The tragedy of corporate America’s anti-child messaging
They portray kids as not worth the trouble — and have no idea what they’re missing
They portray kids as not worth the trouble — and have no idea what they’re missing
Some women are forgoing medical care entirely and giving birth at home unassisted
He may be ‘non-traditional’ but at least he values life
The sinking state tries to erase gender, the human race’s most instinctive feature
Why do Americans insist on using last names as first names?
School closures have set off a devastating domino effect
It’s all white noise and shushing and singing and rocking
We must enshrine the right to life
Pregnancy revealed that I didn’t know anything.
Medical decisions for children should be made by parents, not bureaucracies.
Seeing that new life on the ultrasound gave me hope for the future — not dread
Modern gadgets are less and less our servants and more and more our masters
Arbitrary public health officials are forcing a Sophie’s choice upon parents
Many of them are skeptical yet demand that kids mask up anyway
It might help a little, but the reasons for our low birthrate ultimately run deeper
The prominence of pedophilia in Sixties and Seventies thought
Public policy has now been divorced from reality
The American Academy of Pediatrics are turning mask-wearing into a religion instead of a precaution
Watching the funeral of the Duke of Edinburgh at the weekend — that Land Rover, that lack of eulogy — I felt an alien emotion steal over me. Shortly after the last blast of the bagpipes faded away, I realised what it was: I’d like to be like that. Amusingly, the only person this working-class radical feminist has ever felt this emotion towards was a reactionary prince. Somehow, the very incongruity made perfect sense; I can’t think of anything drearier than having a ‘role model’ who was in any way like me. There are quite a few modern phrases which annoy the heck out of me. ‘Reaching out’ should only
Sometimes the answer to the ever-present ‘is it kid-friendly?’ question should be ‘no, it’s really not’