The Spectator
7 February 2015 Aus
Rise of the new young puritans
Twenty-first century political correctness isn’t benign: it’s creepy and all too keen on witch-hunts
Australia
Big gamble
The determination by many in the media, even among conservatives, to hasten the demise of Tony Abbott’s prime ministership is…
Australian Columnists
Australian notes
The remarkable thing about Tony Abbott’s speech to the National Press Club was how unremarkable it was. There were no…
Californian diary
The American Republic has always been characterized by great political families. From earliest days, from the Adams and the Harrisons…
Australian Features
Sir Phil the Greek; the truth
The usual suspects in the commentariat have peddled myths, untruths and lies about the knighting of Prince Philip
‘Sir’ Bob Carr and the Round Table of Hypocrisy
Plenty of Tony Abbott’s critics have accepted foreign Knighthoods of their own
Our very own Alan Turing
The little known story of our own code-breaking star, Eric Nave, who did as much as anyone to break the Japanese naval codes
The art of dying
David Walsh sees fear of death and access to sex as integral to old and new art
Features
Rise of the new young puritans
I hoped that the British sense of the ridiculous, our relish in piss-taking, would keep us safe. Now I’m not so sure
The new PC from A to Z
From appropriation to zero tolerance, everything you need to keep an eye on while checking your privilege
Jail break
When I started visiting Wormwood Scrubs, it was pinched but peaceful. Now our prisons are pits of despair
The Tooting poisoner
In my London neighbourhood, an argument about wildlife is turning very nasty indeed
Faith in freedom
Martin Luther wasn’t trying to create a more liberal political order. It’s time to talk about what really happened
Dangerous characters
Nasa’s missing hyphen; the extra ‘s’ that could cost £8.8 million; and recipes for disaster
Venice
The islands of Burano and Murano, famous for lace and glass, are the best bet for a quiet lunch and cappuccino
The Week
School’s not out
Fifty new free schools prove that Nicky Morgan is ready to continue what Michael Gove began
Portrait of the week
Home MPs voted by 382 to 128 to make Britain the only country to allow genetic modification of embryos to…
From the archives
From ‘News of the Week’, The Spectator, 6 February 1915: Germany proclaims a paper blockade of all the British coast,…
Columnists
How Labour lost Scotland (and could lose the Union)
The referendum campaign brought a moment of unprecedented cross-party co-operation. Those days are long gone
They want a gender-neutral pronoun? What’s wrong with them?
They want a gender-neutral pronoun? What the hell’s wrong with them?
The NHS needs the politics of envy
We need a populist argument — one that will appeal to the masses — for charging some people for access
With one push of a button, political interviews have become interesting again
Alex Brooker’s Channel 4 encounter with Nick Clegg was a model of how to talk normally to a politician – and make them talk normally back
Unwanted consequences: will cheap oil lead to a Labour election victory?
Plus: Speak up, Stefano Pessina; and a bouquet for Ocado
Books
Bad boys of fashion
A review of Gods and Kings by Dana Thomas suggests that John Galliano and Alexander McQueen were largely irrelevant to the couture houses they headed
Muck and brass
A review of Forging Capitalism by Ian Klaus covers 200 years of theft and fraud in the City
Divinely decorative
A review of Roman Splendour, English Arcadia by Simon Swynfen Jervis and Dudley Dodd celebrates one of the great achievements of Renaissance craftsmanship
One dark summer’s day
A review of Went the Day Well? by David Crane singles it out as the best book so far to mark the bicentenary of Waterloo
Daring to think the unthinkable
A review of Tony Judt’s collection of essays, When the Facts Change, reveals a historian of rare subtlety and foresight
Crime and cover-up — a very Russian tale
A review of Red Notice: How I Became Putin’s No. 1 Enemy describes Bill Browder’s thorough disenchantment with Russia’s president
The fine art of bluffing
A review of Art in History by Martin Kemp finds this 200-page potted outline absurdly sketchy
Worshipping la dolce vita
A review of The Italians by John Hooper warns that unless the birthrate in Italy rises the country is doomed
Gordon Bennett, what a disaster!
A review of In the Kingdom of Ice by Hampton Sides describes the gruesome story of the USS Jeanette in 1879
Churchill’s charm offensive
A review of Sleep in Peace Tonight by James MacManus describes how Winston Churchill charmed the Americans into joining the second world war
Arts
Pop icon
Stephen Bayley celebrates the 100th birthday of the Coca-Cola 'contour' bottle - the most successful manufactured artefact ever
Blunt weapon
Why you wouldn’t wish pop stardom on your worst enemy, whether he went to a good school or not
Farewell, ENO
Wave goodbye to the ENO, redistribute its millions, and you will see an encumbered art form bloom
All in the mind
Plus: at the Haymarket, Taken by Midnight feeds the Hitler myth, while trying to debunk it
Stealing a march
And it contains the best performance of the year that’s not been nominated for an Oscar - and Oprah’s not bad either
Arab spring
Its audience is up by 15 per cent year on year. Here’s why it’s essential that its nuanced approach survives
Seeing the elephant
Worryingly, every soldier this American-turned-Libyan-rebel meets thinks he’s in a war movie
Culture buff
Readers already know from this column something of the forthcoming Perth International Festival (13 Feb-7 Mar) with its huge Journey…
Life
The Shading Out of Poetry by Deadline
Like old-time washerwomen floodwater is sousing trees and shrubs out on the drainage. Floating wrack dribbles seaward from their labour.…
From the horse’s mouth
The horse’s-eye view of the fastest two-year-old in history works surprisingly well
Sixes and sevens
The veteran world championship contender, Victor Korchnoi, has accused the reigning world champion Magnus Carlsen of hypnotising his opponents. Plainly unimpressed by…
No. 348
White to play. This position is a variation from Nakamura-Topalov, Gibraltar 2015. Topalov has already resigned this game as he…
Your problem solved
In Competition No. 2883 you were invited to cast a well-known writer, living or dead, in the role of agony…
2197: Missing
Chambers 2014 is certainly not recommended this week theme-wise! But Chambers 2011 is. Across 1 Cuckoo born…
To 2194: Joe Green
The unclued lights (including 10/1A) are operas by Giuseppe Verdi (whose name in translation is Joe Green). First prize…
Why I won’t cry for Harry
I’m trying to control my feelings about Harry, but the timing of his departure from QPR makes it difficult
A cheerleader to swear by
Cherish one of the greatest British sports people ever – and our No. 1 Wag
Poor little rich meals
With the super-rich I can never tell whether the joke is on us or on them





























































