Zemmour’s Final Word
The danger—or opportunity, depending on your view—is that two radical candidates like Mélenchon and Zemmour win the first round.
A collection of 170 posts
The danger—or opportunity, depending on your view—is that two radical candidates like Mélenchon and Zemmour win the first round.
The truth is we can never hope for a perfect alignment between moral desert and material reward because we each have competing definitions of what constitutes merit.
Young people are still discovering their sexual selves and are often lost when exploring the sexual terrain of someone else’s body and mind.
It is unsettling to consider how similar today’s public cancellations are to those public executions.
The result of these two trendlines—the dominance of luxury-belief-driven status competition in a period of extended economic stagnation—was a brew of identity politics, political tribalism, and cultural warfare that would have been bad enough on its own.
America was born of the virgin Liberty, and like the son of God in which it still largely believes, will always rise from the dead.
The January 6th riot does make for a visually dramatic backdrop to an exploration of the fascistic strain in modern populist politics.
Facing Reality attempts to force into view data that many Americans would rather not acknowledge.
Wrong to the bitter end, sceptics have taken this as a vindication of their do-nothing strategy and are celebrating the decline of a summer surge they said could never happen.
The radicals, always livid, always demanding more, insist that all this is window dressing. A sham.
They’re embarking on an experiment that I think will ultimately fail and will ultimately harm children, but it’s an experiment that they’re entitled to embark on.
As a black conservative man, I will add one final note. None of the points made in this essay—about the over-hyping of victimhood in modern America or the cultural issues in working-class black and white communities—is meant to imply that racism does not exist.
Isn’t it a little late for the rehabilitation of the Black Panther Party (BPP)? After all, the organization that first caught the public’s attention in 1969 was already in its death throes by the early 1970s, beset by internal splits, criminal prosecutions, and violent faction-fighting. Yet, five decades
The increasing power of college diversity bureaucrats over academic affairs since the 1990s has been stunning.
The idea that whites were in the house while blacks were sweating in the fields despising them is comfortable to us today as we look upon the context as a whole and justly revile it.