by Shane Trejo, Big League Politics:

According to a Rasmussen poll, 41% of Americans voters believe a second civil war could afflict the United States. Of these voters, 16% believe such a scenario is very likely.
49% believe that it is not likely that a civil war will take place in the US. 10% are unsure.
The poll also found that Republican voters were more certain that the US would be in a state of civil war than their Democratic counterparts. Specifically, 54%) of Republican voters, 35% of Democrat voters, and 32% of independent voters believe it is at least somewhat likely that the US will go through a second civil war at some point in the next five years.







As a former postgraduate member of Merton College, Oxford University, I receive every year from Merton College a thick, well prepared report replete with color photos titled Postmaster and the Merton Record. The report provides a thorough report on everything associated with the college and present and past members as reported during the year. For example, undergraduate performance and prizes, publications and awards of faculty, concerts, the performance of the various sports teams, social events, reports of marriages, deaths, births, remembrances from past graduates, photographs of the college, gardens, and members, and books on the library’s shelves as if to say that here at Merton we still have the timeless products of Western Civilization in print form on library shelves instead of online somewhere in the cloud. In the current issue, those still alive who attended JRR Tolkien’s lectures provide their memories of this remarkable scholar of ancient languages and storyteller (The Hobbit, and The Lord of the Rings). It all reminds us that at Merton some semblance, some remnant of Britain’s ancient lineage lingers still among the tower of babel England has become.
Canada is veering dangerously close to the type of complete control over people’s thoughts and speech seen in places like North Korea with a new bill that aims to censor people on the pretense of protecting others from “hate speech” – and that’s not even the most daunting part of it. What’s even more horrifying is the fact that 
