All posts tagged: trail

England trail Australia on day two of third test

England trail Australia on day two of third test

Good evening and welcome to live coverage of day two of the third Test of the 2025-26 Ashes series from Adelaide which begins with Australia, having won the toss, on 326 for eight. I think England will be reasonably happy with that though it could have been a lot better had Harry Brook held on to that chance at second slip that would have sent Usman Khawaja back to the hutch on five, had Brydon Carse clung on to a screamer at cover when Alex Carey had just passed fifty and the dopey Snicko operator, in the immortal words of Roy Keane, just ‘done your b—— job’. Will Jacks, Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue, from the Cathedral End, were too leaky as well and let Australia get away but not far enough away yet to ruin England’s chances of getting back in the series depending, of course, on a quick kill this morning and then batting long to build a big lead and finally put some mental and physical pressure on Australia’s attack. Looking for …

In Medicine and More, Canada Blazes a Trail to Authoritarianism

In Medicine and More, Canada Blazes a Trail to Authoritarianism

This story by Wesley J. Smith is republished with the author’s permission from National Review. Freedom of religion is an internationally recognized fundamental human right. But in these increasingly secular times, efforts are ongoing to limit believers from living according to their faith outside of church, synagogue, mosque, or temple and home. In other words, religious freedom is being intentionally shriveled into a tepid and essentially toothless freedom of worship. Leading the Charge Canada is leading that charge and, in the process, becoming increasingly authoritarian. For example, even though the Canadian Charter explicitly guarantees “freedom of conscience and religion,” Ontario doctors with a religious objection to committing euthanasia or abortion were denied conscience protections by courts, thereby requiring them to kill or refer to a doctor they know will kill (“effective referral”) or face professional discipline. The judge ruled that if they didn’t like it, they should get out of medicine. (Not coincidentally, some 16,500 people were killed by doctors and nurse practitioners in the country last year.) In Quebec, public religious practice is in danger of being further suppressed than it already is. …