flat white

The West has a bad case of 'tall poppy syndrome'

I notice that the infantile ‘cutting down the tall poppy syndrome’ appears to be flourishing again. A favourite target of…

22 Feb 2022

Breadgate: let them eat wholegrain

In recent weeks it’s been tempting to look for similarities between the re-election prospects of Boris Johnson and Scott Morrison.…

22 Feb 2022

Weaponising womanhood to destroy equality

Lately, I have been considering why, at a time when women have unprecedented access to opportunities and are participating in…

22 Feb 2022

Bandit Bandt and grave robbin’ Albo

It would take a certain kind of malevolence to stand up during a pandemic and float the idea of taxing…

22 Feb 2022

Simpleton central

George Orwell once observed: ‘Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them.’ What would Orwell say about Australian…

22 Feb 2022

115 years of the Bondi Surf Bathers' Life Saving Club

On this day 115 years ago, the Bondi Surf Bathers’ Life Saving Club was established, arguably making it the first…

21 Feb 2022

The ‘revolution’ is here and it cannot be censored

It has been a long time coming, but it appears we may be on the precipice of change. For two…

21 Feb 2022

Can New Zealand move on from Covid mandates?

Omicron has arrived in New Zealand. A ‘freedom convoy’ has plonked itself on parliament lawns. As the police struggle to…

21 Feb 2022

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Will Putin now roll on to Kiev?

The White House told us with absolute certainty that there would be an invasion of Ukraine this week — instead…

22 Feb 2022

The seismic importance of Putin’s latest move

Vladimir Putin has tonight unilaterally recognised the two breakaway republics in Ukraine. In doing so, he has effectively ended the…

22 Feb 2022

Ending restrictions won't save Boris

Boris Johnson certainly managed to rally the troops on their first day back from recess this afternoon as he told…

22 Feb 2022

Is an anti-Xi resistance emerging?

From the 1980s to 2017, at least every five years, China’s National Party Congress would be a moment of intriguing…

22 Feb 2022

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Can New Zealand move on from Covid mandates?

Omicron has arrived in New Zealand. A ‘freedom convoy’ has plonked itself on parliament lawns. As the police struggle to…

21 Feb 2022

Ardern’s Great Kiwi Reset

Jacinda Ardern’s plummeting popularity indicates a country questioning not only her racist white-anting of our democracy, but the hypocrisy of…

12 Feb 2022

In Fortress New Zealand, faith in Saint Jacinda is starting to fade

  Wellington   Jacinda Ardern recently told an American television host that she finds it ‘slightly offensive’ when outsiders assume…

29 Jan 2022

Dear New Zealand, it’s time to end Covid discrimination

Dear New Zealand, It’s a shame that we as a country have decided to follow a policy of discrimination. Supporting…

3 Jan 2022

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Canada’s truckers won’t truck it anymore

The Freedom Convoy is the largest, longest and noisiest honkfest of a demonstration against a Canadian government in decades. It…

19 Feb 2022

Business/Robbery, etc.

OK Macron; you’re right and ScoMo’s wrong on nuclear power – but this time it’s not about submarines. When the…

19 Feb 2022

Boris goes green and goes down the gurgler

I’d like to say I lost confidence in Boris Johnson when he went to the Peppa Pig park. I’ve never…

19 Feb 2022

Two Australias

Australia’s two separate worlds were vividly on display on Saturday, 12 February. In Canberra, tens of thousands of protesters marched…

19 Feb 2022

Covid mania

It was Mad Max meets Mean Girls at the SummerNats, Canberra’s car festival that brings out the hoons. While tens…

19 Feb 2022

Media misfire on the Big Lie

Conservatives are finally wising up about the legacy media. That’s one takeaway from a revealing recent clash between feisty Trump…

19 Feb 2022

Now racism is the root cause of climate change!

Writer on environmental and social justice issues, Jeremy Williams, is just the latest polemicist to claim climate change and racism,…

19 Feb 2022

Racists in the republican ranks

Billed to speak after Tony Abbott in Melbourne recently, I sought inspiration from his foreword years ago to Twilight of…

19 Feb 2022

Die Walküre

Chesterton said – and the poet Peter Porter loved to repeat – that if a thing was worth doing it…

19 Feb 2022

Grace

Does anyone know where we are in the world of arts and entertainment as Omicron advances, boosters abound, RATS are…

12 Feb 2022

Moulin Rouge

It seems an aeon ago, the press night of Moulin Rouge, on 26 November. Since then, there has been illness,…

5 Feb 2022

Don’t Look Up

How strange it is to be in a supposedly opened-up world, even as the Omicron variety of the virus shuts…

29 Jan 2022

Aussie Life

If a week is a long time in politics, two months is a geological epoch, during which not just goalposts…

19 Feb 2022

Aussie Language

Writing in the Daily Telegraph James Morrow referred to something called a preference cascade which he said was a term…

19 Feb 2022

Where’s the ‘mystery’ in mystery plays?

In The Archers, Ambridge put on its own set of mystery plays dramatising the Nativity and Passion. BBC Radio 4…

19 Feb 2022

Why restaurant food at home beats eating out

‘The opposite of a correct statement is a false statement. But the opposite of a profound truth may well be…

19 Feb 2022

Masters of the opium trade: the fabulous wealth of the Sassoons

Just before I started to read this book I had been immersed in the letters written by Jewish merchants based…

19 Feb 2022

From pirates to princes — the heroic transformation of the Normans

The Normans had an astonishingly good run. Not only did they take over England in 1066, of course, but they…

19 Feb 2022

Christina Patterson overcomes family misfortunes

The journalist and broadcaster Christina Patterson’s memoir begins promisingly. She has a talent for vivid visual description, not least: ‘We…

19 Feb 2022

What’s to become of Africa’s teeming youth?

Demographers are attached to their theories. The field’s most enduring is the ‘demographic transition’, whereby modernisation inexorably lowers a society’s…

19 Feb 2022

Inside New India: Run and Hide, by Pankaj Mishra, reviewed

The first novel in more than 20 years from the essayist and cultural analyst Pankaj Mishra is as sharp, provocative…

19 Feb 2022

Playing until her fingers bled: the dedication of the pianist Maria Yudina

The 20th century was an amazing time for Russian pianists, and the worse things got, politically and militarily, the more…

19 Feb 2022

Why did Britain lock up so many innocent refugees in 1940?

Despite prostrate Germany’s need for the return of its men, in Britain we didn’t release our prisoners of war until…

12 Feb 2022

Watcher of the skies: John Constable, painter and meteorologist

A surprising amount of classic painting turns out to have specific, often literary meaning, even in genres which tend to…

12 Feb 2022