
Is Civil War Coming to Europe?
Ordinary Europeans are starting to admit what their leaders won’t: civil unrest may be closer than anyone dares to say.
Ordinary Europeans are starting to admit what their leaders won’t: civil unrest may be closer than anyone dares to say.
As foreign funding for Islamic religious organizations flows in, concerns grow over transparency and geopolitical motives.
The country’s new constitution will mandate that the president be Muslim, suggesting that authorities may tacitly permit or support Islamist persecution of Christians.
Online followers—often teens—are invited to private chat groups where they are exposed to and encouraged to share extremist and violent anti-Western jihadist propaganda.
Despite being a majority-Christian nation, the Democratic Republic of Congo has become one of the most dangerous places in the world for Christians due to escalating jihadist violence.
The ruling class’s support for state-mandated multiculturalism has culminated in the creation of a new de facto blasphemy law.
The Qatargate scandal is just a symptom of a much wider problem—the building of influence by Qatar and the radicalisation of Muslim communities in Europe.
Eyes are turning to Iran, whose leader has called for the Quran burner to receive the “severest punishment.”
The attackers play out in nihilistic fashion the script provided by radical Islamism, attacking what their Western host societies value most.
PM Orbán: “If we had allowed migrants in, we would not be facing threats, but acts of terrorism.”