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The Spectator

11 May 2019 Aus

Dumb question

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Dumb question

The greatest insult imaginable to the intelligence of the average Australian voter was served up the other night by Bill…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

Last week, candidates from all parties were starting to drop like flies as they were disendorsed by their parties for…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Free speech: a right-wing conspiracy?

As a founding member of the United Nations, Australia  played a pivotal role in the negotiation of the UN Charter.…

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

The Australian Financial Review last week stood out like an island of integrity in a sea of journalistic mendacity when…

Features Australia

Robotaxis to the rescue

Australia enjoys some of the least reliable and most costly electric power in the developed world. There’s some argument about…

Features Australia

Were the Del-Cons wrong?

Well, the election is almost here.  In a little over a week we’ll know if Scott Morrison has pulled off…

Features Australia

Barbarians at the gate

Federal Circuit Court Judge Salvatore Vasta once described the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) as ‘the most recidivist…

Features Australia

The nutters we had to have

‘Every now and then you have to flick the switch to vaudeville,’ former prime minister Paul Keating once said, and…

Features Australia

National suicide note

This election is the most important since 2007 when the best prime minister since Menzies, John Howard, was so unwisely…

Features

Features

Train your brain: How to keep your mind young

‘Beep!’ This is one of the most maddening computer games I’ve ever played. I’m tracking a flock of birds, and…

Notebook

Prue Leith: When did the Samaritans lose their way?

In the past few weeks, on three separate occasions, I have met three different women who for years (one for…

Features

‘Come on, cancel me’: An interview with Bret Easton Ellis

‘I grew up in LA where we all thought fame was a joke,’ says Bret Easton Ellis. ‘My class was…

Gamekeepers burn heather to encourage new growth for red grouse to feed on (Getty)

Features

Grouse moors have destroyed Britain’s natural heritage – so we must rewild them

Britain’s hunting estates were once beautiful. Walking through the New Forest, we can all appreciate how the purchase of land…

Features

Home truths: Are nurseries damaging our children?

As any parent of young children will tell you, toddler groups exist as much for the adults as for the…

Features

25 years off the booze has taught me three simple things

Have you noticed how nearly everyone in the media has won an award? Is there even such a thing as…

Notes on...

Windermere, a voyage into Swallows and Amazons

‘A love of boats and sailing is the surest of all passports to a happy life,’ wrote Arthur Ransome. Standing…

The Week

Leading article

A royal baby reminds us why the monarchy matters

Strictly in terms of its implications for the succession, the arrival of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s son this…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week: Labour/Tory Brexit talks, Gavin Williamson’s innocence plea and Cyclone Fani

Home John McDonnell, the shadow chancellor, blamed Theresa May, the Prime Minister, for leaking details of talks between the government…

Diary

Paul Mason: The Brexit party is great news for Labour

Multiple copies of a Labour leaflet for the European elections are being shared on messaging apps by horrified activists. Not…

Ancient and modern

Like Theresa May, Claudius struggled to know who to trust

After the sacking of Gavin Williamson, a former No. 10 insider said of Theresa May: ‘One of Theresa’s big faults is…

From The Archives

How to fight Bolshevism

From 10 May 1919: The heart of the country is always for moderation. Nothing could show this more plainly than…

Barometer

How long before Baby Sussex slips down the line of succession?

Endangered species The UN claimed a million species of plants and animals could become extinct. If they all died out,…

Letters

Letters: Stop with the propaganda – marijuana use is not trivial

Scrutinising charities Sir: Toby Young was right to raise questions about War on Want’s links to the Stop Trump campaign…

Columnists

Rod Liddle

Are the ‘village idiots’ right about Brexit?

The former BBC presenter Gavin Esler has very kindly given us an insight into how BBC people think (had we…

World Politics

Can May and Corbyn find a Brexit compromise?

Can Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn reach a satisfactory compromise on Brexit? The two leaders’ positions are not, in fact,…

Matthew Parris

Tweedy or Trainer: Which kind of Brexiteer are you?

‘Too tweedy? Goodness gracious me!’ Rory Stewart sounded startled. A contender for the Tory leadership, he was being interviewed by…

Lionel Shriver

Feminism has succeeded – so why don’t we call it quits?

You would think that the British Film Institute’s sponsorship of a month-long festival celebrating some of the most memorable female…

Any other business

Let’s face it, we’d steal China’s secrets if we could

On the matter of whether former defence secretary Gavin Williamson was the real ‘H’ in Line of Duty, I admit…

Books

Richard Holbrooke as US special envoy for Afghanistan and Pakistan in New Delhi, April 2009, a year before his death

Lead book review

How to lose friends and alienate people: Richard Holbrooke was a past master

You may ask yourself, is it worth one of the best American non-fiction writers producing a book of just under…

Books

The only thing that baffled Einstein was his own popularity

On 6 November 1919, at a joint meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society and the Royal Society, held at London’s…

Will Wiles. Credit: Marcus Ross

Books

Who needs psychogeography? Plume, by Will Wiles, reviewed

With his first novel about looking after an engineered wood floor, and a second novel about what it is like…

Books

What really amused Queen Victoria? Dwarfs, giants and bearded women

The American dwarf ‘General’ Tom Thumb is only mentioned once in Lee Jackson’s encyclopaedic survey of Victorian mass entertainment, and…

Books

London after the Great Fire: The King’s Evil, by Andrew Taylor, reviewed

The scene is London in 1667, the city recovering from the Great Fire the year before, with 80,000 people homeless…

Books

Is there no end to the retelling of classical myths?

In the past few years there has been a flourishing of literary responses to the Trojan war. To mention a…

Books

A hero of the Franco era: Lord of All the Dead, by Javier Cercas, reviewed

Who is a hero? Javier Cercas, in his 2001 novel Soldiers of Salamis, asked the question, searching for an anonymous…

Australian Books

Character building

Having fired off his first challenge in paragraph one (‘Read every word of this book, but don’t believe a word…

Arts

Bring me my arrow of desire: the original Italian film poster for Pasolini’s 1974 Il Fiore delle Mille e Una Notte

Arts feature

How film fell for caliphs and slave girls

Most of Hollywood’s Arabian Nights fantasies are, of course, unadulterated tosh. The Middle East, wrote the American film critic William…

Leah Harvey as Hortense and C.J. Beckford as Michael Roberts in Small Island at the National Theatre Credit: Brinkhoff-Moegenburg

Theatre

A magnificent work of art (but don’t worry if you miss the first half-hour): Small Island reviewed

Small Island, based on Andrea Levy’s novel about Jamaican migrants in Britain, feels like the world’s longest book review. We…

The composer sir Michael Tippett. Credit: Erich Auerbach/ Stringer

Music

This concert proves it is time to take Michael Tippett seriously

In Oliver Soden’s new biography of Michael Tippett, he describes how Tippett wanted to open his Fourth Symphony with the…

Musical shapeshifters: I Faglioni performing Leonardo: Shaping the Invisible at Milton Court Concert Hall Credit: Mark Allan/Barbican

Music

The Holy Grail of concert-going: I Fagiolini deliver serious musicianship that never takes itself too seriously

We’ve all read the article. It does the rounds with the dispiriting regularity of an unwanted dish on a sushi…

Zahra Elham, the first women to win the show Afghan Star in its 14-year history. Credit: WAKIL KOHSAR / Contributor

Radio

Female contestants in Afghanistan’s X Factor are dicing with death

The cheering fans, the dramatic Hollywood-style drum rolls, the excitable host all sound just like The X Factor or The…

Mighty resurrection: Aretha Franklin in Amazing Grace

Cinema

A mighty resurrection: Amazing Grace reviewed

Each December in Washington DC, the Kennedy Center Honors anoints five performing artists who have contributed to American life. In…

It’s all Greek to me: a schoolchild’s homework on a wax tablet, Egypt, 2nd century AD

Exhibitions

Would James Joyce have finished Ulysses without coloured pens?

The Mesopotamians wrote on clay and the ancient Chinese on ox bones and turtle shells. In Egypt, in about 1,800…

Chris Lilley as Quentin, the real-estate agent with an improbably huge arse who dreams of becoming a famous DJ

Television

Gloriously un-PC: Chris Lilley’s Swiftian, scabrous, gleefully misanthropic Lunatics reviewed

‘Unfunny, boring and utterly unrelenting,’ says the Guardian’s one-star review of Chris Lilley’s new sketch series Lunatics (Netflix). And if…

The Listener

It made me want to go to sleep and never wake up: Vampire Weekend’s Father of the Bride

Grade: B– One of the things not to like about Vampire Weekend, other than their cloying preppiness, Ezra Koenig’s ingratiating…

Culture Buff

Broadway production of Come From Away

We all remember where we were when first hearing of 9/11. Some people were on trans-Atlantic flights. When the US…

Life

High life

A lament for the UK and the US

New York   Here’s a question for you: if your wife, husband, girlfriend, boyfriend, toy boy even, lied repeatedly to…

Low life

Will the Mistral drive me to murder?

So far this latest Mistral wind has blown for two and a half weeks. The Mistral is said to blow…

Real life

I’ve reached scandal saturation point

A letter before action, or something that looked very much like it, arrived on my doormat from an insurance company.…

The turf

Farewell to the greatest jump jockey of all time

So the Silver Fox has called it a day. We will never see Ruby Walsh, the man whom even Sir…

Bridge

Bridge

Imagine you are on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire?. You have just won £500,000 and cannot go home with…

Chess

Revolutionary

The French Defence appears to be somewhat cautious in nature but can in fact lead to disruptive middlegame clashes. It…

Chess puzzle

no. 553

Black to play. This is from Carlo-Haast, Grenke Chess Open 2019. There is a saying in chess that when you…

Competition

The full English

In Competition No. 3097 you were invited to submit a poem about Englishness in the style of a well-known poet.…

Crossword

2407: Stickmen

The unclued lights, four of two words, individually or as a pair, are of a kind.   Across 11    After…

Crossword solution

to 2404: 1+2 = 3+4

The first and second letters of the unclued lights are the same as the third and fourth ones. All the…

No sacred cows

The UN’s extinction warning doesn’t add up

Anyone watching the BBC’s News at Ten on Monday would have been surprised to learn that economic growth poses a…

The Wiki Man

Why don’t we see more big infrastructure projects?

In 2012 I finished a meeting in Berlin and headed to Tegel airport. Apparently mine was a historic flight, since…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: What should you do when friends invite you to lunch but don’t offer wine?

Q. I was invited to birthday drinks in London. On my way there the name of someone I haven’t heard…

Drink

Save us from fads and change for change’s sake

There is no new thing under the sun. Over the weekend, I read a book which was alarmingly relevant to…

Mind your language

Do MPs actually know what ‘fungible’ means?

‘No darling,’ I said, ‘nothing to do with mushrooms.’ My husband had responded to my exclaiming ‘What does she think…