flat white

Who the 'bloody hell' are the Libs?

The 1987 election was the first I took interest in. Seeing two politicians of conviction, Bob Hawke and John Howard,…

27 Apr 2022

The Musky scent of freedom

Tesla billionaire Elon Musk has put a ring on it. This morning it was announced that social media platform and…

26 Apr 2022

Taking the mickey out of Mickey

There’s a sad trend in Western society of late to erase childhood from the experience of childhood, a sort of…

26 Apr 2022

Australia’s major parties: censorship, thoughtcrime and suppression

By most measures and standards, Australia is a beacon of freedom – a state where any citizen can espouse and…

26 Apr 2022

Stoking the fires of energy policy

Stung from previous election losses, the ALP is at pains to deny that it will introduce a carbon tax. The…

26 Apr 2022

Polling payday for pollies

Politics is big business in Australia. The major parties rake in stupendous amounts of donations every election cycle and have…

26 Apr 2022

Fair go, mate!

The first time I heard the phrase ‘fair go!’ I was a young reporter new to Australia from Britain and…

25 Apr 2022

Restoring Menzies' Australia

I came to Australia from India in December 2000 where I had been a senior civil servant fighting socialist policy…

25 Apr 2022

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The relentless march of Europe’s zombie centrists

Journalists rarely had it so easy as when it came to writing up the final result of the French presidential…

26 Apr 2022

The end of the last Arab Spring success story

Visibly, and with very little pretense, Tunisia is sliding into tyranny. In the last two years, its president, Kais Saied,…

26 Apr 2022

Biden lives long enough to become the villain

“You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain,” Harvey Dent says to…

26 Apr 2022

The perverse joys of Elon Musk buying Twitter

The predictable yet somehow still hilarious news that Elon Musk is to acquire Twitter for $44 billion has been greeted…

26 Apr 2022

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New Zealand 'trusts' China on extradition

New Zealand’s Foreign Minister, under Ardern’s Labour government, has set another scary precedent in relation to China. ‘I don’t think…

24 Apr 2022

New Zealand’s cultural upheaval

My wife and I recently spent two weeks on a road trip around New Zealand’s South Island. It’s a spectacularly…

16 Apr 2022

Ardern and Clark’s next pandemic will be horrid

Helen Clark and Jacinda Ardern have been very mean to the world’s Covid Cinderella, New Zealand. Just when we thought…

10 Apr 2022

Attacking English to undermine our European heritage

It starts with very familiar, underground movements burrowing away, gaining a little ground at a time until eventually a society…

9 Apr 2022

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Sweet cents of Musk

Who amongst us can fail to be at least a little bit excited by the woodsy, earthy scent of musk…

23 Apr 2022

What does China know about MH370?

Australia deserves some credit for its role in the search for missing Malaysian airline MH370. It was a flight connected…

23 Apr 2022

Butler re-heats Rudd’s thought bubble

One of the problems of Labor’s strategy of running with a small target is that there isn’t much to talk…

23 Apr 2022

Luvvies guide to defining a woman

Should someone who cannot define a woman be the nation’s top health bureaucrat? ‘Balls’, said the Queen. ‘If I had…

23 Apr 2022

France’s choice between bad and terrible

So often Western democracies offer awful electoral choices. Boris Johnson for example offers a woeful record on border protection (let’s…

23 Apr 2022

A national scandal

For nine years Coalition governments have tolerated the national broadcaster’s defiant indifference to its charter and editorial policies. For nine…

23 Apr 2022

The leper vote

Like the Grim Reaper, the spectre of Covid’s warped vaccines is stalking the major parties in the Australian federal election.…

23 Apr 2022

Is Albo another Biden?

The 2022 election, closely monitored by criminals, domestic and international, could be one of the most important in Australian history.…

23 Apr 2022

A peculiar backwards mutation

It’s not hard to sympathise with Christopher Allen’s recent column in the Review section of the Australian decrying the juxtaposition…

23 Apr 2022

A remarkable film that gleams with mastery

What a relief it was to see Parallel Mothers the new film by Pedro Almodóvar. There was the tediousness and…

16 Apr 2022

Archangel of Italian film

Like yesterday, there’s the memory of William Weaver, the great translator from the Italian of Umberto Eco’s The Name of…

9 Apr 2022

Mighty and majestic

There is nothing like a ghastly war, an inscrutable election and a great rush of entertainment high and low to…

2 Apr 2022

Aussie life

Of the 101 Australian military personnel who have been awarded the Victoria Cross, our highest honour for bravery, most lie…

23 Apr 2022

Language

Here it is! I have finally found one word that will describe the Liberal party in its present state— ‘agathokakological’.…

23 Apr 2022

Dear Mary: How do I stop my father’s girlfriend boiling a full kettle for one cup of tea?

Q. Financially successful friends have kindly invited my husband and me to stay for a week in France. Our problem…

23 Apr 2022

Why I won’t be following the new equine vaccine regime

When the vet had finished giving my horses their annual flu boosters, she reminded me the vaccination regime had changed.…

23 Apr 2022

The murky history of Germany’s top family businesses

It was a clear cold morning in January 1936 when Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler arrived at the luxurious Regina Palast Hotel…

23 Apr 2022

The case of the ‘Hay Poisoner’ inspired many a cosy murder mystery

The case of the retired major Herbert Rowse Armstrong, a Hay-on-Wye solicitor hanged in 1922 for killing his wife Katharine…

23 Apr 2022

We must all become Doctor Dolittles and listen to the wisdom of animals

One day the writer and artist James Bridle rented a hatchback, taped a smartphone to the steering wheel and installed…

23 Apr 2022

Accusations of racism have lost all meaning

The War on the West is Douglas Murray’s latest blast against loony left wokery, chiefly in the areas of race…

23 Apr 2022

Michel Houellebecq may be honoured by the French establishment, but he’s no fan of Europe

For many years, Michel Houellebecq was patronised by the French literary establishment as an upstart, what with his background in…

23 Apr 2022

Memory test: The Candy House, by Jennifer Egan, reviewed

On page 231 of The Candy House, a sequel – no, a ‘sibling’ says Jennifer Egan – to the Pulitzer…

23 Apr 2022

A tale of forbidden love: Trespasses, by Louise Kennedy, reviewed

Kenneth Branagh’s Oscar-winning recent film Belfast chronicles the travails of a Protestant family amid sectarian conflict in 1969. Louise Kennedy’s…

23 Apr 2022

Nymphomaniac, fearless campaigner, alcoholic – Nancy Cunard was all this and more

The title of Anne de Courcy’s riveting new book might give the impression that Nancy Cunard had no more than…

23 Apr 2022