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Australia’s eSafety Commissioner loses again – A victory for free speech | Celine Baumgarten S3 Ep 18

Celine Baumgarten (Celine Against the Machine) has celebrated her SECOND victory against the eSafety Commissioner. This wasn’t only a personal…

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? | Joel Gilbert S3 Ep 17

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? I’m joined by Joel Gilbert to discuss the genius of humour…

Digital tyranny or ‘child safety’? 😵 & the bitcoin revolution | Efrat Fenigson S3 Ep 16

When Australia’s Under 16 social media ban started locking adult political writers out of #Substack – it was just the…

My fellow Libs, we need to pick a side

The Islamic terrorist attack at Bondi Beach brought us to a crossroad. The tearing apart of the national fabric has,…

11 Apr 2026

Unstoppable wind and sun

The Albanese government thought it had scored a political win from the leaking of the Coalition’s talking points in the…

11 Apr 2026

The land we forgot to remember

The Prime Minister recently characterised One Nation as ‘…some politicians, some of which have risen up recently in the polling,…

11 Apr 2026

Blind Freddy goes fracking

We are now paying the price after decades of demonising fossil fuels. The mythical fraudulent human-induced climate change ideology and…

11 Apr 2026

When the Law of War comes home to roost

Ben Roberts-Smith VC was arrested this week after a long-running investigation into alleged war crimes in Afghanistan. He was not…

11 Apr 2026

Ben Roberts-Smith and the confused battlefield

So Ben Roberts-Smith has been arrested, and his life will never be the same again. Over the next few years…

11 Apr 2026

Labor is busy fuelling the fuel crisis

When a product becomes scarce, prices rise to ration demand. That is not a moral judgement. It is a mechanism,…

Labor’s fossil fools

It’s hard not to experience cognitive dissonance watching  Labor’s hapless ministers respond to the global energy crisis. For five weeks,…

11 Apr 2026

Germany’s fuel price relief has backfired on motorists

The temporary ceasefire between the United States and Iran was certainly a relief for car drivers across Europe. Ever since…

14 Apr 2026

Will Spain’s migrant amnesty backfire?

Spain’s cabinet has just approved a law that allows over half a million undocumented migrants and asylum seekers already in…

14 Apr 2026

The intertwined lives and deaths of Jean Genet and Simone de Beauvoir

A strange literary coincidence occurred in Paris exactly 40 years ago, on 14 April, 1986. In the small hours of…

14 Apr 2026

Harry and Meghan’s Australia trip is a pathetic cry for public love

Before dawn today, a Qantas jet touched down in Melbourne from the United States. Aboard, flying commercial first class but…

14 Apr 2026

The high cost of Ed Miliband’s ‘cheap’ renewable energy

First the good news. Some commercial users may be enjoying free electricity at some point this summer – or better…

14 Apr 2026

The great soccer World Cup swindle

Tickets for this summer’s soccer World Cup are the most expensive in the tournament’s history. Or the history of any sporting…

14 Apr 2026

If Trump hates the Wall Street Journal so much, why is its editorial board dictating Iran policy?

For the better part of a decade, Donald Trump has been an avid, if irascible, reader of the Wall Street…

14 Apr 2026

Ireland’s sinister media crackdown over the fuel protests

Last week, when Irish farmers and hauliers began their protest about the rising cost of fuel, they were dismissed as…

14 Apr 2026

Why is Labour so obsessed by what we eat?

The government has serious work to do. As world war looms and the economy dives perilously close to recession, they…

14 Apr 2026

Will the US blockade force Iran to negotiate?

As Israel prepared to mark Yom HaShoah last night, remembering the Holocaust, the American blockade of the Strait of Hormuz…

14 Apr 2026

Swalwell’s fall was electoral math not morality

Eric Swalwell’s fall from viable gubernatorial contender to political casualty was swift and surgical. He was among the frontrunners to…

14 Apr 2026

Who will take responsibility for Southport?

The official report into the Southport attacks — in which 17-year old Axel Rudakubana murdered three girls at a Taylor Swift…

14 Apr 2026

The row over English becoming an official language of New Zealand

Parliamentarians in New Zealand have been limbering up for an oddly unedifying debate over what ought to be the most…

4 Mar 2026

What they don’t tell you about Christmas in New Zealand

‘I still think New Zealand the most beautiful country I have ever seen,’ Agatha Christie marvelled in 1922. Evidently she’s…

22 Dec 2025

What will Jacinda Ardern do next?

When I first met Jacinda Ardern in the early 2010s, the notion that the young MP with the toothy smile…

8 Nov 2025

The de-Wokification of New Zealand’s education system

The conservative coalition government of New Zealand came to office promising to wind back an enormous, government-run system of ‘Woke’…

3 Nov 2025

Aussie life

‘You’ve come a long way, baby,’ said the slogan which positioned Virginia Slims as the cigarette for the emancipated American…

11 Apr 2026

Language

It was one hundred years ago this year that the great Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova toured Australia and New Zealand…

11 Apr 2026

Is a ‘link-up’ a modern ‘flash mob’?

The public disturbances in Clapham, achieved by social media link-ups, have their precedents. ‘You can imagine what an exhilarating week…

11 Apr 2026

How far would I go for oil?

The oil delivery man had way too much swagger and, as he waved his nozzle about, I realised that he…

11 Apr 2026

Motherless friends: Kin, by Tayari Jones, reviewed

Set in the American South during the Jim Crow era, Tayari Jones’s Kin follows the parallel lives of Annie and…

11 Apr 2026

Singing of arms and the man: Son of Nobody, by Yann Martel, reviewed

Yann Martel, the author of Beatrice and Virgil and Life of Pi, typically explores competing storylines, narrative reliability and the…

11 Apr 2026

Landscapes of longing in illuminated Books of Hours

Christopher de Hamel is an outstanding salesman. At Sotheby’s, back in the 1990s, he brokered the sale of the 15th-century…

11 Apr 2026

Defiantly creative to the end: the transgressive Dorothea Tanning

I received this book for review on the same day that Dorothea Tanning was making headlines in the auction world,…

11 Apr 2026

How the paralysed Franz Rosenzweig continued to translate the Bible

In the early years of the 20th century, a young philosopher named Franz Rosenzweig (1886-1929) set himself the task of…

11 Apr 2026

Self-betterment through contemplation of the Seven Deadly Sins

What mistake did Narcissus make when he looked into the water? To fall in love with his own ravishing self,…

11 Apr 2026

Rebarbative relatives abound: The Palm House, by Gwendoline Riley, reviewed

Like its predecessor My Phantoms (2021), Gwendoline Riley’s new novel is stuffed to the gills with the sort of people…

11 Apr 2026

The harm of dwelling on a traumatic past

Back in the 1970s, people in Britain were mystified by the enthusiasm of Americans – especially New Yorkers – for…

11 Apr 2026