
Fear and loathing of the white working class is palpable in the elite’s response to the unrest.
Something extraordinary happened in the UK this week: the murder of three working-class girls was turned into a moral panic about working-class communities. Ruthlessly, with something approaching relish, the media elites dragged the public gaze from the frenzied stabbing of girls in a seaside town to the supposed frothing bigotries of the seaside town itself. In elite circles, angst over the evil visited on the children of Southport gave way to a foreboding over what lurks within Southport. In those terraced houses, with their white working-class inhabitants, so susceptible to online lies, so given to racial animus. These people want us to fear not the wicked individuals who terrorise our towns, but the towns themselves.
Media coverage of the monster who kiIIed 3 girIs in Southport vs reality: pic.twitter.com/U82y8qGiSR
— End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) August 2, 2024
— Raymond (@Raymond82310289) August 4, 2024






City officials in Toronto have reversed course on a controversial decision to remove the name of a prominent early 20th century Toronto businessman from a historic home, in light of new information brought forward by his descendants.




“Equalization” as we generally know it is an interprovincial funding formula that takes from net producers (like Alberta) and gives to net spenders (like Quebec). It breeds resentment from some, but it’s part of our constitutional architecture, so we’re stuck with it, just as families are obligated to provide for their young, net-consuming children. We also call this 