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Time to stop standover tactics by the Tax Office against small business

The Federal government’s small business agency, the Small Business Ombudsman, has called for major changes to the way the Australian Taxation…

7 Mar 2021

This week on Spectator Australia TV

Here it is – the latest episode of Spectator Australia TV and CounterCulture. While you’re there don’t forget to subscribe…

Why is the Pope trolling Traditional Catholics?

In Rome in October 2019 a young traditional or ‘Trad’ Catholic man grabbed several small Amazonian ‘mother earth’ statues from a church near the Vatican and threw them into the River Tiber.   The five small wooden statues had…

7 Mar 2021

The Brownshirts have gone digital and they’ve cancelled Grandpa

The Brownshirts are back and this time they’re digital, best exemplified on 18 February when 22-year-old student activist Momoko Nojo…

6 Mar 2021

Writers block

Was it Snoopy who said Being-A-Writer means never having to complete your novel? I’ve been thinking a lot about being…

6 Mar 2021

The ABC wants to redefine ‘paedophilia’ for the sake of sensitivity?

The problem with so-called Progressives is that the very term they use to describe themselves begs a question that they…

6 Mar 2021

It’s only a small business

Covid is a mismanaged economic disaster that has done more damage to the financial, social, ethical, and legal structure of…

5 Mar 2021

Nice try, China, but I’m proud you think I’m a scumbag

Lunar New Year is as good a time as any to commend your friends and threaten your enemies, all in…

5 Mar 2021

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What the Pope's visit means for Iraq

You could be forgiven for taking a cynical view of Pope Francis’s visit to Iraq this weekend. How could the…

7 Mar 2021

Fake views: the problem with Netflix documentaries

Netflix gets a lot of stick for being woke these days – and not just from this parish. And when you…

7 Mar 2021

Will the SNP finally see sense on its flawed Hate Crime Bill?

The saga of the SNP’s Hate Crime Bill is drawing to a conclusion. This week, Holyrood will cast a decisive vote…

7 Mar 2021

Brexit and gender are off limits for aspiring authors

When a small US publisher accepted my first book for young adults, ‘Crosstrack’, it wasn’t long before things went pear…

7 Mar 2021

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Sex, lies and the spirit of Salem

The spirit of Salem has come to Australia’s federal parliament with a 21st century twist; woke witches subject their conservative…

6 Mar 2021

Re-thinking Covid-19

On 13 November Kamran Abbasi, editor of the British Medical Journal, argued that the medical debate on Covid-19 and policies…

6 Mar 2021

The Covid Macguffin

A shadowy cabal of billionaires engineer a fake pandemic in order to fool the world into adopting an experimental vaccine…

6 Mar 2021

Reset, build back better, green new deal

Here’s a tip: whenever you read the terms ‘reset’, ‘build back better’ or ‘green new deal’, be afraid, very afraid. …

6 Mar 2021

Turning conservatives into sub-humans

The clever British fantasy series Black Mirror features an episode where soldiers must eradicate dangerous humanoid mutants known as roaches.…

6 Mar 2021

Business/Robbery, etc.

Now that grown-up pragmatists are running BHP and its previous version of Saint Greta Thunberg’s environmental disaster gospel has been…

6 Mar 2021

Cultural cleansing

Those of us who would normally undertake a yearly pilgrimage to Europe for a much-needed injection of Old World culture,…

6 Mar 2021

Collins class all over again

The real surprise for any observer of the $90 billion deal between Australia and the French shipbuilder Naval Group to…

6 Mar 2021

Christopher Plummer

A few weeks ago that great Canadian actor Christopher Plummer died. Everyone knows him as Captain Von Trapp opposite Julie…

6 Mar 2021

Botticelli to Van Gogh: Masterpieces from the National Gallery, London

Saint Zenobius was a Florentine nobleman who was converted to Christianity and baptised as an adult, ultimately becoming the first…

6 Mar 2021

Anne-Marie Duff

Melbourne was just stirring into public cultural life when the hotel quarantine mishap led to that last alarming lockdown that…

27 Feb 2021

Australian Love Stories: Celebrating love in all its guises at the NPG

The National Portrait Gallery seems to be floundering. That may be unfair but the announcement of the next exhibition left…

27 Feb 2021

Aussie Life

If you asked a roomful of Poms to list Winston Churchill’s greatest achievements, few would put ‘introducing the minimum wage’…

6 Mar 2021

Aussie Language

The expression ‘unconscious bias’ is back in the headlines. First came the good news that Oxford’s Somerville college had rescinded…

6 Mar 2021

Raymond Chandler and his contrarian cat Taki

Gstaad That’s all we needed in a great year: copyright has expired on The Great Gatsby. Some Fitzgerald wannabe has…

6 Mar 2021

In defence of horse racing

Rugby has enough problems — from baffling rule changes to concussion — without the referees muddying the pitch even more.…

6 Mar 2021

Chips Channon’s diaries can read like a drunken round of Consequences

Most of the grander 20th-century diarists had a sniffy air about them, looking down their noses at everyone, particularly each…

6 Mar 2021

Walls go up after the Berlin Wall comes down

In her 2017 travelogue Border: A Journey to the Edge of Europe, the writer and poet Kapka Kassabova meets Emel,…

6 Mar 2021

The robot as carer: Klara and the Sun, by Kazuo Ishiguro, reviewed

The world of Kazuo Ishiguro’s new novel — let’s call it Ishville — is instantly recognisable. Our narrator, Klara, is…

6 Mar 2021

Why autocracy in Russia always fails in the end

Churchill was wrong: Russia is neither a riddle nor an enigma. Russians themselves concoct endless stories to glorify their country’s…

6 Mar 2021

My father, the tyrant: Robert Edric describes a brutal upbringing

In a career stretching back to the mid-1980s, Robert Edric has so far managed a grand total of 28 novels,…

6 Mar 2021

Ghosts in a landscape: farming life through the eyes of Thomas Hennell

Thomas Hennell is one of that generation of painters born in 1903 whose collective achievements are such an adornment of…

6 Mar 2021

Why the first self-help book is still worth reading: The Anatomy of Melancholy anatomised

Footling around on the internet recently, I stumbled on a clip of a young woman singing Leonard Cohen’s ‘Hallelujah’ to…

6 Mar 2021

‘Britain’s Dreyfus Affair’: a very nasty village scandal

It has been described as Britain’s Dreyfus Affair — the wrongful imprisonment in 1903 of a half-Indian solicitor George Edalji…

6 Mar 2021