How the Media Broke the Immigration Debate
What good is a free press if it lacks the courage to ask difficult questions about our most important problems?
A collection of 40 posts
What good is a free press if it lacks the courage to ask difficult questions about our most important problems?
Many people were surprised by the number of Latinos who voted for Trump, but opposition to mass migration does not just come from Anglo nativists.
The current system is not only economically counterproductive but incentivises people to become illegal immigrants.
Canadians have had to formulate a new language to address new complications posed by immigration, and no one is quite sure how that language should sound.
In order to function, a cosmopolis must embrace both toleration and the rule of law.
Ireland is struggling with new realities in an age of global migration.
Migration from the developing world to the West will continue until and unless international development can improve the societies people are leaving.
Fears of a CCP sponsored invasion at the Mexican border are misplaced. People are fleeing China because its economy is in dire straits.
A survivor of Sri Lanka’s civil war who found safety and wealth on Canadian shores wonders why his well-to-do white neighbours seem so fixated on racism.
Debt and migration spirals have turned asylum applications into a charade for exploitation.
The rise of ultra-progressive ideologies and the decline in patriotic sentiment are two broad cultural trends that worry American conservatives. Some may be tempted to imagine that these two phenomena are connected to immigration and the resulting ethnic and racial diversity—especially since opposition to immigration is common among conservatives
French conservative radio host Éric Zemmour is mounting a presidential run, seeking to steal the mantle of right-wing populism from Marine Le Pen. Not only does the 63-year-old firebrand want to limit the number of immigrants who can come to France—a standard campaign promise for politicians of this type—
Education was divided along confessional lines into Catholic and Protestant school systems; for these purposes, Jews were designated Protestant.
Democratic transformation generally comes from the ground up, not from foreigners bearing guns and gifts.
Modern Europe and the Enlightenment opens by presenting a balanced examination and robust summary of Enlightenment values.