
South Africans Fear for the UK’s Future
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.

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.

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.

It’s unrealistic to suppose that censorship can continue to be imposed on the grounds of holding up a liberal order that’s already disappeared.

The native British are being pushed out of their own country, to which they still largely feel a profound attachment, but rightly, their attachment to their families is greater.

The country’s elites and powerholders would do well to take Christ’s advice and learn to interpret the signs of the times.

The future flourishing and prosperity of all South Africans, whatever their ethnic background, will be inextricably connected to the presence of South Africans of European heritage.

In the UK today, the once privileged place of the liberty of assembly and freedom of speech has been lost.

Hitherto, many views that might have been expressed by decent, hardworking people in your local pub could not be uttered in most respectable institutions, not just universities.

Did you know that cats are an ecological disaster? Well, the cat-owning ‘environmentalists’ have no clue either.

Christians have a long tradition of hospitality, welcoming, and tolerance, and that tradition has survived because it has been situated within a sophisticated account of justice.