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The Spectator

29 October 2016 Aus

To: Millennial suckers

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Australia

Leading article Australia

Gunshot wounds

Regardless of who said or emailed what to whom, libertarian Senator David Leyonhjelm’s Adler shotgun blasted a big hole through…

Australian Columnists

Simon Collins

Simon Collins

I can’t be the only Speccie reader who’s lost sleep thinking about the Crown Resort employees awaiting trial in China.…

Australian Notes

Conservative Notes

You’d be hard pressed to be overly optimistic about the state of conservative politics in the developed English-speaking world right…

Brown Study

Brown study

Perhaps all is not lost. There might yet be hope for the education of our youth. Like many people, I…

Diary Australia

Q&A diary

Spring returned to Sydney for the long weekend, just in time for me to spend three days incarcerated indoors packing…

Australian Features

Features Australia

Empty pews

In conversation with a Liberal insider some weeks ago, I heard the phrase: ‘I’m trying to rebuild the conservative movement…

Features Australia

Artist’s Notebook

When old ‘wobble board’ Rolf was sent up to the big house I felt a sense of relief not because…

Features Australia

Duterte Harry

At a government press conference, a grandstanding British journalist admonished Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte, stating to the President of the…

Features Australia

To: Millennial suckers

Dear Leftist Millennials, we need to talk. I’ve noticed you’re becoming more easily wounded than ever. You’ve created a fantasy…

Features

Features

Too big not to fail

‘Bad policy.’ ‘No discernible impact on the key outcomes it was supposed to improve.’ ‘Deliberate misrepresentation of the data… a…

Features

‘Hillary Clinton is a disaster!’

Talking to Camille Paglia is like approaching a machine gun: madness to stick your head up and ask a question,…

Features

Le Pen’s long game

Marine Le Pen can be excused for thinking her time has come. With six months to go until France’s presidential…

Features

Blinded with science

We’re continually assured that government policies are grounded in evidence, whether it’s an anti-bullying programme in Finland, an alcohol awareness…

Features

Burlington Arcade

It all began with oysters. Londoners used to eat them as they walked along, throwing away the shells much as…

Features

Sweet sorrow

So, is that it? The end of sweetness, and the end of taste? Physically speaking, those things will no doubt…

Features

Murder and politics

Six months ago an old friend of mine was murdered on his doorstep. This week his killer was sentenced to…

The Week

Ancient and modern

Corbyn and the Old Oligarch

With the Labour party reduced to a cult in honour of the vain and incompetent Jeremy Corbyn, the Tory party…

Barometer

Barometer

Folio society A new collection of Shakespeare’s work credits Christopher Marlowe as co-author of the three Henry VI plays. Some…

From The Archives

A deadly silence

From ‘Secrecy and disease’, The Spectator, 28 October 1916: The war might have damned us, as Germany planned, but it…

Letters

Letters

Bear baiting Sir: I couldn’t agree more with Rod Liddle’s exposé of western politico-militaristic hypocrisy (‘Stop the sabre-rattling’, 22 October). We’ve…

Portrait of the week

Portrait of the week

Home The government approved the proposal in Sir Howard Davies’s report for the building of an extra 3,800-yard runway at…

Columnists

Any other business

Despite what Big Bang destroyed, there’s still nowhere quite like the City

As the 30th anniversary of Big Bang loomed, I found myself back at the scene of my City demise. Ebbgate…

Hugo Rifkind

Free speech and the right not to bake a cake

Let us consider the case of the Ashers family bakery in Belfast which, in 2014, refused to make a cake.…

Matthew Parris

Why didn’t I celebrate Oscar Wilde’s birthday?

On Wednesday 19 October at the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane in London, a reception was held to celebrate…

Politics

The absent opposition

Oppositions don’t win elections — governments lose them. This has long been the Westminster wisdom. But the truth is that…

Rod Liddle

How Pete Burns helped to create our fatuous modern world

So RIP Pete Burns, transgendered Scouse popstar. His indescribably awful song ‘You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)’ — clever…

The Spectator's Notes

The Spectator’s Notes

World leaders are preoccupied nowadays with what is known as their ‘legacy’. In practice, this means being linked with moral-sounding…

Books

Books

Meaty matters

I’m writing this in the Highlands. Through the window I can see Loch Maree, being ruffled into white-tipped skirls by…

Books

A big beast in Hush Puppies

It always used to be said that, if it had been up to Guardian readers, Ken Clarke would certainly have…

Books

TB or not to be

If you are 70-plus, the shadow of TB will have hung over your childhood and youth, as it did mine,…

Books

A tale of two prisons

The Marshalsea was the best and worst place for a debtor to be imprisoned. From 1438 until its closure in…

Books

A race apart

South African democracy has not, on the whole, been kind to the Afrikaner. During Nelson Mandela’s benign oversight of the…

Books

Tormented genius

Married as I am to an antiquarian book dealer, and living in a house infested with books and manuscripts, I’m…

Books

Shiver me timbers

Brrrrr, this is a chilly book. Each time a character put on his sealskin kamiks, muskrat hat, wolfskin mittens and…

Books

Highly undesirable

Most of us just live in cities, or travel to see them and take them pretty much as they come,…

Books

Fierce indignation

In an autobiographical note written late in his life, Jonathan Swift set down an astonishing anecdote from his childhood. When…

Books

The great Soviet gameshow

In the opening chapter of her history of Soviet Central Television, Christine E. Evans observes two Russian televisual displays of…

Australian Books

Walking the walls of Theodosius

Hagia Sophia (the Church of the Holy Wisdom) in Istanbul is arguably the most important building in our Judeo-Christian tradition.…

Arts

Arts feature

Contours of the mind

In Australia, I have been told, the female pubic area is sometimes known as a ‘mapatasi’ because its triangular shape…

Cinema

Net effect

As a documentary-maker, Werner Herzog is a master of tone. His widely parodied voiceovers — breathy, raspy, ominous — are…

Exhibitions

Halloween hire

To use a vulgar phrase, I can’t get my head around this exhibition. It seems anything but ‘vulgar’. Daintily laid…

Exhibitions

Romantic modern

In 1932 Paul Nash posed the question, is it possible to ‘go modern’ and still ‘be British?’ — a conundrum…

Exhibitions

Going Dutch

In debates about what should and should not be taught in art school, the subject of survival skills almost never…

Opera

A night at the circus

The Royal Opera’s latest production is Shostakovich’s The Nose and to paraphrase Mark Steyn, whatever else can be said about…

Radio

Identity crisis

You may not listen to them every year. Or even to every lecture in the current series. But the survival…

Sculpture

March of the makers

Until earlier this year, a squat sculpture nestled rather unobtrusively outside 20 Manchester Square in Marylebone, an address once made…

Television

The lying game

‘Adam Curtis believed that 200,000 Guardian readers watching BBC2 could change the world. But this was a fantasy. In fact,…

Theatre

Sweet and sour

Great subject, terminal illness. Popular dramas like Love Story, Terms of Endearment and My Night With Reg handle the issue…

Culture Buff

La Belle Époque

Farce is a difficult theatrical form to write and to stage successfully. Farce operates beyond reality; a farce must establish…

Life

Crossword solution

to 2281: Fail

Extra letters in clues form the phrase BITE THE DUST. Thematically created entries at 10, 11, 19, 29 and 34…

Dear Mary

Dear Mary

Q. We hired a villa in the Camargue through the so-called ‘Sloane web’. You either know the uber-Sloane who runs…

Food

No place like Rome

Roma sells ancient-Roman-style food near Fenchurch Street station at the east end of the City, near Aldgate. It is, therefore,…

High life

High life

I was not on the winning side of the debate, despite giving it the old college try. Thank god for…

Long life

Long life

I may have made the odd disparaging remark about Brexiteers during the heat of the referendum campaign, but I have…

Low life

Low life

There were six of us round the table to celebrate Trafalgar Day. We ate the same dinner served to Her…

Real life

Real life

Coffee shops are becoming impossible. I had been standing in the queue at Caffè Nero on Battersea Rise for nearly…

Spectator sport

Allardyce’s sacking was not just

The other day Sam Allardyce was photographed with Sir Alex Ferguson at a Manchester United Champions League match at Old…

The turf

The switchers

‘He’s such a good competitor. He works so hard and he deserves it,’ said his predecessor Lewis Hamilton after Nico…

Battle for Britain

The Battle for Britain

The post The Battle for Britain appeared first on The Spectator.

Bridge

Bridge

The Gold Cup Finals were played in London this year and proved to be very exciting but ultimately unsuccessful for…

Chess puzzle

no. 432

White to play. This is from Lasker–Teichmann, St Petersburg 1909. Black had already resigned this game as he could anticipate…

Competition

Lines on the left

In Competition No. 2971 you were invited to submit poems written by Jeremy Corbyn. The seven printed below take £20…

Crossword

2284: Shocking!

Unclued lights consist of a quotation (in ODQ), its speaker and source, and a synonym (one hyphened) of each of…

Mind your language

Straik

I’m very glad I followed a friend’s recommendation to read The Bird of Dawning by John Masefield, an author neglected…