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The Spectator

17 October 2020 Aus

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Australia

Leading article Australia

The Peta Principle

In 1969, Canadian academic Laurence Peter defined what came to be known as the Peter Principle: a person in an…

Diary Australia

Diary

Gulag survivor and author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn famously said that one of the biggest mistakes people make is assuming totalitarianism can’t…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Why judges matter

On our High Court coin tossers

Features Australia

Business/Robbery etc.

Does Hello Big Spenders mean Farewell Fiscal Discipline? But will the private sector deliver? In line with classic Liberal party…

Features Australia

Will the last Dan standing turn out the lights?

When will governments learn that lockdowns don’t work?

Features Australia

The end of the Arab-Israeli conflict

It’s only taken a hundred and one years to correct one scribbled note

Features

Features

Signs of the times

The etiquette of ending an email

Features

Riding the wave

Students who catch Covid may be saving lives by building up immunity

Notes on...

Winkles

For the first time in 30-odd years, many Brits have started eating winkles again. Unable to holiday abroad this summer,…

Features

Out together

Only a ‘good’ Brexit can stop Scottish independence

Features

The default president

Americans don’t seem to care that Biden is past it – they want Trump gone

Features

The antidote to Trump

Why I’m voting for Biden

Features

Macron vs the Islamists

The President has drawn up the battle lines – now he needs to fight

Features

Teenage wasteland

Charities for young people are in deep trouble

The Week

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home ‘The weeks and months ahead will continue to be difficult and will test the mettle of this country,’ Boris…

Diary

Diary

The weird thing about Donald Trump’s handling of Covid-19, alongside all the other weird things, is that he has always…

Barometer

Barometer

Red light, green light The three tiers of Covid restrictions have been described as a ‘traffic light’ system. — The…

Leading article

A united kingdom

When the Black Lives Matter protests struck London in the same week that Public Health England published a report into…

Ancient and modern

Who speaks for Boris?

A spokeswoman has been appointed ‘to communicate with the nation on behalf of the Prime Minister’. He apparently needs ‘a…

Letters

Letters

Wind worries Sir: You are right to side with the 2013 version of Boris Johnson, when he claimed that wind…

Columnists

Any other business

What would negative rates mean for personal savers?

The Bank of England has told commercial banks to prepare for the possibility of negative interest rates. This last hypothetical…

Columns

There are no good choices for Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson used to be defined by his commitment to having his cake and eating it. But now he isn’t…

Columns

Covid has killed off our civil liberties

It started with smoking. The 1960s and 1970s saw little popular objection to legislation restricting advertisements by private companies purveying…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

In this column (26 September), I pointed out that the National Trust’s new ‘Gazetteer’ of its 93 properties linked with…

Columns

Get yourself to Sweden – while you still can

An idea gains ground that we shouldn’t go abroad any more: that the very act of travelling without urgent reason…

Columns

What I got wrong about lockdown

The news that residents of Liverpool are not allowed to visit any other cities in the UK is a hammer…

Books

Australian Books

Portrait of the piss artist as a young man

Being the son of the revered John Olsen has often been intriguing, and sometimes difficult. Olsen, 92, is arguably Australia’s…

More from Books

A friend in need

What Are You Going Through is both brilliant and mercifully brief. Weighing in at 200-odd pages, it can be read…

More from Books

A fatal clash of civilisations

Many books claim to describe junctures that changed the world but few examine ones as consequential as Conquistadores: A New…

More from Books

Figures in a landscape

Some of my happiest fiction-reading hours have been spent in the company of Kevin Barry: two short-story collections, both prize-winners,…

More from Books

Satisfaction all round

In his latest book, the veteran pop commentator David Hepworth is concerned with satisfaction, its acquisition and maintenance. On record,…

More from Books

The imitation game

Closely inspect No. 23 Leinster Terrace, Bayswater and you might notice the house has no letter box. Push at the…

More from Books

Three Girl Fridays

From Downing Street to Pennsylvania Avenue, history’s powerful inter-family influencers, whether spouses or children, have long operated behind weighty political…

More from Books

It wasn’t all laughs

Even if you didn’t have an Auntie Dot in Cockermouth (the one who ate a raffia drinks coaster, mistaking it…

Lead book review

Top-level intelligence

The brilliance of GCHQ can now be recognised – and about time too, says Sinclair McKay

More from Books

Legion of Babel

During the Spanish civil war of 1936 to 1939, 35,000 men and women from around the world volunteered to fight…

More from Books

Irritable male syndrome

By my reckoning, this is the 24th outing for John Rebus, Scotland’s best known retired police officer. One of the…

More from Books

Dublin pub crawl

Far be it from me to utter a word against the patron saint of Dublin pubs, Roddy Doyle. Granted he’s…

More from Books

On a knife-edge with Stanley

Twenty-five years after making Spartacus, a parable of Roman decadence and rebellious slaves shot in California, Stanley Kubrick made Full…

Arts

Australian Arts

Too much of nothing

In the world of the arts, some things keep on even in this time of impossibility which the virus has…

Culture Buff

Josh Frydenberg

There has been a fair bit of bleating from sectors claiming to have been ignored in the Budget; in fact…

Radio

Spreading the word

Nineteen fifty-six: the Suez crisis, the first Tesco, Jim Laker takes 19 wickets in a match. But also: Trinidadian pianist…

Exhibitions

Car-boot sale of the unconscious

In 1772 the 15-year-old Mozart wrote a one-act opera set, like The Magic Flute, in a dream world. Il sogno…

Television

Mossad’s Lara Croft

If you love Fauda — and of course you do — you’re in for a long wait for season four,…

Arts feature

Home improvement

Squatting, gutting and retrofitting – and a lesson from India: Stuart Jeffries looks at the future of British architecture

Dance

Two by two

Mothballed since March when it danced a farewell Swan Lake, the Royal Ballet made a triumphant and joyous return to…

Cinema

Haunted by Hitchcock

Rebecca is a new adaptation of Daphne du Maurier’s gothic, twisted, never-out-of-print tale of sexual jealousy. It’s directed by Ben…

Classical

Panto at Glyndebourne

Offenbach at Glyndebourne! Short of Die Soldaten with a picnic break or a period-instrument revival of Jerry Springer: The Opera,…

Theatre

A conspiracy against art

Southwark Playhouse has revived an American show, The Last Five Years, whose run was cancelled in March. In advance, I…

Life

Aussie Life

Aussie Life & Language

Simon Collins I have been wondering what whale tastes like. There must be quite a few Australians who know. After…

High life

High life

New York New York, New York, once a wonderful town/ The people are crap and the mayor’s a clown/ The…

Real life

Real life

‘I can’t put it off any longer. She’s dying and I don’t think I can ignore the inevitable. We’ve got…

Low life

Low life

‘Yes, I will have a coffee,’ said the van driver. He’d driven down to the south of France from Devon.…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. A year ago we sent out 150 save-the-date notices for our wedding this December. We are still going ahead,…

No sacred cows

Lockdown sceptics are following the science

You probably haven’t heard of the Great Barrington Declaration. This is a petition started by three scientists on 4 October…

Drink

Memories of Perry

I had known Perry Worsthorne for several years before I went to work for him in 1986 (horrifying how time…

Mind your language

Are you guilty of ‘genteelism’?

‘Everyone’s been very kind to my husband and I,’ said someone behind me in a (spaced) queue. That is the…

The Wiki Man

The Covid challenge

The Covid problem lies as much in the delayed action of the virus as in the virus itself. Since symptoms…

The turf

The turf

Fortunately for me and the politicians we entertained over my years covering the darkest profession, Mrs Oakley didn’t do a…

Bridge

Bridge

‘I have a wonderful hand to show you,’ Gunnar Hallberg exclaimed when I saw him last week. Gunnar is a…

Chess

Chess players on ice

We are what we do. Alas, in its zeal to suppress the virus, this government would have many people doing…

Chess puzzle

Puzzle no. 626

Rapport–Sprenger, Bundesliga, September 2020. The game continued 1 Bxc4 Rxc4 2 Bxe5+ f6 3 Bf4 Rxe4+ 4 Kf3 and was…

Crossword

2479: Shielded

The unclued lights (one of two words and one hyphened) are of a kind, verifiable in Brewer. Across 10 United…

Crossword solution

Solution to 2476: Playtime

The unclued lights form pairs of famous soloists and the instruments they play; 1A/19, 5/34, 23/8, 31/39, 43/16A. First prize…

Competition

Letter of the law

In Competition No. 3170, a challenge inspired by Shelley’s assertion that ‘poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world’, you…