Betting on a papal conclave felt mildly degenerate
I began to suspect that the bookmakers had no idea what they were doing.
Grayson Quay is a Spectator World columnist and weekend editor at The Week
I began to suspect that the bookmakers had no idea what they were doing.
Arlo Guthrie’s rambling, satirical anti-Vietnam ballad still plays every Thanksgiving
A new generation of trads damns libertarianism and jokes they’re the ‘based furries’
Why have men become so useless?
While its prequel seems just another tale of a girlboss girlbossing
Instead of abolishing humanity, we spread it across the stars
The obvious question
No, a rep didn’t say she would kill her grandchildren to protect her guns
Pro-life dreams are no longer a sitcom joke
They’ve become agents of woke cultural imperialism
Let’s show the world that freedom and humanity can coexist
They held their noses, voted for Trump, and were proven right
At the Supreme Court as Alito’s decision overturning Roe was leaked
He’s ditched any shred of social conservatism in lockstep with his party
And that’s okay
A new conservative venture shows our partisanship runs deep
After Trump the right needs an intellectual, one who cares about ideas and won’t give an inch
Putin’s government is waging not just a military campaign but a spiritual one
Our politics should stop posting and touch grass
Joe Rogan and the Canadian truckers are said to be extreme — but compared to what?