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The Spectator

12 July 2014 Aus

A very British witch hunt

The present paedomania follows the classic rule of our establishment: wait 30 years, then strike hard

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Hip, hip hooray for Tony Abbott’s carbon tax repeal

Barring any more sudden Ricky Muir-like surprises, it looks as if the Senate will repeal the carbon tax; so allow…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown Study

I feel as if I am writing the Diary this week, as I recount the ups and downs of my…

Australian Notes

Australian notes

‘We have the full range of politics here tonight — from the hard Left to the soft Left.’ The ABC’s…

Diary Australia

Diary Australia

To Darwin, for the wedding of dear friends. An idle morning in that gem of a city provided me with…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Magna Carta turns 800

Eight centuries of freedom is a big deal

Newspaper legends… Rupert Murdoch with Chris Mitchell

Features Australia

The Oz turns 50

It works the sophisticates into a lather, but Chris Mitchell’s Australian is the only serious newspaper in the country

Features

Features

A very British witch hunt

With the good old 30-year rule, Britain can have self-righteous hysteria without anyone in charge ever suffering the consequences

Features

Sorry state

One by one our great institutions have tumbled

Features

Squaring up

On one side: old affluence. On the other: shiny new supercars

Features

That sinking feeling

Civil servants think they can transform our clean energy prospects. The market doesn’t agree. But you’re paying for their hunch anyway

Features

Flying scared

All those ritual checks distract from the intelligence work that actually catches terrorists

Features

This time it’s personal

The plight of Dominic Prince shows why legal costs are a free-speech issue

Features

The betrayal of Wales

We’ve lived with the Labour leader’s alternative to free-market reform for 15 years. The results are horrendous

Features

Obama’s dearest enemies

The President’s second term is a perfectly ordinary disaster. This response is as irrational as it is counterproductive

Features

Welcome to the club

And why I loved this one

Damp, green and beguiling: Killarney

Notes on...

Killarney

Expect beauty. Pack waterproofs

The Week

Leading article

Climatic correctness

Rational debate is poisonous to climatic correctness

Portrait-of-the-week-12074

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Theresa May, the Home Secretary, ordered a review, taking perhaps ten weeks, by Peter Wanless, the head of the…

Diary

Diary

Plus: Paparazzi, football and a plane struck by lightning

Ancient and modern

The Ancient way of death

Death was certainly not welcome. But control was

Barometer

Barometer

No. Plus: What government departments fine one another, and the biggest sporting crowds

Letters

Letters

Real help for those in pain Sir: The fickleness of existence is exemplified by the fact that being Tony Blair’s…

Columnists

World Politics

In search of the Eurosceptic Nick Clegg

A big job is in the offing — but only for the right person

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

Plus: Qatar's role at Royal Ascot, doomwatch with the Prince of Wales, and a novel in verse

Matthew Parris

There’s no fighting paedophile panic. But I’ll try

I know the rumours. I think they’re mostly nonsense. I don’t expect a fair hearing

Hugo Rifkind

When did Israel start to seem so bafflingly foreign?

When was it, do you think, that Israel stopped being regarded as fundamentally a bit like Spain?

Any other business

Gold-fixing was never like match-fixing but its days must surely be numbered

Plus: Who'd want their investments managed like a Tour de France team? And some cricket advice for Mark Carney

Books

An anti-Soviet rally in Moscow, February 1991: Gorbachev’s reforms resulted in the rise of his nemesis, Yeltsin

Lead book review

Goodbye to all that

A review of The Last Empire: The final days of the Soviet Union, by Serhii Plokhy. Newly unearthed material sheds fresh light on the dying days of the 'Evil Empire'

From ‘Amateur Gardener’, c. 1890, showing the much sought after suburban garden at its most perfect

Books

Home sweet home

A review of Everyman’s Castle: The story of our cottages, country houses, terraces, flats, semis and bungalows, by Philippa Lewis. From inglenooks to top-shops, from boarding houses to bedsits, this compendium covers it all (almost)

Books

Extra-ordinary

A review of England and Other Stories, by Graham Swift. These masterful tales about loss and absence conspire to bittersweet ends

Books

Don’t do as I do

A review of How to be a husband, by Tim Dowling. There’s only one joke in this 300-page book – that Dowling’s a terrible husband – but it’s a corker

Close-up of Genghis towering 40 metres over his home pastures near the Mongol capital, Ulaanbaatar – the world’s biggest equestrian statue

Books

How to rule the world

A review of The Mongol Empire: Genghis Khan, His Heirs and the Founding of Modern China, by John Man. The Mongols made China, argues this book, which means it’s unlikely to get a Chinese translation any time soon

Books

Through her eyes only

A review of Pleasures and Landscapes, by Sybille Bedford. Bedford journeyed through Italy, Switzerland, France, Denmark, Portugal and Yugoslavia and vividly noted the postwar evolution of Europe

Books

The way we live now

A review of Mammon’s Kingdom: An Essay on Britain, Now, by David Marquand. An interesting diagnosis of why the secular Left failed Britain - with a shy attempt at a solution

Books

The king is dead – get over it

A review of Elvis has Left the Building: The Day the King Died, by Dylan Jones. The GQ editor provides a lot of padding to the basic story, and makes no attempt to disguise it

Illustration, from World War I in Cartoons, Mark Bryant, Grub Street.

Bookends

I, spy

A review of Secrets in a Dead Fish, by Melanie King. It's John Le Carré - but a Janet and John version

Australian Books

Labor partisan’s economic tale

The old saw about economics being a dismal science turns out, on the evidence of this short but interesting piece…

Arts

Arts feature

The producers

Duncan Weldon and Paul Elliott on the West End's good old days - and being shafted

Arts Essay

Going Global

Lloyd Evans says yes – but a Great Luvvie Backlash is inevitable when any public body is exposed to reform

‘Hawk Pouncing on Partridges’, c.1827, by John James Audubon

Exhibitions

Wings of desire

From Babylonian ducks to Norwich City canaries: Andrew Lambirth admires the bravery of Norwich Castle Museum & Art Gallery’s new survey

Dance

Boringly beautiful

The dancing in their new Sadler's Wells show, Sehnsucht/Schmetterling, may have been perfect, but it was also boring

Music

Keep it clean

A lot of the best rock ‘n’ roll hasn’t had a bath in weeks but, at the moment, Marcus Berkmann can’t get enough of Coldplay’s lovely glowing textures

Opera

Close encounters

Plus: A Glyndebourne production that fails the fragile early Mozart opera, La finta giardiniera

Naturalistic: Ellar Coltrane and Ethan Hawke as Mason, junior and senior

Cinema

Stuff happens

But considering Richard Linklater’s new film Boyhood was 12 years in the making, thank God the kid didn’t turn into a 20-stone slob

Decent and enjoyable production: Tom McKay (Brutus) and Anthony Howell (Cassius)

Theatre

Same old ground

Plus: the Globe's Julius Caesar has flat batteries

Television

Question time

James Delingpole revels in a hagiographic two-parter on the nerdy BBC2 quiz show

Radio

The lady vanishes

Plus: a Radio 4 drama about a Jewish boy who died in Jerusalem in 1947 that could have benefited from a woman’s perspective

Culture notes

North star

This musical celebration offers the opportunity to tootle across Yorkshire, picnicking along the way

Life

High life

High life

Spectator parties and a berth on a yacht – who could ask for more, or cope with it?

Low life

Low life

I was looking for a club full of dissolute writers. This is what I found

Real life

Real life

Big Tom? Really?

Long life

Long life

At least it's one problem that doesn't affect me directly

The turf

Fit as a filly

'They appreciate not jostling with the big stallions'

Bridge

Bridge

The European Team Championships drew to a close last week and the most successful country overall was …England! The doughty…

Chess

Attack

This was the watchword of Grandmaster Dragoljub Velimirovic, one of the leading players of the former Yugoslavia. I first encountered…

Chess puzzle

No. 322

White to play. This position is from Velimirovic-Gipslis, Havana 1971. How did White conclude? Answers to me at The Spectator…

Competition

Dead-end job

In Competition No. 2855 you were invited to compose an elegy for an endangered profession. Estate agents, travel agents, publishers,…

Crossword

2170: Hector’s Summer Nights

The unclued lights (one of three words and three of two), as three pairs and three individually, are of a…

Crossword solution

to 2167: Groupies

The unclued lights are ‘nouns of assemblage’, all listed on page 6 of the Word Lover’s Miscellany section in Chambers…

Status anxiety

Falling short of a true colossus

Take it from an insecure five-foot-eighter: little men have a lot to recommend them

Spectator sport

Why the crusade against Alastair Cook?

England's captain isn't a great tactician – but he is a great man. His critics would do well to remember that

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: Dealing with disgusting dinners, and a student's guide to the muffed mwah-mwah

Food

Simple pleasures in Soho

Nothing is pretending to be anything else, and the stars are agreeably low-wattage