Stop saying ‘Our BBC’

Stop saying ‘Our BBC’

One of the most grating and nauseating verbal constructions of our times – ‘Our NHS’ – has with grim inevitability began to evolve and expand. It was only a matter of time before someone or some organisation deemed it necessary to affix that possessive determiner to another state-run organisation, and you hardly need to guess which one. ‘A GB News ...
Andrew Hastie: the Liberals’ last lifeline

Andrew Hastie: the Liberals’ last lifeline

Andrew Hastie’s bid for the leadership isn’t just another chapter in the party’s factional saga. It is the Liberals’ Last Lifeline, the last chance to adapt to a changing political landscape before, overwhelmed with despair, conservatives break away and build something new. Liberalism, as an organising political philosophy, is reaching its end. Across ...
Sleeping under the Southern Cross

Sleeping under the Southern Cross

Once upon a time, the Australian spirit was known for its courage, independence, and irreverent sense of fairness. We didn’t wait for someone else to speak – we spoke up. We didn’t wait for permission – we acted. We were the quiet battlers who built a thriving democracy out of little more than grit, trust and a handshake. But something has shifted. In ...
Dizzy times

Dizzy times

Andrew Ross Sorkin’s 1929 is a well-told story about the great Wall Street crash. It has vivid characters, a thrilling plot and sensible observations. It is not too long, not too technical and not too tendentious. It brings into the narrative not only the big Wall Street bankers and speculators
Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear.

Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear.

Indigenous peoples are on the vanguard of climate action. Longstanding relationships with land means they endure the direct consequences of climate change. And their unique knowledge offers effective solutions to climate problems. But despite this, international climate policies have fallen short of encouraging Indigenous leadership. With the UN climate
Middle class saviour fantasies

Middle class saviour fantasies

Across history, the middle classes have dreamed of saving their societies. They see themselves as the sober conscience of the nation, humane, rational, on the right side of history. Yet their crusades often end not in redemption but in futility or betrayal, leaving others to pay the price. From the German clerks and shopkeepers who embraced Hitler as a ...

Stop saying ‘Our BBC’

Stop saying ‘Our BBC’
One of the most grating and nauseating verbal constructions of our times – ‘Our NHS’ – has with grim inevitability began to evolve and expand. It was only a matter of time before someone or some organisation deemed it necessary to affix that possessive determiner to another state-run organisation, and you hardly need to guess which one. ‘A GB News ...

Andrew Hastie: the Liberals’ last lifeline

Andrew Hastie: the Liberals’ last lifeline
Andrew Hastie’s bid for the leadership isn’t just another chapter in the party’s factional saga. It is the Liberals’ Last Lifeline, the last chance to adapt to a changing political landscape before, overwhelmed with despair, conservatives break away and build something new. Liberalism, as an organising political philosophy, is reaching its end. Across ...

Sleeping under the Southern Cross

Sleeping under the Southern Cross
Once upon a time, the Australian spirit was known for its courage, independence, and irreverent sense of fairness. We didn’t wait for someone else to speak – we spoke up. We didn’t wait for permission – we acted. We were the quiet battlers who built a thriving democracy out of little more than grit, trust and a handshake. But something has shifted. In ...

Dizzy times

Dizzy times
Andrew Ross Sorkin’s 1929 is a well-told story about the great Wall Street crash. It has vivid characters, a thrilling plot and sensible observations. It is not too long, not too technical and not too tendentious. It brings into the narrative not only the big Wall Street bankers and speculators

Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear.

Finally, Indigenous peoples have an influential voice at COP30. They’re speaking loud and clear.
Indigenous peoples are on the vanguard of climate action. Longstanding relationships with land means they endure the direct consequences of climate change. And their unique knowledge offers effective solutions to climate problems. But despite this, international climate policies have fallen short of encouraging Indigenous leadership. With the UN climate

Middle class saviour fantasies

Middle class saviour fantasies
Across history, the middle classes have dreamed of saving their societies. They see themselves as the sober conscience of the nation, humane, rational, on the right side of history. Yet their crusades often end not in redemption but in futility or betrayal, leaving others to pay the price. From the German clerks and shopkeepers who embraced Hitler as a ...