In the 2024 French Republic, is it reasonable to celebrate a woman who fought for her God and her King?
Washington should unleash open-source AI, not regulate it.
Moutot and Stern have cast off their ties with the Left from which they came, and are keeping a firm grip on the truth.
A quarter of French Jews say they have been the victim of an antisemitic act since October 7th.
An early-release scheme is being extended to domestic abusers and burglars in a half-baked second attempt to cut prison overcrowding.
Belgium voluntarily agreed to let go of the future taxes collected on the assets after months of pressure from the EU.
Originally, the European Stability Mechanism was set up to help troubled member states with their debt. Now, it wants to branch out—and make more money for itself.
Emmanuel Macron’s energy policy will accelerate the organized destruction of EU competitiveness that is already underway.
The proposed harsher punishment for threatening and assaulting officials is meant to be a symbolic stand against the AfD, even though the nationalist politicians are statistically the most likely to be attacked on the streets.
Alternative für Deutchland’s Maximilian Krah called the raid “unsurprising”
The smugglers are accused of financing Hezbollah and Palestinian jihadists.
Two Ukrainian counterintelligence officers were allegedly recruited by Moscow to kidnap and kill President Zelensky as a “gift” to Putin ahead of his inauguration.
Alternative für Deutschland’s Alice Weidel called attempts to make political capital from the recent attack on Social Democrat MEP “vile and irresponsible.”
France’s interior minister calls for an institutional battle to prevent French society from falling into the “Islamic matrix.”
Campaigners ‘relieved’ that Stonewall is losing public funding.
France, Spain, and Belgium account for nearly 90% of all EU imports of Russian LNG, but mainstream media is already trying to blame Hungary in case the plan fails.
Originally, the European Stability Mechanism was set up to help troubled member states with their debt. Now, it wants to branch out—and make more money for itself.
The ones who get to enjoy lower rates are the ones who live on the right side of the euro-zone border. But not in the way we usually think of the euro zone.
Ethiopia must abolish state terrorism and establish law and order.
Leftist NGOs and media outlets have allied with Samidoun, a pro-Palestinian group that is outlawed in Germany.
Seeing Paris demos made him conservative. Will the 2024 campus chaos create new Scrutons?
The GDI’s aim is to discredit news organisations that it doesn’t like, and to reduce their ad revenue as a means to shut them down.
When a Christian politician dares to deviate from progressive morality, tolerance goes out the window.
“The UN is teeming with leftist organizations. I thought: Someone has to do something. Why shouldn’t I try it?”
Founders saw social progress as the result of economic progress—something the state could not be expected to provide.
The Winter edition, like every issue, provides a varied mix of perspectives on different expressions of conservatism around the world. It also has several contributions exploring the theme of love, human dignity, and human rights.
If Milei succeeds, Argentina will once again be the best country in the world.
“In Brussels, we need MEPs who represent national interests instead of the foreign ones, the European people instead of illegal migration, and the cause of peace instead of war!”
The Left has chosen the way of censorship.
This year’s Vienna Philharmonic U.S. tour sees memorable performances of Bruckner’s and Mahler’s Ninth Symphonies.
Rakib Ehsan does not deny the challenges we face, but he demonstrates that the Left’s dark view of Britain is far from warranted.
Scharl’s poetry reminds us of the vibrancy and relevance of our cultural tradition.
With the death of John Bellingham, conservatism has lost one of its greatest sons.
We would do well to consider whether Kissinger should be a role model or a cautionary tale.
Kissinger rejected the idea of America as a ‘City upon a hill’ and exercised a statesmanship guided by power, not morality.
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