Hungarian Conservative

Brian Patrick Bolger

Brian Patrick Bolger

Brian Patrick Bolger studied at the London School of Economics. He has taught political philosophy and applied linguistics at universities across Europe. His articles have appeared in newspapers and magazines, such as The European Conservative, The Montreal Review, The Salisbury Review, The Independent, The Burkean, The Daily Globe, and Philosophy Now. He is the author of Coronavirus and the Strange Death of Truth. His new book Nowhere Fast: Democracy and Identity in the Twenty First Century is published now by Ethics International Press.
‘Elite structures tend to consolidate a prevailing view whether that be the dictatorship of the proletariat or the dictatorship of the ‘trahison des clercs’ of Brussels. There seems to be
A new populism is appearing, based on real participatory federalism oriented towards tradition and community, with the Nomos being grounded in the ethnic divisions of states and regions.
The recent assassination of Alexander Dugin’s daughter has seen a consistent mantra from the Western media; Dugin described as an ‘ideologue’. It is one of those phrases which epitomize the
We now stand at the cliff edge of the truth quarry, where mass media and technology have facilitated what Stalin always wanted: ‘engineers of human souls’.