Bargain Brazilian wines
Brazil’s light, fruity and approachable wines are likely to find a place in the American market
Roger Kimball is a US columnist for The Spectator, the publisher of Encounter Books and the editor and publisher of the New Criterion.
Brazil’s light, fruity and approachable wines are likely to find a place in the American market
Blue skies, periodic showers that freshen the verdure and intelligent governance from Ron DeSantis: no wonder they call it paradise
National Review’s Never Trump redux gets it wrong
The vice president’s ‘diplomatic jaunt’ around Eastern Europe was an embarrassment
From our UK edition
You can tell that the Biden administration is getting serious. They have unleashed their ultimate weapon, cackle diplomacy. The warhead is nicknamed Harris, and it is now in Poland cackling away, endeavouring to assemble the high-level Pierogis before Russia flattens Kiev or Putin decides to go nuclear – and by ‘go nuclear’, alas, I mean ‘go
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Is it time for freedom-loving Canadians to mount a general strike?
Totalitarian ideas are now out in the open
Our elites are finally waking up to the consequences — or maybe they’re just scared of growing public anger
I wonder whether the moment hasn’t come to begin thinking of Washington the way the later emperors thought of Rome
Fans of The Philadelphia Story will remember the starring role played by Miss Pommery 1926
What happened in Colleyville is a lesson in intelligence failure and the toxic effect of wokeness on the FBI
After describing participants as ‘violent terrorists,’ he took the FBI to task
The senator implicitly bolstered the false Democratic narrative about January 6
Young grapes and Ancient Greeks
The long march of the cultural revolution has succeeded beyond its wildest dreams
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A Washington Post writer thinks that, circa 2021, we do not have enough government in our lives
It turns out that ‘systemic racism’ is what you have to rely on when there is no actual racism to be found