British television in the 1970s punched way above its weight in an arena dominated by America. While the US ruled the mass entertainment market, Britain held the prestige drama niche in the palm of her hand. Britain sold more finished programs than formats, whereas the reverse is now the case, and received industry awards at a disproportionately high rate. Its actors had mostly been trained at venerable thespian institutions such as RADA (the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts), and were as comfortable with Shakespeare as they were with a situation comedy. (more…)
Tag: law enforcement
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On Saturday September 6, 2025, President Donald Trump took to Truth Social, channelled his inner Lieutenant Colonel William “Bill” Kilgore from Apocalypse Now, and wrote “I love the smell of deportations in the morning.” (more…)
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Photo courtesy of SHYCITYNikon on Flickr.

Photo courtesy of SHYCITYNikon on Flickr.
1,010 words
For years I worked as police reporter for the Washington Times, spending long hours in squad cars in various cities getting to know cops well. Now I listen to nice white people in the suburbs, and self-assured voices from National Public Radio (NPR), talking about the police. They know nothing of the world where the police work. (more…)
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Photo courtesy of the NARA & DVIDS Public Domain Archive.

Photo courtesy of the NARA & DVIDS Public Domain Archive.
1,381 words
I have a feeling that I’m not the only one who enjoys watching dashcam videos of police chases while I relax with a cup of tea. The cameras mounted on most police-car dashboards in the United States provide entertaining yet troubling footage for the tea-drinking armchair constable such as myself. (more…)
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Liz Collin
They’re Lying: The Media, The Left, and The Death of George Floyd
Paper Birch Publishing, 2022The Fall of Minneapolis (2023)
Directed by J. C. Chaix (more…) -
1,257 words
Some time ago I had dinner with one of Our Guys. He asked me if I followed the many memes that our movement generates. I replied that I do not. Furthermore, I admitted that I don’t always have time to read every article that is published. I am too busy focusing on attempting to create intelligent content of my own which speaks to the truth of our situation. (more…)
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2,228 words
Every day under the Brandon regime brings a new outrage or embarrassment, but last week was one of the most shocking outrages I have seen in some time. A Trump-appointed judge, Trevor McFadden, sentenced Christian Secor to three-and-a-half years in prison, followed by three years of probation. This is after Secor had already served 40 days in solitary confinement followed by months of house arrest. His supposedly heinous crime? (more…)
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White Nationalism has been quite a hot topic in political discourse lately. There have been high-level politicians who have declared it to be the United States’ number one threat. It’s important for people like you — police, first responders, and federal agents — to get some clarity and accurate information about the subject. (more…)
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2,352 words
The Right-wing internet has been abuzz these last few days after the arrest of antifa terrorist Garrett James Smith, who was caught outside a Florida rally in support of January 6 prisoner Jeremy Brown. Because Baked Alaska was in attendance at this rally, people have been semi-ironically referring to the incident as the “failed assassination of Baked Alaska.”
Garrett Smith, an antifa activist, had moved back to Florida from Portland, where he was presumably radicalized, two months ago. (more…)
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Whitey (in this case, Houston Texans NFL player J. J. Watt) prostrates himself before BLM by paying his respects for a dead black criminal and drug addict (George Floyd) at his funeral.
5,931 words
Part 2 of 3 (Part I here, Part III here)
Part II: Black Lives Matter
There is much to be said about the Black Lives Matter movement as a whole and its accompanying narratives. The obvious question is why – as in, “Why do Black Lives Matter?” and “Why should I care?” Is there any evidence to support this claim? It’s not exactly self-evident. (more…)
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Part 1 of 3 (Part II here)
Part I: COVID-19
Not long after 2020 began, most of our lives were deeply disrupted. I had been following rumblings from China about a fast-spreading and potentially lethal virus for over a month before the first case was announced in the United States in late January. Several weeks after that, my last semester of law school was cut short by an early Spring Break in early March, and then a move to virtual classes for the remainder of the term. (more…)
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If An Agent Knocks is a guidebook written by the Center for Constitutional Rights. Although they’re a left-leaning advocacy group, they’re not the sort likely to make you run away screaming as if Cthulhu is trying to eat your mind. Actually, some of their causes may be of interest. The intended audience is those who might be targeted by politically-motivated investigations and harassment under color of law. I’ll go over the basics, and add my extensive commentary as usual. (more…)
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8,516 words
8,516 wordsThomas R. Pegram
One Hundred Percent American: The Rebirth and Decline of the Ku Klux Klan in the 1920s
Chicago: Ivan R. Dee, 2011The Ku Klux Klan suffers from a positively radioactive reputation, even among fellow Rightists. During the infamous family dinner scene in American History X, at which Edward Norton’s Derek Vinyard assaults his sister and displays his swastika tattoo to the Jewish teacher dating his widowed mother, (more…)








