Dear Lord, in this world of palpable evil, give all people of goodwill the wisdom, the courage, and the means to resist and overcome it.
Read the rest, by Ira Katz, here.
Dear Lord, in this world of palpable evil, give all people of goodwill the wisdom, the courage, and the means to resist and overcome it.
Read the rest, by Ira Katz, here.
Some great insights in this 12-minute video.
Tucker Carlson interviews German economist Richard Werner.
Here is some criticism of what Werner said in the interview.
Article by Dr. Robert Malone.
‘What a century-old school of economics predicted about the pandemic state — and why its vocabulary still fits the record better than anything in mainstream discourse’
Article by Gary North.
5 minute video with John MacArthur
Quote from the video description:
In this excerpt, John MacArthur recounts a conversation with a Muslim man who admitted his sin and expressed hope that God would forgive him.
MacArthur presses the crucial question: on what basis would God forgive sin? This moment exposes the fundamental difference between human religion and the gospel. While many rely on uncertain hope, the Christian message rests on the finished work of Christ, who bore sin and secured forgiveness through His substitutionary death. Without that foundation, there is no assurance of salvation.
A Triggernometry video. (12 minutes.)
Book review by Sebastian Wang.
Reclaiming a Better Future: A Christian Vision for True Environmental Stewardship
Robert G. Patridge, 2026
In an age when environmental alarmism often serves as the thin end of a wedge for ever-greater centralisation of power, this book arrives as a refreshing, rigorously argued and profoundly hopeful counter-blast. Written by Robert G. Partridge, an economist who clearly loves both creation and the Creator, Reclaiming a Better Future is no mere polemic against “climate policies.” It is a sustained, biblically saturated call to recover the ancient mandate of Genesis 2:15 – to “cultivate and keep” the earth – without surrendering sovereignty to the state, the UN, the IPCC or any other modern Tower of Babel.
The author’s central thesis is as simple as it is radical: the real conflict is not between “stewardship” and “exploitation”. The real conflict is between those who believe in creation, or a part of it, as sovereign, and those who believe this sovereignty belongs exclusively to the Creator. Once that question is settled, everything else follows. Chapter 1 lays the theological groundwork with admirable clarity, showing how both extreme environmentalism (nature as sovereign) and unbridled exploitation (man as sovereign) ultimately rest on the same godless foundation. The third option – God as sovereign – liberates humanity to exercise dominion responsibly, without the need for global commissars.
What follows is a searching yet constructive critique of current climate orthodoxy. The author is willing, for the sake of argument, to grant the mainstream narrative in Chapter 2, only to demonstrate that even if the alarmists are right, the top-down, coercive remedies being proposed are morally, economically and spiritually disastrous. He draws on economists such as George Reisman and Walter Block to argue for adaptation over mitigation, private-property rights over regulation, and market-tested innovation (including nuclear power) over government fiat. The moral heart of the chapter – that no individual’s supposedly climate-relevant emissions can be traced to measurable harm, and therefore taxing or regulating them constitutes theft – is devastatingly persuasive.
Subsequent chapters broaden the canvas. Chapter 3 exposes the “curse of the greater good,” using the Joseph story and the history of environmental policy to show how well-intentioned central planning repeatedly produces worse outcomes than the problems it claims to solve. Chapter 4 turns a prophetic eye on the spiritual and monetary roots of environmental degradation: the “legalised forgery” of fractional-reserve banking and the “magic money tree” that funds both ecological folly and the growth of Leviathan. The diagrams on the spiritual consequences of excessive government are particularly striking.
The book’s literary and cultural range is impressive. The extended meditation on Watership Down in Chapter 5 – especially the allegory of Cowslip’s warren as the welfare-state snare – is one of the most memorable passages I have read in years. It perfectly illustrates how a culture that forgets its old stories and linear worldview ends up accepting death as final while desperately clinging to the state for salvation. Chapter 6 returns to the Tower of Babel motif, tracing the failure of globalisation and the Covid-era attempt to resurrect it. The author’s eschatology of dominion – the confident expectation that the gospel will be victorious before Christ’s return – is presented not as utopian fantasy but as the historic Christian default, recovered from the defeatism that has gripped much of the Church since the late nineteenth century.
The tone throughout is irenic yet unflinching. The author is no angry culture-warrior; he is a friend of truth who repeatedly urges Christians to be “shrewd as snakes and innocent as doves.” He criticises fellow believers (including respected figures such as astrophysicist Hugh Ross) where necessary, but always with respect and a clear desire for constructive dialogue. Even his engagement with atheist economists such as Block and Reisman is generous: their policy prescriptions are welcomed precisely because they do not violate biblical commandments, in marked contrast to the ruling economic orthodoxy of Keynesianism.
A few minor quibbles do not detract from the book’s power. Some readers may wish for more engagement with recent empirical climate data, though the author’s decision to grant the narrative for argument’s sake actually strengthens his case. Others might question whether a strict 10 per cent-of-GDP ceiling on government is politically achievable without a prior spiritual revival; the author would doubtless reply that the revival must come first. These are not weaknesses so much as invitations to further thought.
Reclaiming a Better Future is a book for our time. It will comfort the many Christians who have felt uneasy about the statist turn of much environmental rhetoric without quite knowing why. It will challenge those who have unconsciously baptised the IPCC’s agenda. And it will equip a new generation to speak truth to power – not with fear, but with the quiet confidence that comes from knowing the Sovereign Lord of creation. If enough believers take its message to heart, we may yet see swords beaten into ploughshares, not by UN fiat, but by the slow, faithful work of the Kingdom of God in the here and now. Highly recommended.
The War on Beauty posted this 23-minute video. And writes in the description:
“Thomas Carlyle’s ‘Past and Present’ is one of the most unique books I have ever read. It is a prophetic look at the root causes of what was beginning to tear down the core of specifically English, but ultimately European, society. With growing atheism, idleness and Dilettantism, and mammon-worship, Europe went from Heroic and True to Un-Heroic and living in a “sham,” in just a few short centuries–a reality which is only just coming into full fruition now.”
See also: Thomas Carlyle for Beginners: Where to Start (35 minutes).
Article by Gary North.
Excerpt:
We look around us and see trends. Some of these trends seem irreversible. But are they? They seem comprehensive. But are they? How much reliance should we place in them? Will they really shape our lives and the world we live in?
Almost 50 years ago, my professor Robert Nisbet wrote a classic article: “The Year 2000 and All That.” It was published in the Jewish intellectual magazine, Commentary, although it was in no way Jewish.
Continue reading here.