Hillary Clinton stuns conference room as she admits that open borders and migration ‘went too far’

Hillary Clinton rocked a conference room in Germany after admitting that migration ‘went too far’ and has had ‘disruptive and destabilizing’ effects on countries with open borders.

The 78-year-old former Secretary of State’s change of heart shocked the Munich Security Conference on Saturday as she spoke on the panel, ‘The West Divide: What Remains of Common Values.’

‘There is a legitimate reason to have a debate about things like migration,’ Clinton began.


She lies even when she tells the truth.

Share

The Vanishing Anglo-Saxon

There is a peculiar rule in modern Anglophone public life: Every people can have a past, except the one that built the country

The Romans can be studied without apology. Vikings are marketed with cinematic enthusiasm. Celts are endlessly romanticised, their mystique carefully preserved. But introduce the Anglo-Saxons, the civilisation-forming population that gave England (and, consequently, much of the world) its language, law, and cultural and political seedbeds, and just watch the institutional mood darken. Cambridge and Nottingham Universities are just the latest to have found the very phrase ’Anglo-Saxon’ sticking in their institutional throats.

Share

Epstein Island is the Logical End Point of Our Corrupted Culture

The belated performative outrage concerning the Epstein files and the UK rape gangs reeks of hypocrisy and moral whiplash as politicians and influencers have been relentlessly encouraging the sexualisation of society since sex was reputedly invented in 1963. Now, we are all expected to condemn with sorrowful faces these ‘outrageous’ sexual perversions when in fact people in power have been cheering them on for years. When Keir Starmer said recently to the Epstein victims: “I am sorry, sorry for what was done to you, sorry that so many people with power failed you,” his words may actually for once be accurate. Whether he realises what he should be apologising for is another story.

Share

The CITIC Files: Epstein Introduced to China’s Military-Intelligence Complex Through a Network Launched by Lord Peter Mandelson

Lord Peter Mandelson had a plan. Use the people’s business as cover to build his personal fortune. But discreetly.

“My schedule in China is a bit complicated,” the Labour Party powerbroker wrote to Desmond Shum on August 30, 2010. “I arrive on Monday 13 Sep with an official UK delegation until Wednesday. I then want to stay on until Fri/Sat unofficially to meet people and network for the future but I am not sure how to do this, where to stay or get myself around because I want to be independent of the Embassy.”

Share

Victory for professor who mocked the woke anti-colonialists

WHEN the University of Washington began requiring academics to issue ‘land acknowledgements’ in a shamelessly politicised attempt to suggest indigenous ownership of the land on which the campus stands, one professor responded by tucking a witheringly satirical version into his course syllabus. You may not have heard of Stuart Reges, but his small act of intellectual resistance led ultimately to a significant First Amendment ruling that strengthens protections for all public-university academics who refuse to turn themselves into ciphers for progressive pieties.

Share

Conrad Black: In search of a distinct Canadian identity

Canadians, and especially all English-speaking Canadians, have lived all their lives intermittently explaining to themselves why Canada should be an independent country and not part of the United States. Apart from the many abrasions of his public personality, the greatest grievance in Canada against U.S. President Donald Trump is that he explicitly stated the same question. Like most Americans, Trump thinks all foreigners wish to be American, and like most foreigners familiar with Canada, he fails to find any significant difference between English-speaking Canadians and Americans from northern states of the U.S. This question arose when former prime minister Justin Trudeau told him that Canada’s economy would “collapse” if subjected to sizable American tariff increases. To Trump, it was perfectly logical, and more a flattering than an insulting question, given that Canada had not paid its way in national self-defence for decades, to ask why it did not take the logical step to eliminate any question of tariffs or any worry about national defence and simply join the United States.

Share

Andrew leaked secrets and met Chinese model at secret dinner as Epstein boasted ‘I’ve got the UK sewn up’: Damning dossier means there MUST be a probe

Police chiefs and ministers last night faced a clamour of demands for a full investigation into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s role as UK trade envoy after a raft of damning revelations by The Mail on Sunday.

A dossier of evidence compiled by this newspaper lays bare the extraordinary extent to which Andrew exploited his taxpayer-funded position at the behest of Jeffrey Epstein in a bid to boost the paedophile’s business interests.

Included in the vast Epstein Files are emails exposing how Andrew allowed the convicted sex offender to organise meetings for him during an official trade mission to China.

Share

Canada Has a Secessionist Movement on Its Hands. Its Supporters Thank Trump.

VAUXHALL, Alberta—In much of Canada, President Trump’s provocations like making the country a 51st state are deeply unpopular. In this conservative, oil-rich province, Trump presents an opportunity.

Alberta is poised to hold a referendum on seceding from Canada later this year, and supporters of independence credit Trump’s disruptive energy for adding fuel to their movement. Alberta secessionists view Trump as a powerful ally in their quest to rattle Canada’s liberal politics and supercharge oil production—and no obstacle to their independence, even if statehood is unlikely.

Albertan independence is a remote but chilling prospect for Canada. The western province is a resources powerhouse that holds most of Canada’s crude oil. Only Saudi Arabia and Venezuela have bigger reserves of crude.

Share

She was earning £65,000 before AI came along. What happened next is a warning to us all

Leonie Tucker has poured two decades of her life into the film industry. As a graphic designer, she finesses the details on movie sets: the posters in the background of scenes, the packaging, everything that is copyrighted – from the branding of a tomato can to phone displays.

“I worked my way up to become successful, to become a lead graphic designer for things like Apple TV. I worked very, very hard for it. And then the work just disappeared,” Tucker says.

Until recently, the 36-year-old graphic designer was making more than £65,000 a year.

Share

Teen Suspect in Canada Shooting Had Turbulent Life Marred by ‘Nomadic’ Early Years

Days after a deadly mass shooting devastated a rural town in British Columbia, Canada, police are still searching for clues as to why the suspect, 18-year-old Jesse Van Rootselaar, would have turned violent, and how she could have carried out her attack.

In Tumbler Ridge, a mining town of roughly 2,700 people, a picture of the teen’s unsettled life was emerging from police and court records and a family statement. Van Rootselaar went mostly by Jesse Strang, the maiden name of her mother, Jennifer Strang. Van Rootselaar was the name of her biological father, a man she barely knew after a difficult split between her parents. Even though her father lived in the same town, they never had much contact.

Van Rootselaar dropped out of school around four years ago, authorities said.

Share

No fuel, no tourists, no cash – this was the week the Cuban crisis got real

Among the verdant gardens of Havana’s diplomatic quarter, Siboney, ambassadors from countries traditionally allied to the United States are expressing increasing frustration with Washington’s attempt to unseat Cuba’s government, while simultaneously drawing up plans to draw down their missions.

Cuba is in crisis. Already reeling from a four-year economic slump, worsened by hyper-inflation and the migration of nearly 20% of the population, the 67-year-old communist government is at its weakest. After Washington’s successful military operation against Cuba’s ally Venezuela at the beginning of January, the US administration is actively seeking regime change.

Share