flat white

‘Hate Speech’ laws and the murder of justice

Anyone keen on hate speech laws, needs to spend a year in Pakistan living under their Islamic blasphemy laws. It’s…

30 Jun 2024

Bureaucratic punishment

Michael* (not his real name) is a typical Aussie kid who grew up in Sydney’s beaches. Confident and cheerful, he…

29 Jun 2024

Fatima Payman: the untouchable senator

When they are first elected and enter their party room for the first time, Labor MPs sign the Pledge. They…

28 Jun 2024

Treason, Leaks, and Julian Assange: a misguided hero?

Thomas Jefferson once shot a man on the White House Lawn for treason. The Western world has come a long…

28 Jun 2024

Australians should celebrate the return of Assange

The return of Julian Assange to Australia has undoubtedly been the dominant news item during the last couple of days.…

It’s time for a reckoning on race and gender

The Western world is facing a reckoning on race and gender. The rise of discriminatory hiring practices is usually the…

28 Jun 2024

Liturgy Wars

One of the epic struggles in the culture wars of our time is reaching its climax, a conflict every bit…

27 Jun 2024

Julian Assange is not the hero many want him to be

Some are celebrating the release of Julian Assange while others beg to differ. Were his actions those of a whistleblower…

Why are Australians dying?

Since the very first day that I was elected as a Senator for Victoria I have been seeking answers as…

27 Jun 2024

The Australian Education Union is miffed about phonics

One of my earliest memories is sitting on the front verandah of my parents’ farmhouse. My two younger brothers and…

27 Jun 2024

Wind turbines? Not in my backyard

It appears that wind turbines are the best thing since people started tilting at windmills. Have you ever wondered how…

26 Jun 2024

The right to f*#kng protest!

Lucky, I speak fluent CFMEU… The construction union’s boss, John Setka, has had a lot to say in the media…

26 Jun 2024

In the footsteps of terror

Al Qaeda’s 9/11 attack, the deadliest terror atrocity in history, killed 2,996 people of the then 285 million population of…

29 Jun 2024

A future Sorry Day

In recent times, Sorry Days have become quite popular, delivered by representatives of both federal and state governments. Apologies have…

29 Jun 2024

Business/Robbery, etc

Australia’s rush to renewables (with its unachievable unrealistic targets) has generated an energy subservience to China. It creates the potential…

29 Jun 2024

eKaren’s magic trick

Every good magician has mastered the art of misdirection. Get the audience looking elsewhere so they don’t notice the trick…

29 Jun 2024

Rise of the new right

Whither representative democracy? The BBC’s Nick Robinson says that Conservatives think of Reform leader Nigel Farage as ‘a kind of…

29 Jun 2024

Importance of Being Earnestly Pro-Renewables

Who is writing Paul Keating’s talking points these days? Those familiar with his tirades might have detected in his latest…

29 Jun 2024

Tiktok… time’s up for old-fashioned politicians

Judging by the outcome of the European elections, it would appear that the globalist consensus has been rejected by voters.…

29 Jun 2024

Britain’s looming disaster

Within a week, Britain will have the most left-wing government in its history. This won’t be because of Labour’s popularity,…

29 Jun 2024

Why is Starmer starting rows before the election?

The Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has insisted he didn’t mean to cause ‘concern or offence’ when he called for…

30 Jun 2024

Biden’s social media needs a refresh

Joe Biden has a cold. That was the desperate message sent out by sources close to the president halfway through…

30 Jun 2024

Newsom is better than Biden

I have on the desk two yo-yos. One is from the brand Duncan – the ‘Imperial’ model. The other is from the…

29 Jun 2024

Kemi Badenoch blasts Nigel Farage

With a week to go until polling day, the Tories are stepping up their attacks on Reform. Following Channel 4’s…

29 Jun 2024

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Kiwi life

New Zealand in crisis Given the destruction the previous Labour government inflicted on this country, and the damage caused by…

29 Jun 2024

New Zealand’s carbon sequestration problem

Ongoing concern about climate change has fuelled debate about the part carbon sequestration might play in reducing New Zealand’s net…

19 Jun 2024

Why New Zealand is cracking down on immigration

The government of New Zealand this week tightened the country’s working visa rules in order to stem historically high numbers…

10 Apr 2024

Why is New Zealand’s deputy PM rowing with Chumbawamba?

In their musical heyday, the English anarchist punk band Chumbawamba enjoyed a reputation for having an irreverent attitude towards those…

22 Mar 2024

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Kiwi life

New Zealand in crisis Given the destruction the previous Labour government inflicted on this country, and the damage caused by…

29 Jun 2024

Language

How are you enjoying dealing with the bureaucrats who run our lives these days? (I heard your answer, and you…

29 Jun 2024

Can politicians really pivot?

‘That’ll be the old pivot again,’ said Amol Rajan on Today last week. He was interviewing Pat McFadden, who is…

29 Jun 2024

Is Southgate making it up as he goes along?

Say what you like about Gary Lineker, and plenty do, but he’s a terrific presenter and when he’s not running…

29 Jun 2024

Unless the Treasury is tamed, there’s no solution to Britain’s problems

The Tory era is not (quite) over yet, but already the obituaries are in. In particular, two new books from…

29 Jun 2024

A brief glimpse of secretive Myanmar

Were trains to blame for the travel writing boom of the 1980s? When Paul Theroux’s The Great Railway Bazaar was…

29 Jun 2024

A sea of troubles: The Coast Road, by Alan Murrin, reviewed

Contemporary Irish writers have a knack of making their recent past feel very foreign. Clare Keegan’s Small Things Like These…

29 Jun 2024

Pure Puccini: an opera lover’s melodramatic family history

‘If a horse is born in a stable, does it bark like a dog?’ By the time the Duke of…

29 Jun 2024

Afrikaner angst: Cato Pedder goes in search of her ancestors

‘Let me tell you about Jan Smuts,’ my grandfather, a doctor born not far from Johannesburg, would begin. And we,…

29 Jun 2024

Runaway lovers: The Heart in Winter, by Kevin Barry, reviewed

Watching Kevin Barry’s progress over the years has been a pleasure. His first novel, City of Bohane, flamboyant with tribal…

29 Jun 2024

The atmosphere of a historic country house cannot be bought

The Historic Houses Association can congratulate itself. This pressure group for country houses, founded in 1973, has proved to be…

29 Jun 2024

No Sir Lancelot: A Good Deliverance, by Toby Clements, reviewed

Sir Thomas Malory is not much of a knight. He lies; he is lecherous; he is bested in tourneys; he…

29 Jun 2024