French sources suggest the streaming giant may deliberately have minimized its reported profits in France, potentially evading taxes.
Security officials believe saboteurs were preparing to place incendiary devices on planes bound for America.
The fed-up unions said that this was just the latest in a series of “violent and repeated attacks”
Workers are frustrated over recent inflation, but an aggressive push for rapid wage hikes could bring inflation back, and make it stay longer.
In a remarkable drum-beating display in Strasbourg last week, the legal mask slipped, the velvet gloves came off, and the EU elites declared war on Hungary.
The broadcaster has become “the mouthpiece of this infernal Labour government,” says TV personality and farmer Jeremy Clarkson.
Tehran has not signalled that it will retaliate—yet.
Brussels has threatened to derail the country’s path to the EU if it doesn’t do as it is told.
British nanny state’s scheme appears to be at risk amid fears for jobs and industry.
“This is how democracy works: when you don’t have the majority to run the country, then we go into another election,” commentator says.
PM Pedro Sánchez ran away, but the king and queen stayed to face public anger.
One of the aims of the trial is to shed light on teacher Samuel Paty’s abandonment by the education system—he knew he was under threat and in mortal danger.
Drones and debris ‘accidentally’ entering NATO airspace are becoming commonplace.
Senatorial report exposes state’s inadequate response to growing crisis
In support of independence activists, the French Left defends tradition, national identity, and sovereignty—as long as it concerns the Antipodes.
There is a distinct reason why inflation does not fall further. I am surprised nobody talks about it.
“We are building an ecosystem of Christian leaders who do not only survive, but also thrive in our cultural moment.”
It seems we have the bland leading the bland, but recusant conservatives can use this time to decide what is worth fighting for, and it is most certainly not more of the same.
“The traditional liturgy is a ‘cathedral’ of text and gesture, developing as those venerable buildings did over many centuries.”
The Italian Church used to be preserved from secularisation, but this blessed time seems over.
Casablanca is not about passion, but about altruistic love, animated by the rare spirit of sacrifice.
Perhaps we do not need a new and very different St. Benedict. We need old-fashioned, traditional Benedictines, and we need them everywhere.
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.
“If we do not destroy Hamas, these savages will storm the streets of London, Paris, Barcelona, and Madrid.”
Columnist Rod Dreher sits down with Louis Betty, editor and co-translator of Enemy of the Disaster, the first authorized English translation of Renaud Camus’ political writings.
“The government is censoring Spain: its legality, its history, its faith, and its traditions.”
Sonya Yoncheva lacked that flame in crucial moments, though comparative listening across performances suggests that Maurizio Benini’s pedestrian conducting may well have been the culprit.
The old cowboy has had the great luck to be written and illustrated by people who love and believe in the original Luke, people who recognize that we still need joyful stories about heroes.
Defending tradition in an anti-traditional world such as ours requires both belief and boldness. Tim Stanley manifests both, combining wry humour and a sense of peace with the world unseen in many political polemics.
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