The regime in Iran and the delusion of moderates
The Canavan conundrum
Senator Matt Canavan has been chosen as Leader of the Nationals. Imagine predicting that last year when conservatism was deep in the…
Matt Canavan elected leader of the Nationals
Popular conservative Senator, Matt Canavan, has been elected as leader of the Nationals. He replaces David Littleproud who, yesterday, said…
China and Russia have their sights set on Antarctica’s oil reserves
On the weekend, I tweeted that Antarctica would become the next frontier of geopolitical conflict as oil shortages in the…
Insatiable greed: Labor to charge for Twelve Apostles
‘It’s only fair that visitors to the region pay a small fee to visit this world-class destination so that we…
Caught in the crossfire: 115,000 reasons to worry
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched Operation Epic Fury against Iran. As the war enters its…
Are the wheels falling off the Royal Commission?
The resignation of Dennis Richardson from the Bondi Beach Royal Commission should, in my opinion, ring alarm bells across the…
Should you stock up for the war?
Like millions of others throughout the world, I have been quietly stocking up on essential day-to-day items for years, perfecting…
The regime in Iran and the delusion of moderates
Almost three decades ago, the regime in Iran launched a new campaign. Its goal was to fabricate legitimacy and break…
The ‘Kharg Option’
For decades, the ‘smartest people in the room’ at the State Department and in the legacy media looked down on…
What did I miss?
Jim Chalmers’ kinder economy has turned a corner and crashed straight into a tree. Inflation expectations are spiking to 5.2…
Chaharshanbe Suri in the Iranian Soul
Chaharshanbe Suri is one of the ancient Iranian festivals, celebrated on the eve of the last Wednesday of the year,…
The Liberal Party should trial community primaries
Australia’s political parties are confronting a long-standing issue that has been gradually worsening over many years: the decline in party…
NSW hate-hunting police force
Premier Chris Minns’ latest move to create a permanent hate-hunting police unit suggests, in my view, that when he claims…
Silence the doctors, harm the children? When ethics becomes dissent
Medicine was never meant to follow ideology. It was meant to follow evidence, ethics, and the simple promise embedded in…
Biological truth must prevail in schools
In court, you must swear to tell the truth. Failing to do so is considered a serious offence and harmful…
E Pluribus Unum: The architecture of unity
‘As surely as Water will wet us, as surely as Fire will burn, the Gods of the Copybook Headings with…
Middle East conflict exposes government on economy
Inflation is not an abstract statistic. It is the weekly grocery bill that keeps creeping higher. It is rent and…
The global climate confidence game
Every successful confidence game follows roughly the same structure. First comes a compelling narrative – a story persuasive enough to…
How to make family tax fair
This week has seen two politicians putting family tax back on the agenda, but in very different ways. Matt Canavan…
Don’t attack Pauline, Senator Matt Canavan
It is no disadvantage at all for Matt Canavan being in the Senate, as The Australian claims. Except for determining…
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…
Pauline? Not our sort of person
Somewhere in Australia tonight, a senior Liberal is having dinner at a good restaurant. The food is excellent, the conversation…
Divisive diversity divas
‘Diversity is our strength.’ One hears this, or myriad variants of the same idea, unrelentingly. Certainly, I work in an…
The Great Rort
To paraphrase Charlie Munger: ‘show us the oversized government program and we will show you the scams and the rorts.’…
The terrifying case of Dr Amos
Last week, Dr Andrew Amos, a leading Queensland psychiatrist and academic, was silenced by the national regulator. The Australian Health…
Nice work if you can get it
In May 2020, in Western Australia’s Pilbara region, two rock shelters, Juukan 1 and Juukan 2, were destroyed by mining…
Middle-class revolutionaries
When the Iranian regime was struck and the death of the Supreme Leader confirmed, one might have expected a straightforward…
Lionesses in the land of Oz
Last Sunday was International Women’s Day, a socialist jamboree, adopted by the United Nations. But it said little about the…
Pauline warns of jihad
The firestorm surrounding Senator Pauline Hanson’s comments regarding ‘good Muslims’ continues to swirl, fuelled by the obviously false claim that…
Brace yourselves for a painful year ahead
Figures just released by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show the economy ground to a halt in January, with…
Can Israel help the people of Iran rise up?
The new supreme leader of Iran has still not been seen in public. Instead, the country’s state television broadcast what…
Is Keir Starmer really, truly sorry about Peter Mandelson?
Sir Keir Starmer wants everyone to know how sorry, really sorry, he is for giving Lord Mandelson the job of…
Was Starmer ever serious about shrinking the British state?
A year ago today, the Prime Minister gave a speech on the ‘fundamental reform of the British state’. ‘We don’t…
War on Iran was not ‘unprovoked’
I’ve been thinking a lot about the phrase ‘unprovoked war’. It’s been rolling off leftist tongues since the explosion of…
Revealed: Lib Dems’ plan for ‘Operation Epsom Fury’
Is any party having a ‘good war’ on Iran? After Donald Trump’s first strikes, I suggested that the Prime Minister…
The right’s Israel fracture
As the joint American-Israeli military campaign in Iran continues, President Trump’s coalition is starting to exhibit some cracks. The war…
‘Blasphemous’ drawings and the myth of tolerance
It’s often assumed and frequently stated that the biggest threat to British society these days comes from cultures which are…
The strange cult of Shabana Mahmood
Is Shabana Mahmood ‘one of the best Conservative Home Secretaries we have ever had’? Tory MP Edward Leigh thinks so.…
Reform’s retreat isn’t what I want
An addendum to my piece in the mag this week, partly for clarification and partly to reinforce the point, for…
The glaring problem with the RAF’s new helicopters
It was good news, albeit good news of the your-house-hasn’t-burned-down variety. Last week, the Ministry of Defence (MoD) announced that…
Petrol is still (relatively) very cheap
On Tuesday, Reform UK held a press conference in a petrol forecourt near the spa town of Buxton. The party…
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…
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…
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…
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’…
Am I an extremist?
Uncanny mutations
Isn’t it odd the way we can start watching a streamer in absolute disgusted disbelief only to discover that we’re…
That glimpse of grandeur
The death of Robert Duvall the other week was a reminder of how long ago some of our cultural landmarks…
A hoard of lost treasure
Ray Lawler’s Summer of the Seventeenth Doll is the most celebrated of all Australian plays; and this story of the…
Strange and familiar
One of the excitements of seeing Ngaire Dawn Fair in the full trilogy of The Summer of the Seventeenth Doll…
Aussie life
I’ve probably enjoyed as many long lunches as any old adman, and in the 1980s and ’90s may well have…
Language
Are our governments guilty of ‘menticide’? This uncommon word is recorded from 1951, in which year it first appeared in…
A meta-analysis of meta
‘That’s really meta,’ said my husband, attempting to imitate a stoned hippie at a festival, but only achieving his usual…
I’m stuck in a house of madness
‘I want to learn Iranian,’ said my father, resolutely, as he watched the bombing on the television. ‘Farsi,’ I said,…
Fractured loyalties: The Tribe, by Michael Arditti, reviewed
Michael Arditti’s impressive and immersive family saga begins in Salonica (now Thessaloniki) in 1911 and follows the fortunes of the…
Blockchain fantasies: My Bags Are Big, by Tibor Fischer, reviewed
If you long for that far-off time when novels were prepared to be hilariously funny, vulgar, caustic, wildly politically incorrect…
Nintendo and the plumber who conquered the world
It’s not more than a parlour game, perhaps, to speculate about history’s most crucial inventions. One invention often makes the…
Lloyd Blankfein – guiding light of Goldman Sachs
Goldman Sachs inspires awe and envy in equal measure. Those who survive the Wall Street investment bank’s annual cull earn…
The world destroyed by madness: Howl, by Howard Jacobson, reviewed
Rarely has such a short title worked harder than Howl, which Howard Jacobson takes from Allen Ginsberg’s incantatory 1955 poem.…
Frederic Prokosch – the man who seemed to know everyone
One day Frederic Prokosch wrote a novel. He was 27 years old, living with his parents in New Haven, Connecticut,…
Caught between Hitler and Bomber Command – the Berliners’ cruel predicament
Can you be a true, thoroughgoing patriot and still want your country to lose in a war? It’s a dilemma…
Chasing happiness: The Daffodil Days, by Helen Bain, reviewed
Is there anything more to be said about Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath? I didn’t think so, but Helen Bain’s…
