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The last thing we need is a bill of rights

Over a century ago the great American jurist James Bradley Thayer warned against handing social policy decision-making over to the…

20 Jul 2021

Big Public Health’s tobacco tactics haven’t worked with smoking. Why should they work with obesity?

I’m not one for personal criticism, even dumb, socialist, hypocritical, anti-everything Greens. But if I were, I would put public…

20 Jul 2021

New polling: the emperor has no clothes

It’s official — or as official as it can be. The emperor — the Prime Minister, actually — has no…

20 Jul 2021

It doesn’t matter what any government says: you are essential

One of the foundational concepts upon which western civilisation is built is the Judeo-Christian insistence that every human being is…

20 Jul 2021

Australian schools need a tough love reboot

Pupils, we can do this the easy way, or the hard way. You choose.  If Australia can’t improve our international K-12…

20 Jul 2021

The only two figures you need to know in Newspoll today

One fascinating figure is missing from today’s Newspoll – the margin of error. As a quick glance at the table…

19 Jul 2021

The Oldest Culture: Science

The third in a series of articles examining Dark Emu-style claims. These days we hear a lot about what a…

19 Jul 2021

It’s Doctor Demento

Poor old John Hewson has been dumped as a columnist with the Nine chipwrappers for the great crime of being…

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Did Dom Cummings save the Queen?

For a man who professes to despise the media, Dominic Cummings is certainly adept at courting it. The former No…

20 Jul 2021

Kicking out the cranks won't save Labour

There is a problem with Sir Keir Starmer’s reported plan to expel 1,000 Labour members associated with ‘poisonous’ groups, and…

20 Jul 2021

No Love for pornstar Brandi at the Turning Point summit

Porn star Brandi Love made waves at Turning Point USA’s Student Action Summit in Tampa this weekend after the group…

20 Jul 2021

How the Pentagon got rich from Afghanistan

The departure of American troops from Afghanistan is being lamented (or hailed — see the Chinese press, passim) as a…

20 Jul 2021

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New Zealand's transgender debate is turning nasty

New Zealand was the first country in the world to give women the right to vote in parliamentary elections. But now,…

14 Jul 2021

Will fairy dust power New Zealand?

Wishful thinking, allied to government incompetence and the ambition of our Prime Minister, is lining up trouble ahead. In one…

13 Jul 2021

Kiwi Life

One of my goals over the coming months is to watch an entire rugby game for the first time in…

10 Jul 2021

New Zealand’s worrying battle over transgender rights

Last year, the equalities minister Liz Truss set aside laws which would have allowed people to self-identity as the legal…

4 Jul 2021

Wink wink, nudge nudge!

The Australian, to its credit, has obtained reams of (heavily redacted) evidence under Freedom of Information that the government of…

17 Jul 2021

The new religion of diversity

Readers of this fine publication have no doubt, on occasion, wondered from where this new, woke religion called ‘diversity’ emerged.…

17 Jul 2021

The force is strong in the CCP

Like a Jedi mind trick, deception involves subverting an opponent with misleading information and intentions that conform with their expectations.…

17 Jul 2021

The rise and rise of the Australian elites

I had the fascinating experience of having the author of The Lucky Country lecture me back in 1974. It was…

17 Jul 2021

On the woke/green path to oblivion

When I was still a school girl, I started to read the Economist. My geography teacher had a commerce degree…

17 Jul 2021

Farewell to Parkes’ vision splendid

Ten years ago, Western Australian Mines Minister Norman Moore proposed that the state secede and rely on China for its…

17 Jul 2021

Hunt goes off script with ivermectin

‘The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety)…

17 Jul 2021

Aux bien pensants

NSW under dictatorship As the dictatorship was intensified over New South Wales, the provisions of new decrees were announced as…

17 Jul 2021

Martin Clunes

Just as the lockdown imprisons the people of Sydney those in Canberra have had the chance to see that exhilaration…

17 Jul 2021

Opera Australia’s production of Otello

Lockdown must be making me irritable; an article during the week really got me going. It concerns two forthcoming productions…

17 Jul 2021

Ethos

A Sydney lockdown on the heels of Melbourne: what price entertainment? It seemed natural as ever to have recourse to…

10 Jul 2021

Jaime Martín

They’re changing guard at our two major orchestras; the Melbourne Symphony and the Sydney Symphony. A couple of months ago…

10 Jul 2021

Aussie Life

When I switched on my TV last Sunday I was not at all surprised to see a three-star Australian general…

17 Jul 2021

Aussie Language

‘Gain of function’ is a chilling new expression—well, new to most of us—that has entered our language as a result…

17 Jul 2021

Dear Mary: How do I avoid hugging at a funeral?

Q. I have been double-vaccinated but am especially at risk and, since I know of at least four double-vaccinated people…

17 Jul 2021

The CV trick that guarantees you an interview

Sometimes the opposite of a good idea is, as Niels Bohr said, another good idea. But the converse is also…

17 Jul 2021

The life cycle of the limpet teaches universal truths

Adam Nicolson is one of our finest writers of non-fiction. He has range — from place and history to literature…

17 Jul 2021

Germany’s post-war recovery was no economic miracle

Lord Macaulay wrote that ‘during the century and a half which followed the Conquest there is, to speak strictly, no…

17 Jul 2021

The power of the translator to break nations

No one ever raised a statue to a translator, disgruntled adepts of that art sometimes complain. I beg to differ,…

17 Jul 2021

She didn’t go quietly: Caroline Norton’s campaign for married women’s rights

When Caroline Sheridan married George Chapple Norton in 1827 she ceased to exist. According to the legal status quo, as…

17 Jul 2021

The man at the heart of punk: the late Pete Shelley recalls his Buzzcocks years

Manchester, in the words of the artist Linder Sterling, is a ‘tiny little world’. Nearly three million people live in…

17 Jul 2021

A matter of life or death: Should We Stay or Shall We Go, by Lionel Shriver, reviewed

Leave or remain? That’s the question hanging like a cartoon sledgehammer over Lionel Shriver’s 17th novel. Although she makes merry…

17 Jul 2021

The US tech companies behind China’s mass surveillance

In January, the United States declared that China’s brutal treatment of the Uighur people in Xinjiang amounted to genocide. ‘I…

17 Jul 2021

Richard Dawkins delights in his own invective

The late Derek Ratcliffe, arguably Britain’s greatest naturalist since Charles Darwin, once explained how he cultivated a technique for finding…

17 Jul 2021