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Sunday, August 31, 2025

Atlas Space - anti immigration marches

Christopher, the Dog-Headed Saint 


How the March for Australia anti-immigration rallies and counter-protests unfolded


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The KGB’s Greatest Trick: How Soviet Spies Invented Liberation Theology to Spread Marxism.



THIS IS ANOTHER OF THOSE THINGS YOUR GRANDMOTHER COULD HAVE TOLD YOU:  Uninspired? Chat with People
People underestimate how much they’ll gain from talking with others.


 MARK JUDGE: ‘The Lives of Others’ and the Anti-Communist Film Festival.

One of the themes that is central to communism, and which has been adopted by the Western left, is shame. As journalist Laura Williams has described it, “If someone looked like he might challenge the Communist Party’s legitimacy or control, the Stasi systematically destroyed his life. They used blackmail, social shame, threats, and torture. Careers, reputations, relationships, and lives were exploded to destabilize and delegitimize a critic. Some forms of harassment were almost comical: agents spread rumors about their targets, flooded their mailboxes with pornography, moved things around in their apartments, or deflated their bicycle tires day after day. Others were life-altering: Individuals labeled as subversives were banned from higher education, forced into unemployment, and forcibly committed to asylums. Many suffered long-term psychological trauma, loss of earnings, and intense social shame as a result of Stasi lies.”


What is ‘neighbouring’ — and are you any good at it?

Many of us are more reluctant than ever to get involved with the people next door. But in an age of loneliness and online, a rethink of the old tropes is due …

According to the World Values Survey from the Policy Institute at King’s College London, 84 per cent of people in the UK trust their neighbours, the fourth-highest levels of trust in the world behind Norway, Sweden and Egypt, while in the US, 72 per cent of respondents said they trusted those living next door.
Yet other reports, including from the British Office for National Statistics, and the American conservative Institute for Family Studies, suggest we are interacting less with neighbours than ever, as a cost of living crisis, dwindling public space and expanding online life makes us shrink back into our private worlds.