Mr Roberts
Essay by Frederick Burnaby | Lieutenant Roberts protects his friends from petty tyranny the best he can, and keeps their hope alive that things can be better
read moreEssay by Frederick Burnaby | Lieutenant Roberts protects his friends from petty tyranny the best he can, and keeps their hope alive that things can be better
read moreEssay by J.W. Horan | Gogol’s incisive wit and innovative prose developed not in spite of his abject feebleness, but precisely because of it
read moreEssay by Nick Wilbur | Women hate men. Everywhere you look, from Politico to Daily Mail, from X bots to Instagram influencers, unabashed misandry is the modern feminist’s rallying cry
read moreThe American patois of the twentieth century was born in the pulps. More specifically, the common language was born in pulp magazines like Black Mask and Dime Detective Magazine. There, in between flimsy, pulp wood paper advertisements for correspondence courses and vril-inducing pills, hardboiled detectives like Dashiell Hammett’s Continental Op or Frederick Nebel’s Cardigan duked it out with gangsters and gun molls, all the while keeping as cool as can be with endless glasses of hard liquor.
read moreNed Flanders is a personality type any kind of right-wing movement has to deal with. They’re nerds who marry other nerds, or are in some subculture consisting of remnants of a past society at least somewhat preserved, such as the Mormons.
read moreIt’s impossible to think about the future of Western civilisation without thinking about Christianity. Even now, whatever the present state of Christianity in all its various shapes and rainbow colours, there’s no escaping its continuing influence on every aspect of Western life and thought. If Westerners we be, then Christians we be too. It’s that simple.
read moreEssay by Georgia | The failure of schools is public knowledge at this point, regardless of whether or not the public chooses to acknowledge it
read moreEssay by T.J. Harker | Musk, despite his faults, reminds us that we can lift our gaze to the profound and enduring mystery and be inspired. That we don’t have to live a small and meaningless life defined by a narrow focus on ourselves and our petty appetites
read moreEssay by Adam Johnston | The threat of heightened censorship hangs menacingly over Europe, Canada, Brazil, and even the United States
read moreEssay by J.W. Horan | The new conformity is not fascist. Perhaps things would be better if it were. Anything is better than conforming to the pious neuroses of weak, defective men like Bernardo Bertolucci
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