flat white

Moira Deeming v John Pesutto

In Jane Austin’s Pride and Prejudice, Mary Bennet, Jane’s puritanical sister, is recorded as saying: ‘Loss of virtue in a…

19 Sep 2024

Hate crime and gender lawfare

As if the Misinformation and Disinformation Bill tabled on September 12 isn’t draconian enough, another new federal bill has been…

19 Sep 2024

A chilling move toward government overreach

In 2024, the Liberal Party, under the leadership of Scott Morrison, proposed the Communications Legislation Amendment (Combatting Misinformation and Disinformation)…

19 Sep 2024

The final nail in the Liberal broad church?

‘The father of the nation…’ That’s how former Deputy Prime Minster John Anderson described his former boss, John Howard, during…

18 Sep 2024

Extinction lecture event

Adelaide University, one of the elite Group of Eight universities in Australia (and my alma mater in the 1970s pre-Woke…

18 Sep 2024

100 dignitaries sign open letter condemning Brazil

Alliance Defending Freedom (ADL) have launched an open letter, condemning Supreme Court Judge Alexandre de Moraes’ attacks on X. More…

17 Sep 2024

Rainbow Toolkit activism, let children be children

Most parents today send their children off to kindergarten and school with the expectation that as they progress from infancy…

17 Sep 2024

Government spending needs reform before taxes

I would like a dollar for every time I’ve read how much the Australian economy needs tax reform. Sure, it…

17 Sep 2024

A wider malaise in the culture of Defence

The news that campaign and gallantry medals will be stripped from a bevy of middle-ranking officers over allegations of war…

17 Sep 2024

The Greens’ housing delusion

There is nothing better than living in your own home. Even with a mortgage, being able to be the king…

17 Sep 2024

Is Thierry Breton’s resignation a win for Elon Musk?

Described as ‘France’s powerful European Commissioner’, the EU bureaucrat who lectured Elon Musk about online censorship has resigned suddenly. Thierry…

16 Sep 2024

Bureaucratic hypocrisy on the International Day of Democracy

Yesterday was the International Day of Democracy. Perhaps conscious of democracy’s decline under their watch, all the usual suspects have…

16 Sep 2024

This Bill is a disgrace

Look, I realise that this Albanese government is adopting policies that give every impression that it wants to destroy our…

21 Sep 2024

Business/Robbery, etc

It was a turning point. And there are significant implications for next year’s federal election, especially in Western Australia. On…

21 Sep 2024

Customer is always right?

Once upon a time, the notion that the customer is always right was a truism, needing no further explanation. Businesses…

21 Sep 2024

The white man’s burden

Much of a recent New South Wales Public Service Commission post to staff dwells on a 2023 People Matter Employee…

21 Sep 2024

Housing crash is now inevitable

By 1989, the average UK house price had surged to 6.2 times average earnings from about four times just before…

21 Sep 2024

The boys from Brazil

The front line of the global attack on free speech these days is Brazil where Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de…

21 Sep 2024

Trump’s questionable tactics

During the past year, if anyone has asked me about the US presidential election, I have replied that the biggest…

21 Sep 2024

The woke manifesto

First, online platform Telegram’s CEO Pavel Durov is arrested on his arrival in Paris. Next, Lula da Silva’s Supreme Court…

21 Sep 2024

Why aren’t some released prisoners being tagged?

As hundreds of prisoners are released early on to the streets of Britain, it’s vital that the authorities keep track…

19 Sep 2024

There’s nothing wrong with being a ‘junior’ doctor

‘The wise bustle and laugh as they walk, but fools bustle and are important,’ wrote F.L. Lucas a century ago.…

19 Sep 2024

The trouble with Trafalgar Square’s transgender tribute

Seven hundred and twenty-six plaster face casts of transsexual, non-binary or gender non-conforming people were unveiled yesterday in London’s Trafalgar…

19 Sep 2024

Diane Abbott doesn’t understand fascism

Diane Abbott believes that Giorgia Meloni is a ‘literal fascist’. That must come as a surprise to the 12.3 million…

19 Sep 2024

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How does New Zealand solve a problem like China?

New Zealand’s most important trading partner is also the nation’s biggest security headache, according to a new risk-assessment report produced…

8 Sep 2024

Why are so many young people abandoning New Zealand?

Heading to the UK is a longstanding rite of cultural passage for many Kiwis. People like my youngest son, who…

24 Aug 2024

Kiwi life

New Zealand in crisis Given the destruction the previous Labour government inflicted on this country, and the damage caused by…

29 Jun 2024

New Zealand’s carbon sequestration problem

Ongoing concern about climate change has fuelled debate about the part carbon sequestration might play in reducing New Zealand’s net…

19 Jun 2024

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Aussie life

Recently the ABC online, and the Weekend Australian, both published detailed articles about problems within the Northern Territory Aboriginal communities.…

21 Sep 2024

Language

Can ‘difficult’ be used as a verb? Surely not, I hear you mutter. But on the web I encountered the…

21 Sep 2024

The meaning of ‘moot’? It’s debatable

In Florence there was a stone on which Dante sat in the evenings, pondering and talking to acquaintances. One asked…

21 Sep 2024

Why women’s golf is better than men’s

In the exhilarating event of Somerset managing to sneak past Surrey and being on their way to claim their first…

21 Sep 2024

Nothing was off-limits for ‘the usual gang of idiots’ at Mad

As many of us who grew up in America in the 1960s and 1970s learned, Mad magazine didn’t, as our…

21 Sep 2024

The sad story of the short-lived Small Faces

One Sunday in October 1967, about 16 per cent of the British population settled down at 8.15 p.m. to watch…

21 Sep 2024

Mysteries and misogyny: The Empusium, by Olga Tokarczuk, reviewed

Nothing is ever quite as it seems in the world of Olga Tokarczuk. Her latest novel starts with an epigraph…

21 Sep 2024

The troublesome idealism of Simone Weil

The French philosopher Simone Weil, who died of self-starvation and tuberculosis in a Kent sanitorium in 1943 at the age…

21 Sep 2024

Life among the world’s biggest risk-takers

The Italian actuary Bruno de Finetti, writing in 1931, was explicit: ‘Probability does not exist.’ Probability, it’s true, is simply…

21 Sep 2024

Unrecorded lives: Tell Me Everything, by Elizabeth Strout, reviewed

There was a time when Elizabeth Strout’s fans had to wait a few years for the next book; but Tell…

21 Sep 2024

Heartbreaking scenes: Annihilation, by Michel Houellebecq, reviewed

Michel Houellebecq’s ninth and longest novel, anéantir, was published in France at the beginning of January 2022 with an initial…

21 Sep 2024

Bones, bridles and bits – but where’s the horse?

The German cultural scientist Ulrich Raulff has written that horses have as many meanings as bones. In the archaeologist William…

21 Sep 2024