- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Happy Expat
- Hits: 724
The Battle of Britain ended on 15th September, 1940 but the Blitz continued long after that. Following the evacuation of Dunkirk and the Battle of Britain a wealthy American living in London persuaded the government to form an RAF squadron composed entirely of Americans.
This is their story.
When war broke out on 3rd September, 1939 there was no mad rush of support for the causes espoused by Britain or for Poland and other occupied European countries. Americans were very much of a mind to remain out of any European war. There was no universal feeling of kinship towards Britain and there was, in fact, quite a lot of sympathetic support for Hitler.
The second most common language spoken in the USA at the time was German and to cap it all the Neutrality Act prevented any engagement, let alone involvement, by Americans with any belligerent country. That included Britain and France as well as Germany.
Amongst all that however, there was a core of sympathetic support for Britain and an eagerness by those who had learned how to fly to enter the fray. Among the various means of getting around the rigours of the Neutrality Act was to cross the border into Canada and proceed from there.
Read more: The Eagle Squadrons: Friends Indeed in Time of Need
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Shaydee Lane
- Hits: 894
In an age of glowing screens and fleeting texts, something precious has quietly slipped away: the letter. Once, entire lives were poured into envelopes - love confessions, battlefield farewells, business dreams, simple reassurances. Letters carried permanence, patience, and poetry. Today, we trade that depth for speed: a thumbs-up emoji instead of a paragraph, an “u ok?” instead of pages of care.
The Hallmark series Signed, Sealed, Delivered (also known as Lost Letter Mysteries) captures this beautifully. Its quirky, unapologetically “nice” postal detectives uncover the stories behind undelivered letters... no sex, no swearing, no violence, just hearts and stories. It reminds us that even now, in an age of instant messaging, a letter can change everything.
When you hold a letter, you hold more than words. You hold the slowness of thought, the imprint of a hand, the hope of reply. A letter can be read and re-read, its meaning deepening with every return.
Read more: The Lost Art of Letters: A Lament in the Digital Age
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Shaydee Lane
- Hits: 871
As young folk, didn't some of us feel like rebels without a cause?
I am 70. In my era, some of us chose to follow Greenpeace. Others chose anti Vietnam war. Still others embraced the feminist ideology and some the allure of socialism and communism. For myself, I never really embraced a cause. I was too busy enjoying life. But I was always a bit of a black sheep.
Terribly stubborn. Opinionated and very determined in my views on what was black or white or right from wrong. Poor Redhead still tries to rein me in but alas, she hasn't been successful thus far. At 93, you would think she would give up trying, but she tells me " I am still your mother. "
Bugger. She is right of course but in all fairness, I do attribute good parenting to the fact that she now has three geriatric offspring who tend to be a pain in her arse because we won't do as we are told. Let me explain.
Read more: From Jim Stark to Charlie Kirk: The Quest for Meaning
- Details
- Written by: The PR Blog
- Hits: 799
As our countries are collapsing under the weight of wokeism, social and communist ideology, who else is looking for a leader to fight back? I know that I am. As has been the case in all times of humanity's struggle against oppression and totalitarianism, all it takes is one man, one voice, one leader.... and the troops will rally.
" Upon this battle depends the survival of Christian civilisation. Upon it depends our own .... life, and the long continuity of our institutions..... The whole fury and might of the enemy must very soon be turned on us. .... But if we fail, then the whole world will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age made more sinister, and perhaps more protracted, by the lights of perverted science. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties..... men will still say, "This was their finest hour." - from Winston Churchill ( excerpt)
- Details
- Written by: Op-Ed Monty
- Hits: 834
Crack Up or Crack Apart
When the world gets grim, you’ve only got two choices: crack up or crack apart.
After days of heavy headlines and the suffocating weight of politics and history, sometimes the wisest thing we can do is pause, pour a cuppa, and remember to laugh. Yet I suspect many have gone past that point.
Australia has always been a country of people who crack up, crack a tinny, crack a joke, and move on. But even we are weary of watching our nation and our world crack apart.
Today I want to talk about the birth and death of humour - how the left lost what little they had, and how humour itself has shifted. Because when laughter dies and mockery takes over, humanity has lost its soul. And sadly, too many governments are legislating joy out of our lives.
Read more: The Death of Laughter: Can a Humourless World Survive?
- View all
- Blog
-
Still No Sparkle: The…
Australia's Spirit at the Crossroads – Time to Shake Off the Mud At dawn, when…
15 hits
-
We are the Ball
Muddy, Battered, and Waiting for the Next Kick-Off After a rugby match, the ball always…
252 hits
-
Let the Paddock Decide
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Edition (Front Page) RUCTION AT THE GULCH OVAL: SETTLED THE…
403 hits
-
Bruce Ruxton - the…
Some men belong to history. Others belong to the national conscience. Bruce Ruxton was the latter.…
336 hits
-
Harold Holt - the…
The Prime Minister Who Disappeared There are many ways for a Prime Minister to leave…
400 hits
-
The Men We Chose…
From Whitlam to Bondi Beach, how moral evasion became cultural habit Australia has woken up…
414 hits
-
Comfortably Numb: Ten Years…
At 9:41am on Monday, 15 December 2014, Man Haron Monis forced Tori Johnson, the manager…
473 hits
-
Lindsay Fox - The…
Recent news in Australia has sparked debate: a ban on social media for under-16s. The…
379 hits
-
The Duck, the Diva…
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Scandal Edition By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble – Foreign Correspondent, Rodent…
371 hits
-
Has the ‘Woke’ movement…
Back in 1904, H. G. Wells published a short story called “The Country of the…
392 hits
-
Young Minds Under Siege:…
Education, often celebrated as a beacon of enlightenment and progress, can also become a potent…
393 hits
-
White Island - A…
On December 9, 2019, New Zealand's White Island erupted .claiming 22 lives and leaving survivors…
404 hits
-
Drawing Blood With Ink
They say the pen is mightier than the sword, and nowhere is that truer than…
389 hits
-
Pearl Harbor - a…
Before the sun had fully risen over Hawaii, a chain reaction had begun — one…
482 hits
-
Little Johnny Outsmarts eSafety:…
“Minor Problem: I Identify as a 73-Year-Old Tabby, Therefore I’m Legally Entitled to X (and…
511 hits
-
Town Ticks 'Duck' en…
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Special Duck Census Edition By Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble – Foreign Correspondent,…
394 hits
-
You'd Have to be…
Flysa spent some of the early years of his life managing construction projects in the…
431 hits
-
From Gold Fever to…
In the heart of Ballarat in 1854, a ragtag coalition of gold miners took a…
536 hits
-
The Bhopal Gas Tragedy:…
The Bhopal Gas Tragedy: Forty-One Years On — A Legacy That Still Breathes, Bleeds, and…
400 hits
-
Henry Kaiser - The…
Henry J. Kaiser: The Self-Made Miracle Worker and the Legacy of Vision This article builds…
459 hits
-
Australia’s Iron Ore Industry…
The birth of Australia’s iron ore industry wasn’t just an economic milestone - it was…
448 hits
-
Meet Lee Hanson: One…
The Quiet Hanson: Why Lee Sherrard Might Just Save One Nation (and Why She Might…
642 hits
-
" The Burka is…
Dusty Gulch Gazette – Emergency Midnight Edition November 27, 2025 – Vol. 147, No. 320…
465 hits
-
Raise a Glass, America…
From a disease-ravaged ship anchored off a windswept coast… to thirteen scrappy colonies telling the…
430 hits
-
The Prime of Miss…
In Muriel Spark’s The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie, a charismatic Edinburgh teacher enchants her…
596 hits
-
Elon Musk - Reaching…
Elon Musk is more than a billionaire tech mogul...he’s a disruptor, a visionary, and a…
436 hits
-
It's Time to be…
Yes, let’s be honest. The days when the Irish, Scots, Italians, Greeks, Poles, Hungarians, Poms,…
455 hits
-
Prohibition didn’t make Teetotallers:…
Picture this: You’re sitting down for a family dinner, and instead of chatting about school,…
448 hits
-
CROW SHOT, CLOUDS CRASH…
Dusty Gulch Gazette November 21, 2025 – Vol. 147, No. 312 By Jedediah "Dust" Harlan…
476 hits
-
Bullet Pops Digital Duck…
by Roderick (Whiskers) McNibble - Chief Correspondent for Ratty News - Aeronautical and Ornithological Division…
463 hits
-
Tynwald, the Isle of…
A green hill in the Irish Sea has stood for 1,045 years. It has seen…
474 hits
-
Lost With All Hands…
There are many ships of the Royal Australian Navy that are dear to the hearts…
443 hits