Owners forced to apologise for on-screen presentation of inconvenient truth.
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser filed a criminal complaint over a photo that was obviously a work of satire.
The Franco-Algerian author was in the crosshairs of a government he has vocally criticised.
Denying someone the right to academic advancement based on their political beliefs is not progress—it is authoritarianism.
The poisonous effects of the Cuban regime extend far beyond its shores. Brussels must take action.
The Franco-Algerian author was in the crosshairs of a government he has vocally criticised.
PM Starmer was denounced from all sides for skipping parliamentary approval before escalating British involvement in the war.
Without explicitly linking migration and crime, the head of the Federal Police said that “the security situation is tense.”
The EPP greenlit a Spanish socialist in exchange for an Italian conservative, even though Teresa Ribera said she won’t step down if prosecuted for mismanaging floods in Spain.
The document identifies 18 systemic shortcomings in Brussels, mostly linked to “attempts to arbitrarily and stealthily extend competences in contravention of the Treaties.”
The EPP greenlit a Spanish socialist in exchange for an Italian conservative, even though Teresa Ribera said she won’t step down if prosecuted for mismanaging floods in Spain.
The document identifies 18 systemic shortcomings in Brussels, mostly linked to “attempts to arbitrarily and stealthily extend competences in contravention of the Treaties.”
Teresa Ribera’s actions during Valencia’s recent deadly floods have sparked outrage.
By doubling down on the proxy war against Russia, NATO is dragging us closer and closer towards the nuclear threshold.
Recommendations from the EU Council play a much bigger role in shaping national law than they should.
Europe should expect a mix of positive and negative effects from a Trump presidency. With a little luck, the positive effects will outweigh the negative ones.
We stand on the cusp of a transnational alignment of conservative leaders committed to economic strength, cultural sovereignty, and individual liberty.
After years of woke gaslighting whereby progressives and academics labelled anyone right of Karl Marx a literal Nazi, the actual far-right fundamentalists they welcomed to our shores are reviving Jew hate once more in the form of Islamo-Nazism.
“This is an extremely grave social issue. It’s everybody’s business.”
A blind adherence to old forms is the path to sterility and death, we must instead act as emissaries of the living flame we possess by virtue of our singular relationship with its past.
With the buffer zones, no one will see the reality, no one will hear the reality, and no one will speak the reality of abortion.
An important lesson emerges from the mediated individualism of Mazo and Velázquez’s family portraits. Nascent elites inevitably seek recognition by assimilation into, not the total destruction of existing social categories. Just as the monarch and feudalism were replaced by a bourgeois meritocracy, likewise too today’s revolutionary levelers will seek as much to reimagine hierarchy as to abolish it.
The Spring edition, like every issue, provides a varied mix of perspectives on different expressions of conservatism around the world. In a particular way, several contributions in this issue explore the theme of Christendom and the West.
Von der Leyen will continue her destructive policies and we all will pay for it.
In reality, the West is projecting its own position on Russia, but that means nothing to Moscow.
The Left uses native grievances to undermine the foundations of Western Christian culture.
In A Defense of Monarcy, six authors present the ancient Christian values symbolized in the British crown.
Jane Austen helps us to see that evil is a very ordinary thing.
The time-travel comics of V.T. Hamlin remind us that our present moment is only one thread in the vast and ongoing tapestry of history.
This year, on May 10th, we lost a gentleman. He was not only a brilliant musicologist and Italian cultural figure, but also the most gifted ambassador of his adoptive father’s work.
FROM THE SUMMER 2023 PRINT EDITION: Martin Amis got the collective cultural impact of pornography right while most were still defending it. “Porno, it seems, is a parody of love,” he wrote.
In what turned out to be his last public homily, delivered three days before he died, Cardinal Pell referred to the “heritage of Wojtyla and Ratzinger.” In addition to being courageous teachers of the Catholic faith, they were, Pell said, also “Europeans, examples of men with profound knowledge of the high culture of the Western world.”
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