flat white

Post-pandemic self-reliance: an answer to globalist nostalgia

Australia is beginning to emerge from the depths of COVID quarantine, but we can’t celebrate just yet! We will shortly…

8 May 2020

Pink and blue? That’s far too simple for some

Last time I checked the number of genders available to identify as or with is currently 112.  That’s up from…

8 May 2020

If we’re on the road back, are interstate travel bans even legal?

There is an old saying about experts and politics: experts are better on tap than on top. In a democracy,…

8 May 2020

The left want to keep us lockdowned to serve the grand green agenda

Leftists have turned to alchemy to try to transform the Covid-19 pandemic into their fabled climate emergency. Former ABC journalist…

8 May 2020

A question for the(ir) ABC and Scott Morrison

Please take a seat; we need to discuss something incredibly important. It has been reported over recent weeks that calls…

8 May 2020

Extinction Rebellion: prepare for “mass civil disobedience”

Extremist, hard-left activists haven’t been wasting their lockdown. Instead, they’ve been celebrating the destruction of hundreds of thousands of jobs,…

The biggest issue with COVIDSafe: incompetence

The COVID-19 tracing application may look like a targeted and temporary solution, but history shows that privacy incursions are typically…

7 May 2020

Revealed: the true cost of our stimulus spending

Relative to GDP Australian government spending to address COVID-19 has been among the highest in the world.   The Morrison…

7 May 2020

Boris Johnson should be wary of comparisons with Churchill

Despite his carefully-crafted bumbling image, Boris Johnson is anything but daft. When vying to replace the apparently rootless Tory moderniser…

8 May 2020

In defence of the British Empire

Is it my imagination, or are the whitened bones of the British Empire being yet again dug up and trampled…

8 May 2020

My father is home at last

Today is my father, Robin Hanbury-Tenison’s, 84th birthday and miraculously he was able to wakeup in his own bed and…

Why Boris bashers like Jacinda Ardern

I’m starting to wonder if the people who unfavourably compare Britain’s Covid experience with New Zealand’s are being wilfully stupid.…

8 May 2020

Selling Beijing the rope

When are we going to start getting real about China? When are we going to stop pretending that China is…

Churchill in reverse

There is a lovely anecdote in Roy Jenkins’ biography of Winston Churchill where Jenkins (a centre-lefty who came to love…

8 May 2020

China’s pantry

Perhaps toilet paper as the first essential on an Australian’s survival list did not fit into the logical part of…

8 May 2020

WAs three red monkeys

When a senior Victorian health bureaucrat compared Captain Cook to the coronavirus it had an ugly echo of eugenics, a…

8 May 2020

Can Morrison emulate our forgotten conservative hero

When this lockdown is lifted, it’s not impossible the capitalist machine proves its resilience yet again and the economy is…

8 May 2020

Maori roadblocks

Expatriate New Zealanders returning home after a long absence are often taken aback by the extent to which the country…

8 May 2020

Missing from the National Cabinet – Tony Abbott

If a close relative suffered seriously  because an operating surgeon was ignorant of world’s best practice, only surviving because of…

8 May 2020

Beijing’s biotech bullies

Kill a chicken to scare the monkeys, the Chinese say. In this case, Australia is the chook, the butchers in…

2 May 2020

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Queens of print

The Spectator has been celebrating its 10,000th UK issue with justifiable pride; it is an astounding achievement. Australia has long…

8 May 2020

Geraldine Brooks and Darleen Bungey

Major award-winning biographies of Arthur Boyd and John Olsen have preceded the third book by Darleen Bungey. It is less…

2 May 2020

The Elgin Marbles

He grew up in Eastwood on Sydney’s Northern Line. Geoffrey Robertson’s brilliant career got off to a flying start with…

25 Apr 2020

Geoffrey Blainey

He coined the phrase ‘tyranny of distance’ which not only entered the language but encapsulated the view that many Australians…

18 Apr 2020

I salute Professor Neil Ferguson

Gstaad Let me begin with a salute to the winner of this year’s Sir Jimmy Goldsmith prize: Professor Neil Ferguson.…

9 May 2020

In praise of French doctors

From my hospital bed in Hyères I could look out of the window and see the old town and Edith…

9 May 2020

Dear Mary: What do I say to the neighbour who comments on my daily exercise?

Q To your correspondent with a guest whose table manners offend (2 May), you suggest screening him off with a…

9 May 2020

My toilet ultimatum to the builder boyfriend

The rain showers had a strange and wondrous effect. All the cyclists, joggers and dog walkers that were coming from…

9 May 2020

Political biographies to enjoy in lockdown

Here are ten political biographies, with a leavening of the classics, for those with time to kill in the present…

9 May 2020

Another alien in our midst: Pew, by Catherine Lacey, reviewed

It needs authorial guts to write a novel in which details are shrouded, meaning is concealed and little is certain.…

9 May 2020

William Sitwell’s history of eating out reminds us painfully of what we’re missing

In the concluding chapter of this book the Daily Telegraph’s restaurant critic and recovering vegan-baiter William Sitwell muses on the…

9 May 2020

We don’t talk of a ‘working father’ — so why do we still refer to a ‘working mother’?

The phrase ‘working mother’ ought to be as redundant sounding as ‘working father’ would be if anyone ever said that:…

9 May 2020

The art of negotiation: Peace Talks, by Tim Finch, reviewed

Early on in Tim Finch’s hypnotic novel Peace Talks, the narrator — the diplomat Edvard Behrends, who facilitates international peace…

9 May 2020

Without Joseph Banks, Cook’s first voyage might have been a failure

When the wealthy young Joseph Banks announced that he intended joining Captain Cook’s expedition to Tahiti to observe the Transit…

9 May 2020

The symbolism of Orion, the hunter of the heavens

What happened in the rites of Eleusis is a mystery. So are all the unwritten parts of human history. Our…

9 May 2020

The deserted village green: is this the end of cricket as we know it?

Imagine an archetypal English scene and it’s likely you’re picturing somewhere rural. Despite losing fields and fields each year to…

9 May 2020