flat white

Tough love: we are letting ourselves get really dumb. 

So, the Has Been’s Club recently met. Burgers and beers at a pub renovated to look more like an upmarket…

14 May 2021

Why does the Left keep making the same mistake?

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. It’s a cliché and it’s misattributed…

14 May 2021

No, the government can’t sprinkle sherbet on everything

I love the federal budget. And I’m unapologetic about it.  But there is one part of budget week that annoys me…

13 May 2021

Adam Bandt’s drink problem

Is this why is Adam Bandt in parliament? Because he failed as a sommelier? One might think so from his…

The Coalition has surrendered its key point of political differentiation - debt and deficit

There were a heap of euphoric headlines in response to the federal budget. And what’s not to like in a…

13 May 2021

The World Health Organisation had one job…

A review of the initial response to the Wuhan virus by an independent panel, co-chaired by former New Zealand prime…

13 May 2021

The age of entitlement is back

I want to share with you the two best pieces of analysis about the 2021-22 federal budget delivered last night…

13 May 2021

How even Xi Jinping gets something this budget

In all the lists of budget winners and losers, one name has been missing: Xi Jinping. Yet China’s President for…

12 May 2021

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Can Labour survive the next election?

Keir Starmer is having a torrid time. Today brings another poll showing his personal approval rating falling. The Labour leader…

14 May 2021

What's the problem, ladies and gentlemen?

Picture the scene. You’re on a train when the following message comes over the tannoy: ‘Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen,…

14 May 2021

The battle the Israeli Defense Force can't win

The hostilities between Israel and Gaza caught Netanyahu’s government by surprise. What started as a local demonstration by Palestinians against…

How are we enjoying the Biden presidency so far?

Well, that didn’t take long. Less than four months into the Biden-Harris deep-state maladministration and we have roaring inflation, the…

14 May 2021

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How to beat the drums of war

Are we at last getting real about China? Are we ceasing to pretend that China is potentially a normal nation…

15 May 2021

Sic ’em, Triggs!

In Canada an old friend of mine, Bruce Pardy, wrote an opinion piece last week calling on conservatives to start…

15 May 2021

Business/Robbery, etc.

It’s only one word – inserting ‘financial’ between ‘members’ and ‘best interests’ – that should kill off much of the…

15 May 2021

The middle-class childhood mafia is fleecing us again

I have always been fascinated by the story of the kibbutz movement in Israel. From their beginnings in the early…

15 May 2021

The next Vietnam

ScoMo might as well get on with building the quarantine stations in the desert. Once vaccination has solved our current…

15 May 2021

Waiting it out behind the Covid Curtain

Behind the Covid Curtain, Australia’s state and federal leaders tremble. Premiers try not to panic about solitary cases and missing…

15 May 2021

You’re gonna make us lonesome when you go

Come writers and critics who prophesy with your pen, Bob Dylan turns eighty on Monday 24 May, and the opportunity…

15 May 2021

Xi’s man in the White House?

Men in the Mirror, Sky News Australia’s excellent documentary by Chris Kenny on the awful similarities between those two prime…

15 May 2021

Ulysses

If you wanted a college at the University of Melbourne that had no hint of imitation Oxbridge you would turn…

15 May 2021

The Truth About China by Bill Birtles

As news came through of China’s suspension of high-level trade dialogue with Australia, I read The Truth About China by…

15 May 2021

Reese Witherspoon

There are moments when the very idea of live entertainment including its high cultural expression, thrills the soul. On 6…

8 May 2021

Francesco Cavalli’s The Loves of Apollo & Dafne

Venice in the 17th century was the birthplace of opera.  Its dominant and most successful exponent was Francesco Cavalli.  Once…

8 May 2021

Aussie Life

A recent jaunt through the NSW South Coast town of Bermagui sparked a friendly family rivalry over whose forebears had…

15 May 2021

Aussie Language

There is an organisation called ‘Dying with Dignity’. In their most recent newsletter they say, ‘The NSW Parliament looks set…

15 May 2021

Dear Mary: How do I tell my fiancee that she eats with her mouth open?

Q. I’ve recently been approached by a very good friend who — with genuinely admirable candour and tact — pointed…

15 May 2021

Shakespeare didn’t need to know the difference between ‘its’ and ‘it’s’

An item on the BBC news site didn’t mean what it said: ‘The latest move is part of a wider…

15 May 2021

The evolution of England — from ragbag kingdoms to a centralised state

The title of Marc Morris’s new history makes me want to get up and dance a little jig. The modern…

15 May 2021

Why did Hitler’s imperial dreams take Stalin by surprise?

The most extraordinary thing, still, about Operation Barbarossa is the complete surprise the Wehrmacht achieved. In the early hours of…

15 May 2021

Will’s world: Shakespeare as the man in the crowd

Shakespeare’s first biographer was the gossipy antiquarian John Aubrey, who famously described the playwright as ‘not a company keeper’. It…

15 May 2021

The gender identity issue: Kathleen Stock puts her head above the parapet

‘Something is afoot,’ wrote the academic philosopher Kathleen Stock in 2018: Beyond the academy, there’s a huge and impassioned discussion…

15 May 2021

Cairo in crisis: The Republic of False Truths, by Alaa Al Aswany, reviewed

Certain novels complicate the very notion of literary enjoyment. This, by the author of the international bestseller The Yacoubian Building,…

15 May 2021

A funny time to be Irish: The Rules of Revelation, by Lisa McInerney, reviewed

Lisa McInerney likes the rule of three. Three novels set in Cork structured around sex, drugs and rock’n’roll and, within…

15 May 2021

The first Cambridge spy: A Fine Madness, by Alan Judd, reviewed

For his 15th novel, the espionage writer Alan Judd turns his hand to the mystery of Christopher Marlowe’s death. The…

15 May 2021

Hitting the buffers: The Passenger, by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz, reviewed

‘They’ll slowly undress us first and then kill us, so our clothes won’t get bloody and our banknotes won’t get…

15 May 2021