Steyn on free movement, free speech, free elections, and the fruits of diversity...
Steyn on Iran's curiously performative attack on Israel...
In case you missed it, here's how the last seven days looked to Mark:
Rick McGinnis reviews John Malkovich's take on Latin America...
Canada - the first hermaphrodite member of the G7...
Mark answers questions on many topics, from the Ukraine war to the State of New York's war on VDare.com...
Mark takes questions from Steyn Club members around the world...
Steyn is interviewed by Frank Haviland of The New Conservative...
Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer interview Mark about the press and much else...
Tomorrow is Tax Day in America - April 15th, the day before Emancipation Day in the District of Columbia (April 16th). So Monday represents America's formal Emancipation Day from what H & R Block & Co like to dignify as "Tax Season". As I used to say on Rush every year round this time, the acceptance of that term is not a good sign: Baseball should have a season, but not tax. Nevertheless, in the brokey brokiest nation in the history of brokeness, on this day the season of 1040s and 1099s draws to a close, and so, as we do with spring and summer, we offer a song for said season. For the first half of Tin Pan Alley's history, tax barely rated a mention in popular song. Before the Second World War, I can think of just two well-known ditties ...
Mark mulls monarchy with Samantha Smith and Conrad Black...
Steyn talks identity politics with Leilani, Samantha and Tal...
Mark talks to his old boss, the Rt Hon the Lord Black of Crossharbour...
Mark and Michele talk Trump, Biden and more...
Steyn files three new motions in the DC Superior Court...
A remote fantastical kingdom far from Europe's chancelleries of power... An unpopular monarch on the eve of his coronation... A ruling class of plotters and would-be usurpers... ...and a gentleman adventurer on holiday. No, not Ruritania in the nineteenth century, but the United Kingdom in the twenty-first...
Tales for Our Time returns with a Steyn take on an H G Wells theme...