
Obituary: A Momentous Englishman
Peter Whittle understood that the English love of respectability had been weaponised against us to make a virtue of cowardice.

Peter Whittle understood that the English love of respectability had been weaponised against us to make a virtue of cowardice.

Montesquieu had it right when he observed that, as far as the interests of commerce go, the whole world “comprises but a single state, of which all societies are members.” Many self-described conservatives, from the Bush dynasty in the United States to the post-Brexit globalists led by Boris Johnson, have fallen for the idea that their task is to conserve only the interests of such a state, which naturally must run on the ideological software of a rootless, unbridled, anti-cultural liberalism.

Farage now has the firepower of the Heartland Institute—a climate realist U.S. think-tank with offices in Britain—squarely behind him.

Britain’s ruling class decided that if they cannot be as great as our historic rulers they can at least be more morally preening.

Labour’s inheritance tax on farmers is a brazen attack on those who feed us, driven by urban elitism and bureaucratic greed.

Badenoch identifies more with prospective immigrants than with the consistently expressed desires of the English people.

Musk is right to attack replacement migration, but he should push his own logic a little further.

Conservatives should not be seeking to seduce minorities at the expense of their more reliable voter base.

What is the First Amendment if not a testament to the best of England?

Conservatives still lionise the democratic form of government while failing to take seriously its obvious breakdown in practice.