Scheduled activities at the Catholic gathering feature discussions on gender-sensitive language, postcolonial approaches to prayer, and queer perspectives on the Bible.

Scheduled activities at the Catholic gathering feature discussions on gender-sensitive language, postcolonial approaches to prayer, and queer perspectives on the Bible.

The meeting in Armenia brings together nearly 50 leaders, but once again confirms the declarative nature of a format that Brussels uses more to project narrative than to produce effective results.

With CPAC Hungary set for Saturday and the Patriots’ Grand Assembly in Budapest on Monday, the patriotic bloc is presenting itself as one of the main European centres of political gravity.
The agreement comes as Europe struggles to maintain its goal of global climate leadership, with recent UN talks showing waning influence and limited progress.

Post-war German education once stood for intellectual rigour. Today, feelings trump facts, ideology replaces enquiry, and political conformity stifles critical thinking.

Climate-related funds are being cut in the next federal budget as the country’s leadership has to realize they have been living in a dream world.

As usual, Macron shows contempt for the French people and lectures them on morality.

In 100 days, Trump rewrote the global energy map—while Brussels failed.

The LIFE programme—the EU’s funding instrument for the environment and climate action— has a budget of €5.4 billion but transparency is completely lacking.

“We’re facing a climate emergency and we can no longer afford to not face it together.”