
The Teacher Shortage Didn’t Just Happen—Western Europe Designed It
Nearly three-quarters of French teachers surveyed said they would not recommend their career to others.

Nearly three-quarters of French teachers surveyed said they would not recommend their career to others.

There is a purposeful “silence” from responsible authorities surrounding the inability of teachers to teach.
Vienna spends €2.2 million a year on free tuition helping integration but has little to show for it.

Teachers report living with students threatening to “faire une Paty”—in reference to the beheading of history teacher Samuel Paty—on a daily basis.

Violence and death threats against teachers refute the myth of schools as sanctuaries.

We are marked from the day of our birth with an end date; all is indeed vanity. To forget our mortality is thus to lose something human, to become inhuman.

Who, amid the convulsions of culture wars and legal rights, is standing up for those who suffer the worst consequences of gender dysphoria and the immutability of biological sex?

The Paris Academy, the academic region of Île-de-France, has condemned the death threats and stated that it has “immediately taken all the necessary measures” to guarantee security at the Lycée Charlemagne for the remaining baccalauréat exams.