As has been reported on Gateway Pundit, The results from canvassing efforts in Arizona are now out…this is a separate exercise from the Maricopa County audit the Arizona Senate is sponsoring.
However, for all of those who knew this election was stolen, those who were ridiculed or labeled conspiracy theorists – You have been vindicated. Perhaps this is an opportunity to revisit a landmark decision handed down by the United States Supreme Court in the case of The United States versus Throckmorton.
Read more: Fraud Vitiates Everything
“Gold is the primary store of value for those who mistrust the government, but silver remains the refuge of choice for most people because it is cheaper and more accessible.”
The aptly-named New York University professor William Silber wanted to title his book “Silber on Silver” – but his publisher instead had him settle for The Story of Silver: How the White Metal Shaped America and the Modern World. The wittiness of that remark in the acknowledgements shows the many instances of snark, irony, or amusing tales that are scattered throughout this excellent contribution to the history of monetary commodities. Always playing second fiddle to gold, silver’s status as asset and as money is as riveting as the more widely known history of gold.
It is a strange world that we live in, isn't it? There is so much that cannot be explained by " science " yet we drag out the " science " word with such ease and dismiss God with equal ease.
Marie Stopes Australia has closed four of its Queensland clinics. The clinics, located in Townsville, Rockhampton, Southport, and Newcastle employed over 40 staff and performed around 5,000 abortions annually.
Managing director Jamal Hakim described the closures as “a really difficult decision“.
The whole debate over the Bible stories is often held up for ridicule by those who believe that the most popular book ever written is a load of tosh and well, simply laughable.
Yet, strangely enough, the very people who scoff at the wisdom of The Bible, are the first to believe in the book of Biden and the forbidden jab in the Garden of Pfizer.
As any old person who has been interrupted by a checkout assistant at a do-it-yourself supermarket scanner would agree, there is a general perception among the younger members of the community that we oldies are senile and useless. While refusing to let the unwelcome interloper scan for me, I always remember the great poem Ulysses by Lord Tennyson, which ends with the following lines:
This topic has been prompted by comments from knitters on my last dissertation “The Men Who Saved Australia”. I was surprised that it arose in the way it did because the role of the Japanese escort with the first ANZAC fleet was touched on in my series on the first HMAS Sydney and its fight with the Emden.
The history of Japanese and British alliance is a maze that keeps going back at each stanza of the relationship but in the interests of brevity and completeness, I am starting with the Anglo-Japanese treaty of 1902.
Growing trees need three essentials – radiant energy from the sun, CO2 and rain from the atmosphere, and nutrients and minerals from the soil. Climate alarmists correctly claim that burning forest products in thermal power stations is “net-zero emissions” because burning the wood just puts the same CO2 back into the atmosphere. Identical reasoning applies to grazing cattle.
Read more: Our Children First or Last... that is the Question.
As our world descends into a chaotic shadow of its former moral self, I have been thinking about finding a way out of this maze of cancel culture, identity politics, sexual dysphoria and narcissistic self gratification. Our governments are herding us into lockdown, exile and social isolation whilst assuring us that it is for our own. good. So many people are happy to receive an unemployment payment, sit home and take selfies - as long as there is food and drink and a roof over their heads.
Yet the sage words of John Steinbeck and John Calhoun are increasingly in my thoughts these days. Will we ever find our way out of this maze?
Australia's Spirit at the Crossroads – Time to Shake Off the Mud At dawn, when…
185 hits
Muddy, Battered, and Waiting for the Next Kick-Off After a rugby match, the ball always…
271 hits
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Edition (Front Page) RUCTION AT THE GULCH OVAL: SETTLED THE…
414 hits
Some men belong to history. Others belong to the national conscience. Bruce Ruxton was the latter.…
346 hits
The Prime Minister Who Disappeared There are many ways for a Prime Minister to leave…
405 hits
From Whitlam to Bondi Beach, how moral evasion became cultural habit Australia has woken up…
416 hits
At 9:41am on Monday, 15 December 2014, Man Haron Monis forced Tori Johnson, the manager…
478 hits
Recent news in Australia has sparked debate: a ban on social media for under-16s. The…
382 hits
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Scandal Edition By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble – Foreign Correspondent, Rodent…
373 hits
Back in 1904, H. G. Wells published a short story called “The Country of the…
394 hits
Education, often celebrated as a beacon of enlightenment and progress, can also become a potent…
395 hits
On December 9, 2019, New Zealand's White Island erupted .claiming 22 lives and leaving survivors…
407 hits
They say the pen is mightier than the sword, and nowhere is that truer than…
391 hits
Before the sun had fully risen over Hawaii, a chain reaction had begun — one…
488 hits
“Minor Problem: I Identify as a 73-Year-Old Tabby, Therefore I’m Legally Entitled to X (and…
517 hits
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Duck Census Edition By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble – Foreign Correspondent,…
396 hits
Flysa spent some of the early years of his life managing construction projects in the…
433 hits
In the heart of Ballarat in 1854, a ragtag coalition of gold miners took a…
538 hits
The Bhopal Gas Tragedy: Forty-One Years On — A Legacy That Still Breathes, Bleeds, and…
402 hits
Henry J. Kaiser: The Self-Made Miracle Worker and the Legacy of Vision This article builds…
461 hits
The birth of Australia’s iron ore industry wasn’t just an economic milestone - it was…
449 hits
The Quiet Hanson: Why Lee Sherrard Might Just Save One Nation (and Why She Might…
646 hits
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Emergency Midnight Edition November 27, 2025 – Vol. 147, No. 320…
467 hits
From a disease-ravaged ship anchored off a windswept coast… to thirteen scrappy colonies telling the…
432 hits
In Muriel Spark’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, a charismatic Edinburgh teacher enchants her…
601 hits
Elon Musk is more than a billionaire tech mogul...he’s a disruptor, a visionary, and a…
438 hits
Yes, let’s be honest. The days when the Irish, Scots, Italians, Greeks, Poles, Hungarians, Poms,…
457 hits
Picture this: You’re sitting down for a family dinner, and instead of chatting about school,…
450 hits
Dusty Gulch Gazette November 21, 2025 – Vol. 147, No. 312 By Jedediah "Dust" Harlan…
479 hits
by Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble - Chief Correspondent for Ratty News - Aeronautical and Ornithological Division…
464 hits
A green hill in the Irish Sea has stood for 1,045 years. It has seen…
475 hits
There are many ships of the Royal Australian Navy that are dear to the hearts…
445 hits