
The Two Britains on the Streets of London
Last Saturday’s rival demonstrations exposed a nation split between approved and disapproved dissent.

Last Saturday’s rival demonstrations exposed a nation split between approved and disapproved dissent.

The surge of the populist Right in England’s local elections is a sucker punch to the sneering cultural elites.

Every April 23rd, as sure as night follows day, the UK commentariat loves to sneer at ordinary English people.

Britain doesn’t need to learn any more lessons—it needs the will to act.

Another beloved British institution has succumbed to the cult of self-loathing.

Endless self-denunciation might quench a progressive longing, but it does nothing to make the public safer.

If hostile states believe Britain can be deterred by the threat of domestic unrest, they will exploit that perception, utilising communities which have failed to fully integrate into British society.

Just as in France, the Left is widely seen as romantic while the Right is viewed as abhorrent.

There is a peculiar rule in modern Anglophone public life: Every people can have a past, except the one that built the country.

Amelia is a reminder of how badly governments misjudge the nations they claim to protect.