- U.S. News
- World News
- Africa
- Asia
- Australasia-Oceania
- Canada
- Europe
- Latin America
- Middle East
- Freedom
- First Nations
- Afric.-Americans
- Tibet
- Videos
- Technology
- Arts
- Film
- Literature
- Music
- Radio
- Television
- From Our Files
- Classic Essays
- Vintage Mencken
- Vintage Mercury
- Education
- Fiction
- Health
- History
- Opinion
- Reports
- Science
- Social Science
- Humor
doug-christie
Doug Christie Takes Powerful Free Speech Message to the University of Ottawa
By Ann Hendon on April 13, 2010
by Paul Fromm, Canadian Association for Free Expression Just ten days after a rowdy mob of protesters, egged on by a university administration that admonished the controversial U.S. writer Ann Coulter against “inappropriate” or hateful speech, won the University of Ottawa (unaffectionately known as the U of Zero) a reputation for censorship when Ottawa Police [...]
US News »
By Way of Deception, Thou Shalt Do Boston
April 26, 2013

by Keith Johnson WAS SLAIN Boston Marathon bombing suspect Tamarlin Tsarnaev (pictured) coerced, blackmailed or manipulated by Mossad agents posing as FBI agents? Mark Glenn and the crew over at The Ugly Truth have produced a series of radio broadcasts making a compelling argument that he was: TUT Broadcast April 20, 2013 The Victory Hour [...]
Africa, History »
‘The Choice of Achilles’: John Alan Coey Against the New World Order
January 3, 2013

by T.R. Bennington AS EVER, BUT ESPECIALLY in our present state of civilizational malaise, there is a need for figures with the power to inspire — men who in less confused and cynical times would have been unabashedly described as heroic. One such figure is Corporal John Alan Coey, a young soldier who has perhaps [...]
Social Sciences »
The Happiness Hypothesis
May 8, 2011

Of Jonathan Haidt, The Happiness Hypothesis, and Historical Narratives by A. Helian JONATHAN HAIDT IS ONE OF THE MOST coherent thinkers in the social sciences today. A Professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, he specializes in the study of morality and emotion, and how they vary across cultures. He describes himself as an [...]
Reader’s Comments
Categories
Archives
Pages
Login / Register / RSS
Classic Essays »
H.L. Mencken, America’s Wittiest Defender of Liberty
April 26, 2013

by Jim Powell DURING THE FIRST HALF of the twentieth century, H.L. Mencken (pictured) was the most outspoken defender of liberty in America. He spent thousands of dollars challenging restrictions on freedom of the press. He boldly denounced President Woodrow Wilson for whipping up patriotic fervor to enter World War I, which cost his job as [...]
History, Opinion »
Whittaker Chambers: Ghosts and Phantoms
December 11, 2011

by David Chambers WHITTAKER CHAMBERS died 50 years ago at the age of 60. Much in the world has changed since then. What might he think about world affairs today, were he still alive? Before commenting, he would catch up on history with books like Tony Judt‘s Postwar. Another would be Timothy Snyder‘s Bloodlands, which [...]
Arts, Film, Literature »
Pauline Kael: One Against the Herd
May 6, 2012

Selected Writings of Pauline Kael; Library of America, 2011 Pauline Kael: Alone in the Dark; Brian Kellow, Viking Adult, 2011 by Ron Capshaw FOR CONSERVATIVES, PAULINE KAEL IS notorious for her much-quoted comment about her astonishment that Nixon won the 1972 election since “everyone I know voted for McGovern.” Despite this prime example of the liberal [...]
Names and Topics
- American History
- Biography
- Center for Perpetual Diversity
- Christianity
- Christopher Ketcham
- Communism
- Diversity
- Economics
- Financial crimes
- Freemasonry
- Henry Hazlitt
- Iran
- J.B. Matthews
- Jason and Marcia Matthews
- John Mitchell Henshaw
- Judaism
- Leo Frank
- Martin Wright Sampson
- Quinta Mazatlan
- Razvlekatsa Zabavlatsa
- Relationships
- United States
- US History
- Washington Post















