Britain’s drinking problem | Sam Hall
Britain has a booze problem. Specifically, a problem of quantity and frequency; when we’re sad, happy, and celebrating; at weddings, funerals, sports games; when our team loses and when they win. At home, in pubs and clubs; to celebrate the end of the week or even just one day. Fuelling this problem is the availability of cheap alcohol.
COVID-19: the need for community and breaking free from the buffered self | Ojel L. Rodriguez Burgos
The UK government’s refusal to timely adopt more stricter measures to combat the virus also makes it incumbent on all of us and our communities to protect ourselves. Taking the time to talk to an older person, helping a stranger, volunteering in the Church or an organization could look trivial to the action needed to deal with the crisis- but a thousand acts of random kindness… can be of enormous benefit to the whole of society.
Britain’s epidemic of broken homes is affecting its children | Kelseigh Powell-Hall
It is, of course, necessary to state that simply pointing out the ideal conditions for raising children is in no way shaming or ignoring the struggles of single parents, but instead promoting the traditional family as the prerequisite for optimal childhood development. Britons today must be educated on the benefits of stable families and encouraged to create an environment which will best allow for their children to succeed.