
Cancel culture may be noisy, but real accountability remains rare, especially for survivors of sexual assault. read now...

Since 2006, the Economist Intelligence Unit has measured the quality of democracy in 167 countries and territories across the world. Its last index, for 2024, was published in February. Over the past eighteen years, the average score has declined — both globally and for each of the world’s regions —

The Queensland government has accepted four out of six recommendations made by an independent assessment into the state’s disaster management Four reports from the Office of the Inspector-General of Emergency Management (IGEM) assessing the performance of the disaster management system were tabled in parliament last week. Minister for Police and

Condemnations and condolences have been pouring in since yesterday's deadly antisemitic terror attack at Bondi Beach. The post Australian leaders and international heads of state condemn Bondi terror attack

While we reel from the Bondi terrorist atrocity that killed 15 innocent people celebrating Hanukkah, there are serious questions for our intelligence and security officials — and our politicians —

For years, antisemitism in Australia was spoken about as something rare and unusual. Things are very different now. The post Over centuries, Jews have learnt to pay attention to moments

Halting migration might sound like a quick fix to Australia’s housing and economic woes, but the real outcome would be stalled growth, lost jobs and rising costs across the nation. read now...

The government's handout to Rio Tinto last week to ensure the future of the expensive, enormously energy-hungry Tomago plant in NSW rewards a strange collection of bedfellows. The post Tomago

The fight for quality housing is political Pip Hinman Mon, 15/12/2025 - 11:30

After the uprising of radical leftist forces and extremist Islamist groups in 1979 and their seizure of power in Iran, a period of brutal repression began, marked by torture, executions, and the systematic assassination of dissidents.
Thousands of Iranians were forced into exile.
Yet many of us never abandoned the struggle against tyranny and Islamist ...

In case you’ve missed any of them, here’s a rundown of the past week’s articles:
Man Convicted of Sexual Assault for Fraudulently Inducing Woman to Have Sexual Intercourse
The former Australian soldier showed the sex worker a receipt for $700 when he had only deposited $100.
Click here to read the article
The Offence of Possessing, ...

Around 40,000 years Before Present, during the last ice age of the Pleistocene, explorers walked from Wilson’s Promontory, the Australian mainland’s southern-most projection, to northeast Tasmania, crossing an isthmus exposed by falling sea levels. In time, the entire Bassian Plain was exposed — wider than the island itself — and

Cancel culture may be noisy, but real accountability remains rare, especially for survivors of sexual assault. read now...

Since 2006, the Economist Intelligence Unit has measured the quality of democracy in 167 countries and territories across the world. Its last index, for 2024, was published in February. Over the past eighteen years, the average score has declined — both globally and for each of the world’s regions —

The Queensland government has accepted four out of six recommendations made by an independent assessment into the state’s disaster management Four reports from the Office of the Inspector-General of Emergency Management (IGEM) assessing the performance of the disaster management system were tabled in parliament last week. Minister for Police and

Condemnations and condolences have been pouring in since yesterday's deadly antisemitic terror attack at Bondi Beach. The post Australian leaders and international heads of state condemn Bondi terror attack

While we reel from the Bondi terrorist atrocity that killed 15 innocent people celebrating Hanukkah, there are serious questions for our intelligence and security officials — and our politicians —

For years, antisemitism in Australia was spoken about as something rare and unusual. Things are very different now. The post Over centuries, Jews have learnt to pay attention to moments

Halting migration might sound like a quick fix to Australia’s housing and economic woes, but the real outcome would be stalled growth, lost jobs and rising costs across the nation. read now...

The government's handout to Rio Tinto last week to ensure the future of the expensive, enormously energy-hungry Tomago plant in NSW rewards a strange collection of bedfellows. The post Tomago

The fight for quality housing is political Pip Hinman Mon, 15/12/2025 - 11:30

After the uprising of radical leftist forces and extremist Islamist groups in 1979 and their seizure of power in Iran, a period of brutal repression began, marked by torture, executions, and the systematic assassination of dissidents.
Thousands of Iranians were forced into exile.
Yet many of us never abandoned the struggle against tyranny and Islamist ...

In case you’ve missed any of them, here’s a rundown of the past week’s articles:
Man Convicted of Sexual Assault for Fraudulently Inducing Woman to Have Sexual Intercourse
The former Australian soldier showed the sex worker a receipt for $700 when he had only deposited $100.
Click here to read the article
The Offence of Possessing, ...

Around 40,000 years Before Present, during the last ice age of the Pleistocene, explorers walked from Wilson’s Promontory, the Australian mainland’s southern-most projection, to northeast Tasmania, crossing an isthmus exposed by falling sea levels. In time, the entire Bassian Plain was exposed — wider than the island itself — and
