flat white

The Peter Ridd case: am I missing something?

Yesterday’s piece by Graham Young on the Peter Ridd High Court case got me thinking.  Not about Young’s thesis that…

2 Jul 2021

Do we have a constitutional right to free speech?

“Freedom of speech may not be protected by Australia’s constitution, high court judge says,” screamed a recent headline in The…

2 Jul 2021

Find the CO2

Man-made carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere is responsible for catastrophic climate change, according to climate alarmists. We must stop…

1 Jul 2021

They don’t have safe spaces in North Korea

If you still have a copy of the important 1976 volume by Alexander Solzhenitsyn, A Warning to the West, it will be worth…

1 Jul 2021

Don’t moralise about sex work

There are a lot of myths surrounding prostitution. Chief among them is the claim that sex workers are virtual slaves,…

1 Jul 2021

What do the ABC and the Chinese Communist Party have in common?

With all the attention being paid to the Chinese Communist Party’s birthday, we thought it only fair that our beloved…

The Peter Ridd case is too important to be left to the courts

A lot rides on the case of Ridd v JCU, which was heard last Wednesday, June 23, 2021, in the High…

1 Jul 2021

The woke patriarchy

The hyperbole of progressive feminism has provided a lot of fodder for conservative commentators.  Just the mention of the “patriarchy”…

30 Jun 2021

Sign up to the Morning Double Shot newsletter

The Spectator Australia's Morning Double Shot delivers a hearty breakfast of news and views straight to your inbox

Sign up to the Flat White newsletter

Weekly round up of the best Flat White blogs - delivered straight to your inbox

Why the Chinese Communist Party fears its bloody history

This week, the Chinese Communist Party celebrated its hundredth anniversary with a powerful statement of self-confidence. What began as an…

3 Jul 2021

Macron steps up his war on identity politics

The lifestyle magazine Elle is best known for its beauty tips, fashion recommendations and recipe ideas but the latest issue in France contains…

3 Jul 2021

What Merkel's visit means for Brexit Britain

Angela Merkel visited the UK yesterday for the last time as German chancellor – the 22nd visit she has paid in…

3 Jul 2021

Is it fair to compare inner-city crime to the Global South?

Just before 11 p.m. on Tuesday June 1, 18-year-old Kennedy Hobbs of Jackson, Mississippi stopped at a gas station off…

3 Jul 2021

Sign up to The Spectator Australia newsletter

Australia's best political analysis - straight to your inbox

Sign up to the Best of the World newsletter

Get the latest developments around the world

Kiwi saboteur?

For New Zealand’s Prime Minster to be talking such nonsense – in fact, such a complete untruth as ‘bold action…

3 Jul 2021

Laurel Hubbard is just a symptom of new chilling attacks on free speech in New Zealand

Individuals seem born with a basic sense of fair play, and perceiving hard-working, well-deserving or brave individuals treated unjustly inevitably rankles.  So condemnation of the New Zealand Olympic…

30 Jun 2021

Maorification of smiling zombies

In his best-selling 1976 book The Passionless People, the late author and journalist Gordon McLauchlan characterised his fellow New Zealanders…

26 Jun 2021

Miss New Zealand

Male-born Laurel Hubbard’s admission to the women’s Olympic weightlifting competition as a representative of New Zealand is, of course, absurd.  …

23 Jun 2021

Infrastructure: the new motherhood?

There’s a section of the Bruce Highway that we drive along fairly frequently. It’s been a construction site and unmitigated…

3 Jul 2021

How high, Helmsman Xi?

WA Premier McGowan demands the PM show ‘a bit of tact and a bit of savvy’ in his dealings with…

3 Jul 2021

‘We are the government and we are here to help’

On 11 June, I got the most patronising, individual choice-shaming and self-congratulatory letter to over-70s from the PM, Health Minister…

3 Jul 2021

Does Matt Kean dream of electric Jeeps?

One of the more persistent fantasies of global warming activists is that electric cars will become the dominant means of…

3 Jul 2021

Kiwi saboteur?

For New Zealand’s Prime Minster to be talking such nonsense – in fact, such a complete untruth as ‘bold action…

3 Jul 2021

Covid scariants and the Delta blues

Funny man Mel Brooks coined the greatest horror movie tagline of all time —‘Be afraid. Be very afraid’, which is…

3 Jul 2021

Rule by fear across the nation

Every day on which the Marxist-manufactured Wuhan virus is allowed to dominate our life, the closer we lurch towards dictatorship,…

3 Jul 2021

Business/Robbery, etc.

Thanks, Premier Xi. Had it not been for your bellicose behaviour, including your economic bullying of Australia, as evidenced by…

26 Jun 2021

Singing Shakespeare

Britain is certainly revving up when it comes to culture. Andrew Lloyd Webber’s defiance about social distancing for his new…

3 Jul 2021

The Dictionary of Lost Words

These days I don’t read many novels although occasionally I have to read one for my book group. Recently our…

3 Jul 2021

Anya Taylor Joy stars in the new Mad Max

It’s funny to reflect how the performing arts, theatre in particular, are a lot stronger when they have a literary…

26 Jun 2021

Spring Waters

Recent decades have seen the opening or upgrading of numerous performing arts centres throughout regional Australia enabling the development of…

26 Jun 2021

Aussie Life

The only time that the BBC has ‘emu-lated’ an Australian broadcaster was in the early Seventies, when it suspended its…

3 Jul 2021

Aussie Language

‘Muck-raking’ is an old journalism expression coined in the US around 1900 to describe two types of journalists: a) those…

3 Jul 2021

Dear Mary: When is it acceptable to make a French exit?

Q. The other night, while hosting a house party, I was one of only three people still chatting by the…

3 Jul 2021

Why I won’t buy a Tesla

I loved the Ford Mustang Mach-E which I had on loan for four days. It was gorgeous to drive, and…

3 Jul 2021

Australian art in the Roaring Twenties

The only criticism that can be levelled at For the Fallen by Paul Paffen is that it lacks the hard…

3 Jul 2021

Not so dryasdust: how 18th-century antiquarians proved the first ‘modern’ historians

Antiquaries have had a bad press. If mentioned at all today, they are often derided as reclusive pedants poring over…

3 Jul 2021

Leni Riefenstahl is missing: The Dictator’s Muse, by Nigel Farndale, reviewed

Leni Riefenstahl was a film-maker of genius whose name is everlastingly associated with her film about the German chancellor, Triumph…

3 Jul 2021

A lesson in understanding serial killers and child molesters

True crime is having a moment: every day there’s a new documentary, book, podcast, or blockbuster film announced, detailing the…

3 Jul 2021

Return to LA Confidential: Widespread Panic, by James Ellroy, reviewed

Even by James Ellroy’s standards, the narrator of his latest novel is not a man much given to the quiet…

3 Jul 2021

The strangest landscapes are close to home

This pleasant volume, the author announces in the introduction, is ‘not a nature book, or even a travel book, so…

3 Jul 2021

Sweet and sour: Barcelona Dreaming, by Rupert Thomson, reviewed

I’ve never been to Barcelona, but Rupert Thomson makes it feel like an old friend. The hot, airless nights and…

3 Jul 2021

We’ve embraced William Blake without having any idea of what he was on about

Whose were those feet in ancient time that walked upon England’s mountains green? That William Blake assumed his readers were…

3 Jul 2021