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Why is Victoria heading down a dead end street with prostitution law reform?

New South Wales model of decriminalisation and deregulation of prostitution has failed to protect workers in the sex industry while empowering…

24 Sep 2021

Keating, Turnbull and Rudd: the new Three Stooges

Three questions in today’s quiz: Who couldn’t care less about party or national loyalties once the prime ministerial pension kicks…

24 Sep 2021

We salute the Trotskyite press (sorta)

First The Age called the Melbourne protests correctly. Now, even the Trotskyites have made points worth noting. Red Flag, their…

Australia’s vaccine mandates: a violation of international law?

The Covid-19 Directions adopted by Australia’s governments have the effect of violating the rule of law when they excessively interfere…

Now it’s the great vape conspiracy

The ongoing conflation of vaping and tobacco industry e-cigarettes is an intentional misdirection and a dangerous one.  The strongest observation…

23 Sep 2021

Why is Victoria Police fighting media freedom?

Whatever your views on the Melbourne protests, here’s something you should be concerned about: the attack on media freedom –and transparency…

23 Sep 2021

Limiting access for the unvaxed to public places will likely breach the Disability Discrimination Act

Your correspondent is a retired lawyer who these days prefers gardening to litigating. Spring in the Victorian High Country is…

23 Sep 2021

Unis still stinging students while claiming Covid-poverty

In the era of Covid-19, change is everywhere. I have spent the past 18 months adapting to the Covid-19 university experience.…

22 Sep 2021

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Harry and Meghan, maskless in Manhattan

Aspiring hermits Prince Harry and Meghan Markle retreated to the notably reclusive borough of Manhattan today to visit the One…

24 Sep 2021

Could the squeeze on living standards bring down Boris?

There is about to be a two-phase onslaught on the living standards of those on low-to-middling incomes. On 1 October…

24 Sep 2021

Why the world is in for a dangerous decade

The Australia/UK/US (Aukus) deal for Australia to acquire nuclear submarines is the clearest demonstration yet of the UK’s tilt to…

24 Sep 2021

Is Russia ready for life after Putin?

When Russians headed to the polls last week, the Duma election results were never in doubt: Putin’s United Russiaparty won…

24 Sep 2021

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Does AUKUS show there’s still life in the Morrison government?

Yesterday’s surprise announcement of AUKUS – the new Australia-United Kingdom-United States security partnership – is huge news. Not only is…

17 Sep 2021

Jacinda Ardern – an agenda-driven autocrat?

It’s hard to keep up with our adroit Prime Minister who apparently doesn’t like answering questions, such as the one about where does…

13 Sep 2021

More than one way to ruin a country

The shock of the brutal religious fanaticism of the Taliban again abroad in Afghanistan, partly at least to the shame…

11 Sep 2021

Kiwis want elimination, and nothing but elimination

Yesterday, the New Zealand Herald published the findings of an opinion poll it commissioned as a wave of the Delta…

3 Sep 2021

Premier Dan-Xi crushes dissent

Victoria’s truculent Premier Dan Andrews – who ought to change his name to Dan-Xi Andrews in homage to his role…

25 Sep 2021

This headline is ‘hateful’ to Victorians

It’s not hard to see why Michael O’Brien’s leadership of the Liberal party in Victoria had become so tenuous before…

25 Sep 2021

Voldermectin

On 10 September, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) banned GPs from prescribing ivermectin for preventing or treating Covid-19, citing ‘a…

25 Sep 2021

Our classy new subs

The good news from the government’s defence announcement in mid-September is that the absurd $90 billion deal between Australia and…

25 Sep 2021

Thanks for nothing, Mathias

It is estimated that Australian taxpayers chipped in at least a million bucks to support the bid of former Liberal…

25 Sep 2021

Labor falls off its horse

‘The man-baby Nazis who attacked the construction union’s HQ deserve to the have the book thrown at them,’ tweeted once…

25 Sep 2021

‘Strong Female Lead’ is weak on the truth

You’re taking the journalistic mickey when the image you use to promote a show you’ve listed in the ‘factual’ program…

25 Sep 2021

A harbinger for AUKUS

Was keeping Christopher Pyne in Parliament and Malcolm Turnbull in The Lodge really worth spending billions on a fleet of…

25 Sep 2021

Nic Denton and Frances O’Connor

As the northern hemisphere, that ambiguous spectral homeland we’re conscious of, starts to open up, it’s easy to be envious…

25 Sep 2021

Diane Lane

It was doubly sad the other night to see Virginia Gay deliver a speech from her Covid-cancelled Cyrano on the…

18 Sep 2021

Thomas Mann

And so Baz Luhrmann’s Moulin Rouge is Melbourne’s musical-in- waiting. The show that can only go on when we’re 80…

11 Sep 2021

Charlie Watts

The endless news is of shows locked down as every form of life is locked down in a nation struggling…

4 Sep 2021

Aussie Life

Not everyone was as pleased as most Australians were to learn about our historic new defence pact with the UK…

25 Sep 2021

Aussie Language

Just published is Testosterone: The Story of the Hormone that Dominates and Divides Us by Harvard biologist Carole Hooven. She…

25 Sep 2021

The problem with ‘bame’

In its coverage of the shuffled cabinet, the BBC added a note: ‘BAME (Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic) is a…

25 Sep 2021

How do we calculate the value of a painting?

There’s an intriguing conversation on YouTube between Mark Carney, former governor of the Bank of England, and the artist Damien…

25 Sep 2021

A 21st-century Holden Caulfield: The Book of Form and Emptiness, by Ruth Ozecki, reviewed

The world Ruth Ozeki creates in The Book of Form & Emptiness resembles one of the snow globes that pop…

25 Sep 2021

The coal mining conundrum: why did the NUM fight so hard for its members’ right to suffer underground?

Anyone with a grasp of the history of Britain knows that its once considerable power, and much of its still…

25 Sep 2021

Flight into danger: Freight Dogs, by Giles Foden, reviewed

Flying has always attracted chancers and characters to Africa. Wilbur Smith’s father so loved aviation he named his son to…

25 Sep 2021

China and the WHO are given an easy ride in the Covid blame game

Are you ready to relive 2020? That’s what Adam Tooze is offering as he tells the story of Covid-19 through…

25 Sep 2021

The first patrons of Modernism deserve much sympathy and respect

If Modernism is a jungle, how do you navigate a path through its thickets? Some explorers — Peter Gay and…

25 Sep 2021

From salivating dogs to mass indoctrination: Pavlov’s sinister legacy

When two post-Soviet supermodels committed suicide in the noughties, both throwing themselves off high buildings in New York and Kiev,…

25 Sep 2021

T.S. Eliot’s preoccupations in wartime Britain

In her essay ‘A House of One’s Own’, about Vanessa Bell, Janet Malcolm says memorably that Bloomsbury is a fiction,…

25 Sep 2021

Thoroughly modern Marie: Matrix, by Lauren Groff, reviewed

It is 1158. A 17-year-old girl, born of both rape and royal blood, is cast out of the French court…

25 Sep 2021