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Australia’s eSafety Commissioner loses again – A victory for free speech | Celine Baumgarten S3 Ep 18

Celine Baumgarten (Celine Against the Machine) has celebrated her SECOND victory against the eSafety Commissioner. This wasn’t only a personal…

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? | Joel Gilbert S3 Ep 17

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? I’m joined by Joel Gilbert to discuss the genius of humour…

Digital tyranny or ‘child safety’? 😵 & the bitcoin revolution | Efrat Fenigson S3 Ep 16

When Australia’s Under 16 social media ban started locking adult political writers out of #Substack – it was just the…

A very English revolution

Everyone has their own way of thinking about America’s Declaration of Independence. For some, it is the birth certificate of…

11 Jul 2026

The treason of the tenured

Associate Professor Matthew Champion of the University of Melbourne has spent his career studying how medieval and early modern communities…

Out and about with B1

I guess it makes political sense. Having taken a second job, Climate Change and Energy Minister, Chris Bowen – B1…

11 Jul 2026

The beautiful game?

A s some readers may recall, I love competitive sports. I played varsity basketball at university in Canada. I represented…

11 Jul 2026

Style versus substance

When subscription news captions recently blared the words ‘Far-Left Winning Streak’ inside the Democratic party, they were reacting to a…

11 Jul 2026

China Shock 2.0

Whenever people cite causes of the global financial crisis, they often blame the era’s macroeconomic imbalances, the same distortions behind…

11 Jul 2026

Men without books

I once heard a clever quote that The Simpsons had run out of content because it had successfully deconstructed its…

11 Jul 2026

Bread, circuses and ballistic missiles

If we were to dignify Anthony Albanese with a governing ethos, it would be bread and circuses. As national debt…

11 Jul 2026

The classless response to Ann Widdecombe’s murder

Ann Widdecombe represented British politics at its best: she was deeply principled and sincere, yet warm and dignified. But in the response to her death, over…

13 Jul 2026

Why Lindsey Graham was always ready for war

Political lives almost always end in failure, or at least anticlimax, but Lindsey Graham went to his reward while in…

13 Jul 2026

Robbins puts Starmer in the dock

Hell hath no fury like a disgruntled former employee – and, in this case, perhaps justifiably so. As Sir Keir…

13 Jul 2026

Why the actor Sam Neill was so loved

Actor Sam Neill, whose unexpected death was announced today by his family, was claimed as a son by not one,…

13 Jul 2026

Ken Bates, Chelsea, and the bad old days of football

The timing of the death this weekend of Ken Bates, the former owner of Chelsea and Leeds United, will have…

13 Jul 2026

George Cottrell and the troubling incuriosity of Nigel Farage

I wrote in this space not long ago, in the context of Nicola Sturgeon, about how incuriosity can, when taken…

13 Jul 2026

Labour can’t blame the Tories for Britain’s tagging crisis

Electronic Monitoring – ‘EM’ or ‘tagging’ – is at the heart of the government’s plans for the justice system. Tags…

13 Jul 2026

Thomas Tuchel has done the impossible: he’s made me love the Germans

Oh Thomas Tuchel, how I love you! Unlike the last boss of the England team, Saint Gareth of Southgate, there’s…

13 Jul 2026

The price children pay for ‘free’ nursery

Bridget Phillipson’s proposal to extend 30 free hours of childcare to families on benefits is lunacy. Over eight years working…

Burnham’s tour of Britain is pure narcissism

Andy Burnham, who will be prime minister this time next week, has apparently decided to spend part of the summer…

13 Jul 2026

The mass appeal of Ann Widdecombe

The death of Ann Widdecombe calls to mind the song of the same name by Victoria Wood. The festive ditty…

13 Jul 2026

Will Lindsey Graham be remembered as a great senator?

Already the denunciations of Senator Lindsey Graham, who died at 71, are piling up. Former Republican operative Steve Schmidt’s verdict was not untypical. He declared…

13 Jul 2026

A New Zealand republic in Jacinda Ardern’s lifetime?

New Zealand’s former Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, believes the nation will become a republic within her lifetime. We have heard…

21 Jun 2026

The row over English becoming an official language of New Zealand

Parliamentarians in New Zealand have been limbering up for an oddly unedifying debate over what ought to be the most…

4 Mar 2026

What they don’t tell you about Christmas in New Zealand

‘I still think New Zealand the most beautiful country I have ever seen,’ Agatha Christie marvelled in 1922. Evidently she’s…

22 Dec 2025

What will Jacinda Ardern do next?

When I first met Jacinda Ardern in the early 2010s, the notion that the young MP with the toothy smile…

8 Nov 2025

Kiwi life

Here is a useful test of human endurance. You are trapped in a lift in Wellington for ten hours with…

11 Jul 2026

Language

A radio talkback caller described many of the activities of the bureaucrats living in the Canberra bubble as being nothing…

11 Jul 2026

Why does the UAE value British racing more than we do?

You might remember that I mentioned His Excellency Mansoor Abulhoul, the United Arab Emirates ambassador to the UK, a couple…

11 Jul 2026

Dear Mary: Help! I have four girlfriends

Q. I am 26 and my problem is that I have four girlfriends. None of them knows about the other…

11 Jul 2026

Buckle up for the smack-downs: the media behemoth that is modern wrestling

For British readers of a certain age, wrestling occupies a very particular place in the collective memory. Long before the…

11 Jul 2026

An ill-fated romance: Dark is the Morning, by Rupert Thomson, reviewed

As a prolific writer of literary fiction, Rupert Thomson has had plenty of practice in creating a good story. In…

11 Jul 2026

The art of betrayal: Exhibition, by Alex Hyde, reviewed

Exhibition, Alex Hyde’s second novel, recounts the intimate, messy, ambiguous and ultimately ill-fated relationship between two fictionalised Young British Artists…

11 Jul 2026

What precipitated a worldwide total war in the 1930s?

More than 80 years after it ended, we are still living through the aftermath of the second world war. When…

11 Jul 2026

Distant shadows: Frame 37, by Nicholas Shakespeare, reviewed

In photography, balance, whether radial, conceptual or symmetrical, is critical to the success of a composition. An unbalanced photograph can…

11 Jul 2026

How does the Catholic J.D. Vance justify Trumpian policies?

‘Read Hillbilly Elegy,’ a friend messaged me a decade ago. ‘The author really gets it.’ So I did, and indeed…

11 Jul 2026

Too close for comfort: Family Friends, by Chloë Ashby, reviewed

‘Across the courtyard the water glistens a pale blue, the sun’s rays shimmering on its surface. The surrounding garden is…

11 Jul 2026

Southern Gothic: the horror story of Alex Murdaugh, paterfamilias and ‘family annihilator’

The central figure of The Family Man, the lawyer Alex Murdaugh (pronounced ‘Murdock’), spends his life getting implicated in so…

11 Jul 2026