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The Spectator

16 April 2016 Aus

Sex, lies and tax returns

The confected scandal around the Panama papers is part of a concerted and sinister attempt to change what counts as private

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Walk the plank

It’s sad to say but the Royal Australian Navy is fast becoming a joke, if it isn’t there already. The…

Australian Columnists

Brown Study

Brown study

As you know, I have always been at the forefront of the fight against discrimination, especially the evil variety that…

Diary Australia

Diary

On arrival in Sydney for a stint with the Centre for Independent Studies, I am ensconced in the bourgeois bohemia…

Australian Features

Features Australia

What the PM should have said

Malcolm Turnbull’s speech notes mysteriously fell into the hands of...

Features Australia

Del-Conmania

Have you got what it takes to join the latest ‘irrelevant’ conservative political group?

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc

Which is worse: union or business corruption?

Features Australia

Liberal values hi-jacked!

The peculiar appointment of Mr Laundy

Features Australia

Off the rails

Australia’s political class want higher taxes, not real reform

Features

Features

Sex, lies and tax returns

All this confected outrage over tax is part of a concerted and sinister attempt to shift the definition of privacy

Features

Just join Germany

It’s the only part of the whole deal that’s really worth our while

Features

The devil in footnote 351

Did he cunningly sanction Communion for the divorced in a hidden corner of his latest pronouncement? Nope

Features

The politician’s daughter

Ted Cruz’s daughter ruins photocalls by making bunny ears behind her dad’s head and refusing to hug him for the cameras

Features

The cult of clean

I should feel sympathetic to the new cult of cleanliness. Instead it repulses me

Features

Caught in the tourist trap

If beautiful places are to survive when the whole world is affluent, they’ll have to be reserved for a fortunate few

Pack mentality: it’s amazing what people reveal

Notes on...

Tarot reading

If I can do it for angry strangers from Wisconsin, I can do it for you

The Week

Leading article

Fit to print

Anti-free-speech conspiracy theories are impossible to reconcile with the sorry state of Fleet Street

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Plus, teargas fired at migrants trying to escape Greece and the Austrian government seizes Hitler’s birthplace

Diary

Diary

Plus: The V&A’s knicker exhibition; categories of holidays; John Whittingdale; my shaggy hair problem

Barometer

Barometer

Also in our Barometer column: the cost of tax evasion, the lives of farm animals, and aid for tax havens

Ancient and modern

Tax returns to boast about

There was hardly a street corner without a sign about some benefaction or other

From The Archives

All quiet on the Western Front

An average day in a soldier’s life, April 1916

Letters

Australian letters

Burger kings Sir: It’s a truth universally acknowledged that no two countries with Macca’s outlets have ever declared war on…

Columnists

World Politics

Cameron’s plan for a graceful exit all hinges on the referendum

The Prime Minister aims to hang on until 2019 and be the first Tory leader since 1937 to leave of his own volition

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s notes

Also in The Spectator’s Notes: Obama’s policy on the Middle East; behaviour of banks; titles for spouses

Matthew Parris

The wisdom of pitchfork-wielding crowds

Better an enraged mob than the enervating national cynicism that prevails in some European countries

Hugo Rifkind

Cameron and Mugabe: spot the difference

The Prime Minister is behaving with conciliation to the point of deference. Plus: MPs’ tax returns

Any other business

Let’s refocus the Panama story on the bad stuff that really matters

Also in Any Other Business: footballers’ taxes; care homes’ wages; negative interest rates

Books

Lead book review

The tragedy of Arabia

Lawrence’s vision was betrayed in a shabby colonial carve-up — and the Middle East has been paying the price ever since, according to Neil Faulkner’s biography

The French frigate Surveillante blows up the British frigate Quebec in a minor but famously furious engagement on 6 October 1779

Books

Britannia rued the waves

The British won many sea battles in the American War of Independence but were defeated by America’s countless rivers, lakes and creeks, according to Sam Willis’s ‘liquid history’

Books

Out of the depths

After her partner drowns rescuing their son in the Caribbean, Decca Aitkenhead finds her only hope is to write about it

Books

Trapped in hell

In an understated gem of a book, Marwa al-Sabouni, an architect from Homs, describes a country ripped apart. Foreign correspondents Janine di Giovanni and Charles Glass do the same.

St James by the Master of Mambrillas (early 16th century)

Books

To be a pilgrim

To make the pilgrimage less grim, avoid the Pyrenees — and your fellow travellers, advises Jean-Christophe Rufin

Books

Fast and furious

Robert Colvile’s The Great Acceleration and Charles Duhigg’s Smarter Faster Better offer helpful advice on the pace of modern living

Books

The last word

The bizarre story of the guru Sri Ramakrishna and his feuding entourage is full of sly charm and astonishing vitality

From Grayson Perry’s Sketchbooks

Books

Trivial pursuits

Offset by a blood-spattered backdrop, this is just one of many startling images from Grayson’s colourful sketchbooks, dating from the 1980s

Vita Sackville-West, c. 1940

Books

Mouldering hats and wedding veils

In a frank memoir of alcoholism and emotional suppression, Juliet Nicolson finally liberates herself from her formidable forebears

Books

Nine angst-ridden men

In a series of stories that are both dark and hilarious, David Szalay explores the predicaments of nine tormented men

Arts

Dark magus: Don Cheadle as Miles Davis in ‘Miles Ahead’

Arts feature

‘Do black movies really not sell?’

The Oscar-nominated actor-director explains how Hollywood really works – and how his latest film broke all the rules

‘Undressed’ is too much boob, not enough woman: ‘Tamila’ lingerie set from the Agent Provocateur Soirée collection

Exhibitions

A trip down Mammary Lane

The atmosphere is vague and vapid and feels like an excuse to look at women’s pants while being in denial about why we’re looking at women’s pants

Theatre

Deluded continent

Plus: Cyrpus Avenue at the Royal Court is a pointless and partisan exercise

Drowning in detail: Vicki Mortimer’s sets for Royal Opera’s production of ‘Lucia di Lammermoor’

Opera

There will be blood

And even if you closed your eyes on Katie Mitchell’s production, you’d still not find it a great evening, with the conductor merely beating time

‘Merde d’Artiste’, 1961, by Piero Manzoni

Exhibitions

In defence of conceptual art

Conceptual art can be fanciful rubbish but at its best it’s funny, arresting and, in spite of itself, even beautiful

Cinema

Fresh and wild

Deborah Ross welcomes this dark remake of the animated classic, especially its lack of icky messages about belonging

Television

An inconvenient truth

Channel 4's What British Muslims Really Think will come as no surprise to the British public, says James Delingpole

Radio

Death watch

Plus: Timothy Garton Ash comes out fighting for free speech on Radio 4

Culture Buff

Sachin Joab in STC’s Disgraced

Our grandmothers told that we shouldn’t discuss politics or religion in polite society. Apparently that was not a lesson learned…

Life

High life

High life

But it didn’t elicit any real answers to my questions about such reliable ‘allies’ such as the Saudis and Pakistanis

Low life

Low life

Given the prevalence of Desperate Dan lookalikes even the French left wouldn’t champion the idea that gender is a matter of choice

Real life

Real life

Everything that tormented Basil has tormented me since I started taking in paying guests

Long life

Long life

It’s the centenary of the Anglo-Russian Hospital of St Petersburg, founded by Lady Muriel Paget, my grandmother and a world-class hustler and humanitarian

The turf

National review

The winners upset the odds —  and while the race was casualty-free for the fourth year running it lost nothing of its spectacle

Bridge

Bridge

Can there be a game more humiliating than Bridge? Last weekend the boys and I went to Warsaw to play…

Chess

666

The year 2016 is the anniversary of a number of significant events in the chess world. In 1946 Alexander Alekhine…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 404

Black to play. This is a position from Carbone–Slipak, Mar del Plata 2016. How can Black conclude? Answers to me…

Competition

Mismatch

In Competition No. 2943 you were invited to submit a review of a well-known work of literature that has been…

Crossword

2256: 11 x 11

The unclued lights (three of two words), individually or paired, are of a kind, with 1 Down as a plural.…

Crossword solution

To 2253: Your starter for ten

FIRST, the ‘starter’ solution at 10 Down, can be linked with the other unclued lights, with it also appearing twice…

Status anxiety

My confession: I began dodging tax aged eight

From bob-a-job with the Cubs to selling contraband smokes at school, I was a Tory wrong ‘un from the start

Spectator sport

Well done Danny, but Jordan will come back

Well here’s a thing: we’ve just had the first English bloke to win the Masters. Sure, an Englishman has won…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Plus: make a pre-emptive strike to stop your husband having an office affair

Food

The bitter taste of victory

The campaign for this caff might be my last dance with the left

Mind your language

Illegitimate

‘Illegitimate’ and ‘legitimate’ have done service in English these six centuries