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The Spectator

30 January 2016 Aus

In defence of gender

Children are not all ‘gender fluid’. It’s dangerous and wrong to try to persuade them that they are

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Culture defeat

Could somebody please disband the miserable committees whose ‘job’ it is to select the so-called ‘Australian of the Year’? No…

Diary Australia

Pink ball diary

As a lover of cricket and history, the chance to witness the first-ever day-night Test match was something I was…

Australian Features

Features Australia

After Cologne

Witness the Great Unquestioning of multicultural ideology

Features Australia

Wealth obsessed

Oxfam appear more concerned with the rich than the poor

Features Australia

It’s a Google-mobile

Cars as we know them are all set to change

Features Australia

Islamic extremism, Nazism and modernity

Exposure to the liberal, modern, progressive world may not be enough to stem the lust for unthinkable barbarism

Features

Features

In defence of gender

What started as a baffling skirmish on the wilder shores of victim culture has now turned into something more menacing

(Photo: Getty)

Features

Turkey’s climate of fear

President Erdogan’s increasingly tyrannical regime is suppressing the truth about its war on the Kurds

Shooting targets on display at Shot Show (Photo: Getty)

Features

Calling the shots

Rubbing shoulders with the hunters, urban cowboys and trigger-happy heroes at Las Vegas’s Shot Show

Features

No, women can’t have it all

An interview with Anne-Marie Slaughter

Novak Djokovic, the world number one, said that he turned down US$220,000 to throw a match. (Photo: Getty)

Features

Game over

Without the public’s trust, it’s nothing. And it’s working hard to forfeit that trust

Notebook

South Georgia Notebook

Matt Ridley’s South Atlantic notebook, on explorers’ legacies, the Falklands and a mine-clearing midfielder

Masterpieces this way

Notes on...

The Venice Accademia

Picture for picture, it has perhaps the most concentrated collection of masterpieces anywhere

The Week

Leading article

‘In’ trouble

Their data is dodgy, they disregard the facts and their leaders are lazy

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, prepared a paper on the four areas of concern between Britain…

Richard Branson at Davos (Photo: Getty)

Diary

Diary

Also in Fraser Nelson’s diary: a minister in economy class, and how to do your bit for social mobility

Barometer

Barometer

Also in our Barometer column: the fate of beached whales, and the fastest and slowest commutes

Ancient and modern

Quintilian on lecturers

Professor Louise Richardson says she’s not sure how to judge teaching. But Quintilian knew

From The Archives

Disciplined brutality

From ‘The Crimes of Germany’, The Spectator, 29 January 1916: It would be a relief, a partial solution, if only…

Letters

Australian letters

Punishing failure Sir: Once I finished chuckling at Neil Brown’s words on Christopher Pyne’s NPC plan for encouraging innovation in…

Columnists

World Politics

Stay or leave, Europe is sinking anyway

Better to let it fall apart while still on board than get the blame for its demise, say Tory ministers

Rod Liddle

If you’re stupid enough to let all these people in, at least treat them decently

Our metropolitan elite aren’t just silly. They have a nasty side, too

James Delingpole

Time to put my money where my mouth is

I’ve invested in a fund that will aim to short-sell overvalued renewable energy stocks

Any other business

Mr Bear is back: sit tight because he may be with us for a while

Plus: Google’s taxes; and why Scunthorpe Ladies’ Luncheon Club is my Davos

Books

Lead book review

Autocracy tempered by strangulation

Simon Sebag Montefiore’s gripping account of life under the tsars shows how Russia has always been dedicated to autocracy

Red sky of warning: Elephants and Cape buffaloes cross the Luangwa River

Books

Not so happy valley

Simon Barnes’s Sacred Combe in Zambia is not the idyll he imagines— and his bumptious optimism is exasperating

A local leader of the Mara gang (photo: Getty)

Books

Poverty + anarchy + drug dollars = Mexico

According to Ioan Grillo’s Gangster Warlords we are now all in thrall to Latin America’s drug cartels for just about every commodity

Egypt on its knees: Friday prayers in Tahrir Square

Books

A country in crisis

According to Jack Shenker, things could hardly be worse for this great country after its tragically failed revolution

Author Howard Jacobson

Books

Rewriting the merchant’s tale

This setting of the Merchant of Venice in Cheshire’s golden triangle is a serious comic masterpiece

Christopher Hitchens (Photo: Getty)

Books

Alive and kicking

Essays by Shirley Hazzard and the late Christopher Hitchens make for outstanding reading — in very different ways

Books

Tricks of the trade

Maria Konnikova explains the subtle wiles of the grifter— but might her book itself be an elaborate con?

Books

Very much like a whale

Adam Skolnik tries to fathom what makes people risk their lives in this pitiless sport

Getty images

Books

A legend in her own time

Boys in the Trees, the singer-songwriter’s extraordinarily intimate memoir, covers adultery, addiction and marriage to sweet baby James

Books

Recent crime fiction

Jeff Noon reviews detective fiction from Nicholas Searle, Thomas W. Hodgkinson, Ragnar Jónasson and Tim Baker

Australian Books

Kerr’s curse

Here it is, yet another book on the Dismissal. The fall of Gough Whitlam in 1975 has created quite a…

Arts

About strange lands and people: ‘Midsummer Eve Bonfire’, after c.1917, by Nikolai Astrup

Arts feature

Magnetic north

Astrup’s childlike vision, drenched in the wet hues and strange rituals of his western Norway, are finally being recognised at the Dulwich Picture Gallery

‘Nympheas (Waterlilies)’, 1914–15, by Claude Monet

Exhibitions

Show me the Monet

Monet emerges triumphantly from the distracting emphasis on rhododendrons and watering-cans in the Royal Academy’s Painting the Modern Garden exhibition

Annemarie Kremer as Maddelena. Photo Credit: Robert Workman

Opera

Northern lights

In their new production, however, Opera North showed the advantage of not being able to afford temperamental stars or lavish scenery

Left to right: Rachel McAdams, Mark Ruffalo, Brian D’Arcy James, Michael Keaton and John Slattery

Cinema

Doing the wrong thing

Deborah Ross wanted the film to give it to the church with both barrels but instead director Tom McCarthy chooses to keep a respectful distance

A splash of brightness: Terenia Edwards as Pamela in ‘Five Finger Exercise’

Theatre

Fine vintage

Plus: Clickbait, a new play at Theatre 503 that offers a refreshing take on internet porn

A musician plays in the lobby of the Regal hotel in Hong Kong. Photo: Lucas Schifres/Bloomberg/Getty Images

Music

Sound and fury

We are all to blame for the spread of background noise. Many feel uneasy with silence and want to be jollied along. Yet piped music is bad for our mental and physical health

Sgt Bowe Bergdahl. Photo: U.S. Army/Getty Images

Radio

Lessons in the surreal

Plus: A.L. Kennedy has some nightmarish observations in The Essay on Radio 3 and Tuesday afternoon’s drama on Radio 4 dares to offer ten seconds of silence

Prime suspect: Steven Avery, whose case is the subject of the Netflix documentary ‘Making a Murderer’

Television

An inconvenient truth

For anybody who holds to the quaint notion that documentaries should be true, it would represent a serious betrayal if it weren’t

Culture Buff

Culture buff

If your backyard is good enough to have been considered for inclusion in the Open Garden Scheme then I’m sorry…

Life

High life

High life

The media may crucify him, but he speaks to a white working class ignored by the bien-pensant elites

Low life

Low life

My superb mechanic is a master of his trade but a monomaniacal conspiracy-theorist

Real life

Real life

It’s easy: just ask how much they charge to remove a pea-sized cyst from a spaniel

Long life

Long life

The recipient will be genuinely grateful — unlike charities, who spy on and persecute their benefactors

Bridge

Bridge

If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster, and treat those two impostors just the same… Well, Kipling obviously never…

Chess

Keres scene

This week I conclude my homage to the great Estonian grandmaster Paul Keres, who was born a century ago this…

Chess puzzle

No. 393

White to play. This is from Keres-Mardle, Hastings 1964. How did Keres ignite his attack? Answers to me at The…

Competition

Doublespeak

In Competition No. 2932 you were invited to submit up to 16 lines of verse that are the fruit of…

Crossword

2245: Fair and square

Each of eleven clues contains a misprinted letter in the definition part. Corrections of misprints spell the source (three words)…

Crossword solution

To 2242: Defeated

Each partial answer indicated by a clue in italics is KNOCKED INTO A COCKED HAT (5 39). Resulting entries at…

Status anxiety

Is this a golden age of protest?

It has been accepted that the absence of black nominees for the Oscars is to do with racism … but is it?

Contactless payments have taken the fun out of buses

The Wiki Man

The power of painless payment

Painless payment is a peerless consumerist mind-hack, and it could transform the traditional British pub

Dear Mary

Your problems solved

Plus: The ultimate home for some old Christmas cards; and advice on shooting etiquette

Drink

Border spirit

The land of the reivers powered the British empire, and still has a role to play in business

Mind your language

Peak

A vogue usage that has been so done to death that even its jocular use is becoming wearisome