flat white

Ben Eltham vs Craig Kelly: it’s never ok to dox

Yesterday on Twitter, Guardian Australian Arts writer Ben Eltham, possibly bored from writing about culture in a country that doesn’t…

1 Sep 2021

ANZUS, Afghanistan – and where’s Billy Hughes or John Monash when you need them?

The last Australians to stand up to bullying by the United States were World War I General John Monash and…

1 Sep 2021

Brad Hazzard’s schoolmaster schtick is making lockdown more laborious

It makes perfect sense that the New South Wales Health Minister would describe unvaccinated people as “self-entitled and indulgent”. He…

1 Sep 2021

Living in a left-wing psychodrama

I have good news and bad news. The good news is that we have managed to survive four years of…

1 Sep 2021

Profiles in Courage: Malcolm Turnbull

From today’s lockdown emergency toilet paper source, The SMAge: Former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull says American-led wars in the Middle…

Thirty per cent of Coalition voters question if ScoMo deserves another win

The fortnightly Essential Poll is out today, eclipsed (as it all too often is) by the Monday Newspoll, despite showing…

31 Aug 2021

How can anyone own the word ‘liberal’?

There is no word more mangled in the political lexicon than ‘liberal’. It’s the only word whose definition first requires…

31 Aug 2021

Daniel Andrews, democracy is an essential service

The Commonwealth parliament is sitting this week. The Victorian parliament is supposed to be. Except it isn’t. On the advice…

31 Aug 2021

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Is troubled Trudeau the new Theresa May?

Oh dear. For years Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been at pains to prove his feminist credentials. Whether it’s correcting a…

1 Sep 2021

On child vaccination, parents should have the choice

On Saturday, the Health Secretary made his most bullish comments on child vaccination so far. Writing in the Times, Sajid Javid argued that…

1 Sep 2021

Was Hurricane Ida really caused by climate change?

It’s climate change, innit? No sooner had Hurricane Ida smashed into the coast of Louisiana with winds of around 150…

1 Sep 2021

The Tunisian paradox

‘We swore to defend the constitution,’ shouted the deputy speaker of the Tunisian parliament, to which a young soldier retorted,…

1 Sep 2021

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UK-New Zealand trade deal likely within weeks

September is shaping up to be a big month for Liz Truss and the Department for International Trade. While the minister…

28 Aug 2021

The All Blacks, the All Whites – and how the demand for racism far exceeds supply

The demand for racism far exceeds supply. How else to explain New Zealand Football’s sudden concern that the nickname of…

26 Aug 2021

Why are we ruled by political party patsies – as well as unelected MPs?

Some time back I learned a valuable lesson. At one of our annual Summer Sounds Symposiums, bringing together individuals from…

25 Aug 2021

New Zealand’s zero Covid strategy is becoming unsustainable

New Zealand has done remarkably well over the past 18 months at protecting its citizens from the worst of the…

22 Aug 2021

Hey Joe, I warned you what would happen…!

Understandably there has been rather a lot of comment on the triumphant entry of the Taliban into Kabul. The shots…

28 Aug 2021

Zombie in the White House

The fall of Kabul on 15 August conjures up grim memories of Saigon in April 1975. People plunging to their…

28 Aug 2021

Educating Melitta

Of the many presentations which were delivered at the Australian Association for the Teaching of English (AATE) conference held in…

28 Aug 2021

Gladys turns out to be a bad joke

One of the pitfalls of being a regular columnist is that sometimes you speak too soon. OK, sometimes you get…

28 Aug 2021

Are our journalists just lazy? Or dumb?

Recently I wrote a column on Flat White (Speccie online) about the dishonesty of the political class in this country.…

28 Aug 2021

Saigon… Kabul… Taiwan?

Mark Twain reportedly said ‘God created war so Americans would learn geography’. Former defense secretary Robert Gates said Joe Biden…

28 Aug 2021

Flattening Australia fair

Armed forces on the streets. Helicopters overhead. Sullen people unable to leave. Is it Saigon or Sydney? Kabul or Melbourne?…

28 Aug 2021

Time to court-martial Joe Biden

In a world increasingly dominated by the Chinese communist-led Beijing-Moscow-Tehran Axis, it is timely to ask the political class, much…

28 Aug 2021

Nicole Kidman

And, as even Canberra locks down, so do all the shows. The Melbourne Theatre Company shuts down its production of…

28 Aug 2021

Ernest Hemingway

Entertainment in a public place shrivels as the lockdowns continue. The Australian Ballet has cancelled its Melbourne season, Anna Karenina…

21 Aug 2021

Aden Young

No one has any guarantee of seeing Sigrid Thornton in Lifespan of a Fact with the Sydney Theatre Company now…

14 Aug 2021

Rose Byrne

‘Unemployed at last!’ That wonderful bit of national self-mockery that opens the classic Australian novel Such is Life takes on…

7 Aug 2021

Aussie Life

We now know that Boris Johnson’s initial reluctance to impose Covid containment regulations was prompted by a confidential January 2020…

28 Aug 2021

Aussie Language

TV host Paul Murray spoke on Sky News Australia about the role the word ‘misinformation’ is currently playing in the…

28 Aug 2021

Dear Mary: how can I matchmake two dinner guests?

Q. What is the best seating plan when you have a supper party where you are hoping to matchmake two…

28 Aug 2021

The language of the victimhood war

Language is used in a weird way in the victimhood war, where those who see themselves without agency bravely speak…

28 Aug 2021

Jesus & the journo

Greg Sheridan, the foreign editor of the Australian newspaper, is best known for his shrewd analysis of our country and…

28 Aug 2021

Was Josiah Wedgwood really a radical?

No wonder Josiah Wedgwood, the 18th-century master potter, was a darling of the Victorians. From W.E. Gladstone to Samuel Smiles…

28 Aug 2021

Hubris, blunders and lies characterised the war in Afghanistan from the start

And so the reckoning begins. As frantic Afghans wrestle with the agonising, life-and-death choice between staying in Kabul and risking…

28 Aug 2021

A narrow escape in Britain’s most treacherous mountain range

Twenty-five years ago, my cousin Jock, a Scottish priest, rang in shock. Two priest friends, David and Norman, had been…

28 Aug 2021

Like burst balloons after a party: the last paintings of John Hoyland

When the internationally acclaimed abstract painter John Hoyland died in 2011 at the age of 76, a large chunk of…

28 Aug 2021

A glimpse of lost London – before the yuppie invasion

In a 1923 book called Echo de Paris, the writer Laurence Houseman attempted to conjure up in a very slim,…

28 Aug 2021

War between Heaven and Hell: The Absolute Book, by Elizabeth Knox, reviewed

Ursula Le Guin once described speculative fiction as ‘a great heavy sack of stuff, a carrier bag full of wimps…

28 Aug 2021

First love: The Inseparables, by Simone de Beauvoir, reviewed

‘Newly discovered novel’ can be a discouraging phrase. Sure, some writers leave works of extraordinary calibre lurking among their effects…

28 Aug 2021