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THIS WEEK'S ISSUE

The Spectator

6 December 2014 Aus

Moscow calling

Russia Today’s mission to subvert the West from your living room

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Australia

Leading article Australia

The art of persuasion

‘Our job is to simplify, to tear away the unrelated, to pluck out the weeds that are smothering the product…

Diary Australia

Islamic diary

Australia originally appeared to me in the form of a boyfriend. A fellow student brought him home one evening without…

Australian Features

Bottom Drawer

Bottom drawer

The Prohibit Small Parties Party

Features Australia

Darkness descends on Patterson Lakes

Tony Abbott must heed the lessons of the Liberal loss in Victoria

Features Australia

Gay marriage and the death of freedom

Rather than striking a blow for individual liberties, the dogma of gay marriage is stifling them

Features Australia

The Cashmere Steamroller

Naomi Milgrom, one of Australia’s wealthiest women, defies the crtics with her philanthropic design and architecture

Features Australia

Kangaroos and Fertility

Australia has a serious aging problem: our fertility rate is below the level needed just to keep the population steady…

Bottom Drawer

Bottom drawer

The Prohibit Small Parties Party

Features

Features

Moscow calling

It looks like a news channel. It talks like a news channel. It says whatever Putin wants

Features

Russia falling

Since the invasion of Crimea, Russia's President has been conducting an experiment in anti-western rebellion

Features

How HS2 blights lives

My dad’s back working in a car factory at 77, a lifetime’s work wrecked by a blighted house

Features

Beyond the rainbow

It's not that he presided over a golden age; it's that the problems have become clearer since

Features

The Pope is all right

It’s in his leadership of Argentina’s Jesuits, when he laid emphasis on the perspective of the ordinary faithful poor, that the truth is to be found

Features

Fame at last

The Tatler documentary brought me instant fame – and mockery

Features

A fair hearing

The best voices draw attention to the words spoken, not the speaker

‘The plan was to pour the apple juice into an oak hogshead, freshly emptied of its whisky’

Notes on...

Cider-making

The plan was to pour the apple juice into an oak hogshead, freshly emptied of its whisky...

The Week

Leading article

Osborne’s ambition deficit

He achieves great things when he goes for it. On the debt, he's not going for it

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The government spent days announcing how the Autumn Statement would allocate funds. ‘Frontline’ parts of the National Health Service…

Diary

Diary

There are more than 20 Sun journalists still on trial or facing prosecution — some of whom have been on bail for three years

Barometer

Barometer

Plus: Other ways to spend the £3 million cost of ‘plebgate’, and will Bicester really be a garden city?

Ancient and modern

Aristotle on David Mellor

An ancient analysis of rage still fits today’s headlines

From The Archives

From the archives

From ‘The Honourable Spy’, The Spectator, 5 December 1914: Decency is violated by the military spy when he becomes, for…

Letters

Australian Letters

Friend or foe? Sir: The editorial piece ( Spectator Australia, 29 Nov.) and following article by James Allan deal broadly…

Columnists

World Politics

This Chancellor is a most political animal

Osborne has achieved one of the most difficult things in his profession: renewing himself in office

Rod Liddle

A story of vile, stupid lefties – and dodgy statistics

The truth about all those utterly bogus statistics you see in the newspapers

James Delingpole

Why argue when you can simply take offence?

It happened to Michael Gove. It's happened to me. I'm starting to wonder if it's the death of debate

Books

An unholy cross between Big Ben and Las Vegas, the Makkah Royal Clock Tower stands on an estimated 400 sites of cultural and historical importance

Lead book review

Serving Mammon first

A review of Ziauddin Sardar’s Mecca argues that Islam’s most sacred city has been desecrated irrevocably by the Saudis

Wine tasting in 19th-century Austria

Books

The butt of jests and ribaldry

A review of Wood, Whiskey and Wine by Henry H. Work, shows how the humble barrel has transformed our lives

Books

Germ warfare within

A review of Why Aren’t We Dead Yet? by Idan Ben-Barak describes the complicated germ warfare being conducted daily within us

Books

No accounting for greed

In A Theft: My Con Man, the author Hanif Kureishi describes how his trusted friend and accountant swindled him out of a fortune

Books

Tales of the Occupation

In a review of Suspended Sentences by this year’s winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Paris and the Occupation of France take centre-stage

Books

What you’ll never find in the road atlas

A review of Britannia Obscura by Joanna Parker reveals a Britain — mostly subterranean — we scarcely knew existed

Books

Staring into the abyss

Two books tackle the subject of violence in strikingly different ways

Books

Mao’s violent disciple

A review of Michael Dillon’s biography of Deng Xiaoping reveals the Chinese leader’s ruthlessness in the great famine and the Tiananmen Square massacre

Even Cilla’s biographer admits that critics were justified in knocking the ‘prurience ‘of Blind Date

Books

In a world of their own

Cilla Black, Joey Essex, Roger Moore, Dermot O’Leary and Luis Suárez come under Christopher Howse’s scrutiny

Arts

The serried ranks of an El Sistema youth orchestra in Caracas, 2012 — a ‘miracle’ that’s turned very sour

Arts feature

Sistema’s secrets

An explosive new book uncovers abuse at the heart of one of classical music’s most revered institutions. Damian Thompson finds it’s the tip of an iceberg

‘The Life Room’, 1977–80, by John Wonnacott

Exhibitions

Life force

Two exhibitions in Norwich celebrate the Life Room of John Wonnacott and John Lessore that marked a high point for this time-honoured practice

‘North Cape’, probably 1840s, by Peder Balke

Exhibitions

In from the cold

The National Gallery’s Peder Balke show, full of epic sea storms and frozen desolation, is a revelation

Music

Chorus of approval

Peter Phillips is interested to see even arch-modernist Harrison Birtwistle turning to tonality in his latest work for the Merton Choirbook

Dance

Dance One last dance

Ismene Brown is intrigued by an 18th century baby shower, spooked by a worldweary Dracula, bored by an overlong Rambert triple and disappointed by Len Goodman and Lucy Worsley

Opera

Rameau resurrected

2014 was the 250th anniversary of one of great French musical adventurers, Jean-Philippe Rameau. Were the celebrations generous enough?

Theatre

Sin city

Plus: a gripping analysis of the addict’s psyche as it yo-yos between despair, euphoria and another crack pipe at the Tristan Bates Theatre

Too lovable: Bill Murray and Jaeden Lieberher in ‘St. Vincent’

Cinema

Saints and sinners

But you can imagine Murray’s eyes lighting up when he first saw the script - drinking! Smoking! Whoring! Betting!

Television

Ghost town

Remember Me would be BBC1’s best current drama - if it wasn’t for The Missing

Radio

A dose of good sense

Two programmes on Radio 4 this week explore how it is not cash that our health systems lack but a way of processing all our knowledge

Culture Buff

Culture buff

We’ve established that capital city festivals are for other people. Their principal purpose is to bring people into the city,…

Life

High life

High life

One by one the taverns that made the city hum with Runyonesque characters are being replaced by the sleek and the glitzy

Low life

Low life

The man from the Daily Mail was as great a traveller as that Satanic-faced Victorian Sir Richard Burton

Real life

Real life

The atmosphere was a cross between All Quiet on the Western Front and Children of the Corn

Long life

Long life

The problem is our big beasts' inability to realise that their pre-eminence is partly down to luck

Bridge

Bridge

I witnessed utter carnage at the bridge table the other week. I was watching the European Champions Cup online when…

Chess

Classic

London chess fans are about to enjoy a great treat. The London Chess Classic will run from the 10-14 December…

Chess puzzle

Chess puzzle

White to play. This position is a variation from Larsen-Portisch, London 1986. How can White exploit a fatal weakness in…

Competition

It’s a rap

In Competition No. 2876 you were invited to submit an example of an ill-advised foray by a poet laureate, past…

Crossword

2191: Bunk

The other unclued entries, in pairs around 3D, provide the key words in a definition of 11D.   Across  …

Crossword solution

To 2188: Pieces of eight

The eight unclued lights are anagrams of eight clued solutions: 2/12, 3/13, 8/35, 16/40, 18/28, 19/30, 24/27 and 26/38. First…

Status anxiety

The perilous prospect of forced paternity leave

The campaign to force fathers to take equal time off is under way in Sweden. Expect it here next

The Wiki Man

Have airport designers noticed that laptops exist?

The public provision of tables is so bad that Starbucks now earns $15 ­billion a year renting out horizontal surfaces

Dear Mary

Dear Mary: Your Problems Solved

Plus: Dealing with Uber driver flattery, and a cure for Christmas alone

Drink

Last of the lunchtime wine

At 4 p.m., there was still a glass left for me

Mind your language

Control

In his speech on immigration last week, David Cameron said a couple of funny things. I’m not talking about the…