Will the Saints Go Marching in?

BY NIALL MCCRAE The first port of call, on JB Priestley’s tour of England in 1933, was Southampton. That phrase is appropriate, because the city is best known as Britain’s gateway to the ocean. Cruise-ships proliferate nowadays, but Southampton retains the regular trans-Atlantic service to New York (crossing on Cunard’s Queen Mary 2). Narrowing of the English Channel between the neck of Cherbourg and Portland Bill … Continue reading Will the Saints Go Marching in?

A Life in Fiction

BY ALEX STORY Our current establishment lives in a make-believe world. The latter rests on a set of theories (or lies). These are, at best, only tangential to reality and devastating when applied to it. But they allow the powerful to deconstruct all aspects of our cherished life built up over millennia by our plucky, and increasingly forsaken, forefathers. Ostensibly this is done for our … Continue reading A Life in Fiction

Blaming the Cutlery

BY FRANK HAVILAND As I argued in Banalysis: The Lie Destroying The West, the single most virulent disease afflicting Britain and the West generally is not mass immigration, gender ideology or even Islam, but the lie which facilitates them: ‘equality’. That’s not to say of course that people should not be treated equally, or even as if they were equal – but the insistence that they are de facto equal, regardless … Continue reading Blaming the Cutlery

Suburban Desert: London’s Loss of Local Football Clubs

BY NIALL McCRAE The more people, the fewer amenities. This phenomenon may seem counter-intuitive: surely a booming population in our cities would generate a greater market for goods and services? But that depends on the commodity. Yes, there will be more consumption, but local community life is not necessarily improved by ever-expanding housing development, particularly if the influx is mostly from foreign countries and cultures. … Continue reading Suburban Desert: London’s Loss of Local Football Clubs

Multiculturalism & Multiracialism

BY ALEX STORY A week or so ago, Suella Braverman spoke about the country’s right to control her borders and decide who can live within them. She referred to Angela Merkel, Germany’s former Chancellor, who said in a speech in 2010, that multiculturalism had utterly failed. At the time, Nicolas Sarkozy of France and David Cameron, our erstwhile Prime Minister, said much the same thing. … Continue reading Multiculturalism & Multiracialism