flat white

Don’t burn the budget. Bring back the firesticks

New South Wales Treasurer Dominic Perrottet has announced the latest fix for our bushfire problems. Unsurprisingly it involves big spending.…

26 Jun 2021

Getting Ridd of junk science 

As the High Court judges retire to consider the Science Case of the Year, Peter Ridd v James Cook University,…

25 Jun 2021

Why don’t we hear about the $40,000 per household cost of decarbonisation?

The Irish Times reports that an IMF study of Ireland estimates that the nation will need to spend 20 billion euros a…

25 Jun 2021

When can conservatives disobey the law?

The great English novelist Charles Dickens, based on his experiences, had a very dark view of lawyers and the legal…

25 Jun 2021

It’s time to put power lines underground

In the Irish stronghold of south-west Victoria, St Patrick’s Day is a notable date on the celebration calendar.  Danny Boy…

24 Jun 2021

An abundance of dread as Daniel Andrews’ comeback looms

In just days, the architect of one of the worst chapters in the life of Victoria (outside of war and…

24 Jun 2021

It’s time outrage at sexual exploitation extended to prostitution

A story has surfaced about a prostitute in Adelaide who alleged she was raped after a male client removed his condom…

24 Jun 2021

Time for a sports revolution: let’s have Gender of Origin

The SpecOz has already registered disgust at New Zealand male-born Laurel – formerly Gavin – Hubbard’s selection in the Kiwi…

24 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

How cable news will inevitably politicize the Surfside building tragedy

Nothing could be more predictable than media coverage of the catastrophic building collapse in Surfside, Florida. Cable news will feature…

26 Jun 2021

Does Derek Chauvin deserve a 22-year sentence?

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was sentenced to over 22 years in prison by Judge Peter Cahill on Friday…

26 Jun 2021

Hancock has made a mockery of his own rules

How much trouble is Matt Hancock in? The Sun splashes this morning on the Health Secretary’s affair with aide Gina…

26 Jun 2021

Did the SNP cover up a cancer crisis?

The news that a Scottish woman died from cancer after being among more than 400 wrongly told they did not…

26 Jun 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

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

Laurel Hubbard is the beginning of the end of women’s sports

When women’s professional soccer was deemed good enough for our TV screens a couple of years ago, I was watching…

22 Jun 2021

A great badness is abroad

I was recently contacted by a highly intelligent woman whose granddaughter came home from school very upset about things she…

16 Jun 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

False gods of public health

Even before Covid, it was impossible to hold public health research and the small band of professionals who make a…

26 Jun 2021

Misjudging our Constitution

After so many mediocre (I was raised to be polite) High Court of Australia appointments from eight years of Coalition…

26 Jun 2021

WHO’s behind Facebook?

This week, the World Health Organisation surprised everyone, critics and cheer squad alike, by advising parents to hold off on…

26 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

Dan is back

The main thing about the whole ‘Dan is back’ caper is that Dan Andrews is back. Not quite yet but…

26 Jun 2021

ABC of boutique quality

If you listen to two of the ABC ‘s Sydney radio stations, national and local, they regularly report a 1°C…

26 Jun 2021

Fables of the Dark Emu

With the power of the ABC’s propaganda unit behind it, Dark Emu, by the self-proclaimed Aboriginal historian Bruce Pascoe sold…

19 Jun 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

Andrea Riseborough

National Treasure is a remarkable piece of TV drama, and it looks for a long, bewildering moment like a masterpiece.…

19 Jun 2021

Divine Vinyl Survives

Two weeks ago, a fire broke out at the Universal Studios in Hollywood, 13 years to the day after another…

19 Jun 2021

Aussie Life

Every time a dog cocks its leg to urinate on the Federation Pavilion in Centennial Park, Sydney, a terminally ill…

26 Jun 2021

Aussie Language

A report in the Australian said ‘anti-Semitic’ hate crimes are on the rise in America – and the FBI and…

26 Jun 2021

The art of Dolly Parton’s bra

New York I hope this is my last week in the Bagel. I plan to fly first to Switzerland and…

26 Jun 2021

The rise of older jockeys

There are many facets to Royal Ascot’s appeal. For some it is glamour, style and opulence. For some it is…

26 Jun 2021

Justice betrayed

It was always an inherently implausible accusation: that Australia’s most senior Catholic prelate had sexually assaulted choir boys after Mass…

26 Jun 2021

In search of Great-Aunt Pearl’s will: a black comedy of familial strife

Lendal Press has found a brilliant novelist in Matt Cook: funny, shrewd, satirical, disturbingly and entertainingly analytical in his psychology…

26 Jun 2021

Blood on the tracks: the unsolved murder of the Japanese railway chief

‘There is no end to influence,’ says Harold Bloom in his seminal 1973 work, The Anxiety of Influence — and…

26 Jun 2021

Singing to the gods: a millennium’s span of ancient Greek hymns, gloriously portrayed

We are experiencing a boom of popular books on Greek mythology: Stephen Fry’s Mythos; Natalie Haynes’s Pandora’s Jar; Liv Albert’s…

26 Jun 2021

The sexploits of Mariella Novotny

Orgies! Gangsters! Drugs! Spies! Scandals! This biography promises much but I’m not sure it actually delivers, or not in any…

26 Jun 2021

Doctor Butcher: crank, genius or son of Frankenstein?

I hated reading this book. Not only was it objectively upsetting, as any book describing monkey vivisection would be (I…

26 Jun 2021

A tender portrait of Leonora Carrington, painter, writer — and a mother who was not always there

Ever since Leonora Carrington, the last of the Surrealists, died in 2011, having made it to her 94th year with…

26 Jun 2021

How William Hogarth made Britain

Has any artist ever had a wider impact on the world than Hogarth? He was the motivator behind the most…

26 Jun 2021