One Nation is not going to help rural Australians nor furious Gen X men, both unable to see an end to their housing, financial or energy strife. But hey, neither
Elon Musk, growing legal challenges and alternative social networks throwing open their doors to ban refugees are some of the issues surrounding the government's flagship tech policy. The post
36 Months accused ban critics of being paid off by big tech. Meanwhile, it was lining up sponsorship deals, eyeing global expansion and coming up with its own AI tool
Plus Seb Costello returns from a post-scandal hiatus, and the ABC fails the Test. The post Michelle Rowland’s News Corp meeting, Pauline Hanson plagarises herself, and One Nation beets the
Australian investment in data centres is already the second highest in the world — but the ravenous big tech industry wants more. The post Ravenous big tech is here to
Barnaby Joyce is officially joining Pauline Hanson's One Nation bandwagon. Let's take a look at the colourful exchange of words the pair have shared over the years. The post ‘As
Every civilisation reaches a moment when it must decide whether it wishes to remain itself. Australia has come to that moment. Not through war or economic collapse, but through something quieter and far more difficult to reverse: the demographic pressures of mass migration from incompatible civilisational systems.
For decades, Australians assumed that ...
The almost magical age of 16 will be the focus in a few days when the government’s contentious social media ban enters into force. Recently, we have come to recognise an additional reason the age of 16 is so significant. One of the authors of this opinion piece phoned a teenager, the son of a family friend, to congratulate him on his 15th birthday. ...
No politician is safe as the media's focus on parliamentary expenses entitlements intensifies, and the RBA will not cut rates in its final decision of the year. The post Wells
Helen Silver’s independent review into the Victorian Public Service was handed to the state government in June. Six months later, Jacinta Allan’s government has revealed what measures it will adopt to find $4 billion in savings, including scrapping eight agencies, the absorption (MOG) of seven entities into umbrella departments, and
One Nation is not going to help rural Australians nor furious Gen X men, both unable to see an end to their housing, financial or energy strife. But hey, neither
Elon Musk, growing legal challenges and alternative social networks throwing open their doors to ban refugees are some of the issues surrounding the government's flagship tech policy. The post
36 Months accused ban critics of being paid off by big tech. Meanwhile, it was lining up sponsorship deals, eyeing global expansion and coming up with its own AI tool
Plus Seb Costello returns from a post-scandal hiatus, and the ABC fails the Test. The post Michelle Rowland’s News Corp meeting, Pauline Hanson plagarises herself, and One Nation beets the
Australian investment in data centres is already the second highest in the world — but the ravenous big tech industry wants more. The post Ravenous big tech is here to
Barnaby Joyce is officially joining Pauline Hanson's One Nation bandwagon. Let's take a look at the colourful exchange of words the pair have shared over the years. The post ‘As
Every civilisation reaches a moment when it must decide whether it wishes to remain itself. Australia has come to that moment. Not through war or economic collapse, but through something quieter and far more difficult to reverse: the demographic pressures of mass migration from incompatible civilisational systems.
For decades, Australians assumed that ...
The almost magical age of 16 will be the focus in a few days when the government’s contentious social media ban enters into force. Recently, we have come to recognise an additional reason the age of 16 is so significant. One of the authors of this opinion piece phoned a teenager, the son of a family friend, to congratulate him on his 15th birthday. ...
No politician is safe as the media's focus on parliamentary expenses entitlements intensifies, and the RBA will not cut rates in its final decision of the year. The post Wells
Helen Silver’s independent review into the Victorian Public Service was handed to the state government in June. Six months later, Jacinta Allan’s government has revealed what measures it will adopt to find $4 billion in savings, including scrapping eight agencies, the absorption (MOG) of seven entities into umbrella departments, and