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Australia’s eSafety Commissioner loses again – A victory for free speech | Celine Baumgarten S3 Ep 18

Celine Baumgarten (Celine Against the Machine) has celebrated her SECOND victory against the eSafety Commissioner. This wasn’t only a personal…

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? | Joel Gilbert S3 Ep 17

Did Donald Trump conquer the world with witty insults? I’m joined by Joel Gilbert to discuss the genius of humour…

Digital tyranny or ‘child safety’? 😵 & the bitcoin revolution | Efrat Fenigson S3 Ep 16

When Australia’s Under 16 social media ban started locking adult political writers out of #Substack – it was just the…

What do you most despise?

The great and recently deceased playwright Tom Stoppard was once asked what he most despised. This, by the way, is…

18 Apr 2026

Remembering Bert Kelly

I was lucky enough to become friendly with Bert Kelly MP in the last years of his life. Bert had…

18 Apr 2026

The ignorant Aussie

In my view the true nature of the Liberal party became apparent during the vote on the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate…

18 Apr 2026

Australia is fast becoming a failed socialist state

The Hawke government, with Paul Keating as Treasurer, spent the 1980s dragging Australia away from the economic model that was…

Modern slavery

Ruqia was a 21-year-old Afghan woman building a new life in Australia. She and her family fled Afghanistan after the…

18 Apr 2026

Labor’s crazed ideological bent

I know how Father Damo feels. The delinquent young priest in Father Ted arrives on Craggy Island, clocks the situation,…

18 Apr 2026

FoolWatch

Having abandoned the notion of pretending it isn’t facing a fuel crisis, the Albanese government’s bright idea to bring down…

18 Apr 2026

Top Brasso

After my article last week on what is called the ‘civilianisation’ of military justice, I found myself in a series…

18 Apr 2026

Trump’s foe-bashing won’t save his capsizing presidency

Has the dustup between Washington and Tehran come to an end? ‘They’ve agreed to give us back the nuclear dust…

17 Apr 2026

Rowan Williams: ‘There’s something demonic in US political culture’

Rowan Williams, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, has said ‘there is something demonic’ in the ‘political culture’ of the United…

17 Apr 2026

Miliband’s fight against North Sea drilling is far from over

What have North Sea oil and gas production and grammar school education got in common? Both are subject to a…

17 Apr 2026

In defence of Olly Robbins

The Mandelson scandal continues to metastasise throughout Whitehall. We now know, from reporting in the Guardian and largely confirmed by…

17 Apr 2026

How France is bending the knee to Iran

What is Emmanuel Macron playing at? In the space of just a few days, three apparently unconnected incidents have the…

17 Apr 2026

Can a new national selector save English cricket?

The England Cricket Board is appointing a new national selector: the window for applications closes today. If they get a…

17 Apr 2026

John Swinney wants to decide Scotland’s food prices

First Minister John Swinney needed a headline-grabbing new policy for the launch of his party’s Holyrood election manifesto today, and…

17 Apr 2026

Starmer is making life impossible for the Chagos Islanders

Five of them came aboard our sailing boat at 8 a.m. on Saturday. Naval and Royal Marine personnel rebranded as…

17 Apr 2026

Olly Robbins sacked over Mandelson scandal

The Mandelson scandal claims yet another victim. Late on Thursday night, Olly Robbins was sacked from his post as the…

17 Apr 2026

Three claims Starmer must explain on Mandelson

Spin, spin, spin! That furious sound you can hear out of Westminster is Labour’s apparatchiks doing their damnedest to dig…

17 Apr 2026

Who’s actually winning the wars in the Middle East?

If you read the New York Times or watch the foreign policy establishment’s “best and brightest,” you will be told,…

17 Apr 2026

Watch: Meghan says she was ‘the most trolled person in the entire world’

They say that the clue is in the name, but with Meghan the first two letters give the game away:…

17 Apr 2026

The row over English becoming an official language of New Zealand

Parliamentarians in New Zealand have been limbering up for an oddly unedifying debate over what ought to be the most…

4 Mar 2026

What they don’t tell you about Christmas in New Zealand

‘I still think New Zealand the most beautiful country I have ever seen,’ Agatha Christie marvelled in 1922. Evidently she’s…

22 Dec 2025

What will Jacinda Ardern do next?

When I first met Jacinda Ardern in the early 2010s, the notion that the young MP with the toothy smile…

8 Nov 2025

The de-Wokification of New Zealand’s education system

The conservative coalition government of New Zealand came to office promising to wind back an enormous, government-run system of ‘Woke’…

3 Nov 2025

Language

‘Hypocorism’ is another strange and wonderful word (hip-OCK-ah-riz-um.) The Oxford’s definition is: ‘pet name’. But there is a bit more…

18 Apr 2026

Aussie life

St Arnaud is a tiny speck on the map of Australia. The western Victorian town is surrounded by farmland and…

18 Apr 2026

Why do we loiter?

When my husband wants to do something I won’t like, such as getting tickets for Henley, he hangs about, plucking…

18 Apr 2026

Zack Polanski’s plan to abolish the Grand National

Having trained the runner-up in the Grand National twice – and once in the Topham Chase for good measure –…

18 Apr 2026

Why one of Renoir’s most celebrated paintings languished unloved

Shimmering off the cover of The Renoir Girls are sisters Alice (aged four) and Elisabeth Cahen d’Anvers (six), portrayed in…

18 Apr 2026

Unravelling the infinite mysteries of physics

Can artificial intelligence become godlike? Can such technology unravel the world’s great mysteries? Can everything, from love and intuition to…

18 Apr 2026

Derided as ‘feminists’: the unsung witnesses of the Nuremberg trials

There are several things wrong with James Vanderbilt’s new film Nuremberg, least of all, some might say, the fact that…

18 Apr 2026

A dying fall: The Last Movement, by Robert Seethaler, reviewed

Robert Seethaler is known for celebrating the unsung: commonplace characters – peasants, labourers or shop assistants – who draw us…

18 Apr 2026

The typo that spelled death in the Soviet Union

‘As anyone who has gleefully spotted a typo in a prestigious publication, felt a flicker of schadenfreude at a pompous…

18 Apr 2026

‘A lost generation’: My Year in Paris with Gertrude Stein, by Deborah Levy, reviewed

In a 2013 interview, Deborah Levy said: ‘Modernism is the soft typewriter of the womb that made me.’ But what…

18 Apr 2026

The cormorant – symbol of gluttony and the Devil

Greed, death, hate and clouds of destruction – this is the cormorant season all right. I was hungry to read…

18 Apr 2026

A deadly imitation game: the fate of the British teenager who posed as a Russian oligarch’s son

This story is little more than a brutal anecdote, which Patrick Radden Keefe has chosen to tell at excessive length.…

18 Apr 2026