Articles

19 Feb2021

‘Official Socialism’ skulking beneath the cover of Covid

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As COVID-19 hit these shores, the country’s medical bureaucrats must have felt like the members of a small and rapidly diminishing cargo cult when they finally glimpsed ships on the horizon.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
12 Feb2021

Problem is the tax on our super is too high

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian 

Released by the Treasurer in the midst of the pandemic, the report of the Retirement Income Review has received far less attention than it deserves. While the report covers a great deal of ground, it is disappointing and dangerous in important respects.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Problem is the tax on our super is too high_Fri 12 Feb 2021.pdf)Problem is the tax on our super is too high_Fri 12 Feb 2021.pdf[ ]106 Kb
05 Feb2021

Australia Day ‘invasion’ rhetoric perpetuates victimhood

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It was predictable, but nonetheless a pity, that the row over Australia Day would prove to be all heat, no light.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Australia Day ‘invasion’ rhetoric perpetuates victimhood_Fri 5 Feb 2021.pdf)Australia Day ‘invasion’ rhetoric perpetuates victimhood_Fri 5 Feb 2021.pdf[ ]110 Kb
29 Jan2021

Honours without a shared sense of honour

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It is one of the paradoxes of the modern world that while the concept of honour has about as much influence on daily life as that of chastity, honours abound, and — as this week’s polemics showed — so does the controversy that surrounds their award.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.



Attachments:
Download this file (Honours without a shared sense of honour_Fri 29 Jan 2021.pdf)Honours without a shared sense of honour_Fri 29 Jan 2021.pdf[ ]117 Kb
22 Jan2021

150 years on, Germany’s past shows fragility of freedom

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

150 years on, Germany’s past shows fragility of freedom

One hundred and fifty years ago this week, on January 18, 1871, the German empire was proclaimed in Versailles’ Hall of Mirrors, which the troops of the German states had just captured in the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

 

Attachments:
Download this file (150 years on, Germanys past shows fragility of freedom_Fri 22 Jan 2021.pdf)150 years on, Germanys past shows fragility of freedom_Fri 22 Jan 2021.pdf[ ]112 Kb
08 Jan2021

Anthem is not the PM’s; it belongs to the nation

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Coming at the end of a year in which Australians have been subject to restrictions that are unprecedented in peacetime, including widespread and persistent border closures, it may well have been appropriate for Scott Morrison to remind us that we are — or should be — “one and free”.

Click here to access the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (America’s democracy designed to survive Trump crisis.pdf)America’s democracy designed to survive Trump crisis.pdf[ ]111 Kb
18 Dec2020

Why Obama’s ‘Jew’ slur must be called out

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The silence that has greeted the former US president’s description of Nicolas Sarkozy in his book reflects the normalisation of casual anti-Semitism on the ‘progressive’ side of politics.

The words leap out and grab you. After all, in countless pages of prose, no other world leader is characterised by Barack Obama in anything like those terms.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Why casual bigotry of Obama’s 'Jew' slur about Sarkozy must be called out_Fri 18)Why casual bigotry of Obama’s 'Jew' slur about Sarkozy must be called out_Fri 18[ ]70 Kb
11 Dec2020

Western ideals of aspiration born out of the Black Death

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

When the Black Death reached Europe and the Mediterranean in 1346-47, Egypt and England were roughly comparable economies, with similar populations and income levels.

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04 Dec2020

Calculated show of contempt by China

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As so often happens with mass production, the quality of China’s lies has plummeted as their number has increased. However, the purpose of its latest outrage was not so much to deceive as to humiliate.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Calculated show of contempt by China_Fri 4 Dec 2020.pdf)Calculated show of contempt by China_Fri 4 Dec 2020.pdf[ ]97 Kb
27 Nov2020

Oxford’s All Souls has shed its own by erasing Codrington name from library

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Having held out for many months, All Souls capitulated last week, erasing the name “Codrington” from its world-famous library.

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Attachments:
Download this file (Oxfords All Souls has shed its own by erasing Codrington name from library_Fri 2)Oxfords All Souls has shed its own by erasing Codrington name from library_Fri 2[ ]119 Kb
20 Nov2020

ABC blames France when jihadis murder its innocents

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Since the brutal assassination of French schoolteacher Samuel Paty, who was beheaded on the street by an ­Islamist for showing his students a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed, the ABC has distinguished itself by publishing one piece after the other that pins the blame for the French terrorist attacks not on the fanatics and their murderous ideology but — you guessed it — on France.



 

Attachments:
Download this file (ABC blames France when jihadis murder its innocents_Fri 20 Nov 2020.pdf)ABC blames France when jihadis murder its innocents_Fri 20 Nov 2020.pdf[ ]146 Kb
13 Nov2020

Public interest? ABC betrays its founding principles

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Much like the BBC, the ABC was formed, and its mission framed, on the basis of two beliefs that emerged from the trauma of the First World War.

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Attachments:
Download this file (Public interest_ABC betrays its founding principles_Fri 13 Nov 2020.pdf)Public interest_ABC betrays its founding principles_Fri 13 Nov 2020.pdf[ ]114 Kb
06 Nov2020

US election: Elusive virtues that would help nation heal these scars

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Many decades ago, in that fleeting parenthesis between the ravages of Marxism and those of the assault on Dead White Males, there raged in academia something of a great debate about Thucydides’s History of the Peloponnesian War.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

 

Attachments:
Download this file (US election_Elusive virtues that would help nation heal these scars Fri 6 Nov 20)US election_Elusive virtues that would help nation heal these scars Fri 6 Nov 20[ ]379 Kb
30 Oct2020

As pillars of probity, ASIC pair should know better

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
As pillars of probity, ASIC pair should know better

Whether Christine Holgate, the CEO of Australia Post, acted properly in distributing designer watches to the senior executives who had secured a major contract will be determined by the inquiries that are now under way. But whether she acted wisely is another question.

 

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.  

Attachments:
Download this file (As pillars of probity ASIC pair should know better_Fri 30 Oct 2020.pdf)As pillars of probity ASIC pair should know better_Fri 30 Oct 2020.pdf[ ]116 Kb
23 Oct2020

Islam and the West: We must strike back or soon we’ll all be Samuel Paty

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Islam and the West: We must strike back or soon we’ll all be Samuel Paty

Samuel Paty, the French schoolteacher decapitated last Friday for showing his students a caricature of the Prophet Mohammed, did not lose his life in a clash of civilisations; he lost it in a clash between civilisation and barbarism.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Islam and the West_We must strike back or soon we’ll all be Samuel Paty_Fri 23 O)Islam and the West_We must strike back or soon we’ll all be Samuel Paty_Fri 23 O[ ]119 Kb
16 Oct2020

Berejiklian and Andrews: A tale of two crises

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The past week has hardly been kind on our political system’s image. In NSW, Gladys Berejik­lian’s previously untarnished reputation was battered by revelations of her relationship with Daryl Maguire, a disgraced former Liberal MP.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Berejiklian and Andrews_A tale of two crises_Fri 16 Oct 2020.pdf)Berejiklian and Andrews_A tale of two crises_Fri 16 Oct 2020.pdf[ ]160 Kb
09 Oct2020

Covid-19 facts now clear – let’s shout them out

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Recent polls that show a majority of Australians support tough restrictions aimed at curbing the spread of COVID-19 may well reflect public perceptions of the risks associated with the disease.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

02 Oct2020

And to think that we saw it on Spring Street

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Eyes wide shut – Victoria’s debacle shows the public service sector remains steeped in political expediency


“When I leave home to walk to school / Dad always says to me / ‘Marco, keep your eyelids up / And see what you can see.” So begins the classic 1937 children’s book And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street by Dr Seuss.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (And to think that we saw it on Spring Street_Fri 2 Oct 2020.pdf)And to think that we saw it on Spring Street_Fri 2 Oct 2020.pdf[ ]46 Kb
18 Sep2020

In Palaszczuk and Andrews, we face a plague of Creons

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Sophocles’ legendary tyrant was supremely political, imbued with the casual ­ruthlessness of those whose craft is power. This cynicism is also on display in Queensland and Victoria.

Almost 2500 years after it was first performed, Sophocles’s Antigone has seemed more relevant — ever since Queensland refused Sarah Caisip, a 26-year-old Canberra-based graduate nurse, permission to attend her father’s funeral.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Annastacia Palaszczuk and Daniel Andrews prove a match for cruel King Creon_Fri )Annastacia Palaszczuk and Daniel Andrews prove a match for cruel King Creon_Fri [ ]75 Kb
11 Sep2020

Force Daniel Andrews to bear the costs of the damage he wreaks

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The cruellest thing one can do to Daniel Andrews’s explanation of Victoria’s strategy for dealing with COVID-19 is to read it a second time. After all, given the costs that are being inflicted on Victorians and on the country as a whole, one might assume, on a first reading, that a cogent justification for the strategy lay hidden in the explanatory material Andrews used last Sunday.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Force Daniel Andrews to bear the costs of the damage he wreaks.pdf)Force Daniel Andrews to bear the costs of the damage he wreaks.pdf[ ]86 Kb
22 May2020

China ties: History shows trade can lead to servitude

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With China’s trade war against Australia escalating, the scene seems distressingly contemporary: a fraying global order, riven by mounting tensions between states; an ascendant, brutally authoritarian power, determined to throw its weight around; and dependent economies which, though formally independent, find their room for manoeuvre increasingly compromised as the rising power uses its economic clout to punish them for stepping out of line.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (China ties_History shows trade can lead to servitude_Fri 22 May 2020.pdf)China ties_History shows trade can lead to servitude_Fri 22 May 2020.pdf[ ]110 Kb
08 May2020

Coronavirus: Australia is fortunate Abbott took action years ago

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

“No one could have foreseen five or 10 years ago the situation we face,” Emmanuel Macron declared in early March, as he sought to explain the shortages of personal protective equipment and respirators that had plunged France into a devastating crisis.


Click here to read the oped at The Australian's subscriber website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

01 May2020

Coronavirus: Australia’s tough fight to defeat ‘the louse’

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


In December 1919, as the Bolsheviks struggled with a typhus epidemic that killed more than five million people, Lenin famously declared “either socialism will defeat the louse or the louse will defeat socialism”.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Coronavirus__Australia’s tough fight to defeat ‘the louse’_Fri 1 May 2020.pdf)Coronavirus__Australia’s tough fight to defeat ‘the louse’_Fri 1 May 2020.pdf[ ]272 Kb
23 Apr2020

Coronavirus: Return to sender — economists’ letter is gibberish

Posted in Op eds

Coronavirus: Return to sender — economists’ letter is gibberish
HENRY ERGAS and JONATHAN PINCUS


Like some books, there are petitions that deserve to be forgotten, not for the sake of their potential readers but to protect the reput­ation of their authors. The open letter by a bevy of economists urging­ Scott Morrison to keep the COVID-19 restrictions in place is a case in point.

Click here (login required) to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

 

17 Apr2020

Coronavirus: We can win this war — and avoid an economic defeat

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian:

With the toll from the coronavirus declining to very low levels, Australians need some clarity about the path back towards normality.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website, or check back here next week to download a pdf.
13 Apr2020

Coronavirus: Grim reaper will kill off our words first

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

When Albert Camus set out to write The Plague, the novel that more than any other work earned him the Nobel prize for literature in 1957, words almost failed him.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Coronavirus_Grim reaper will kill off our words first_Mon 13 Apr 2020.pdf)Coronavirus_Grim reaper will kill off our words first_Mon 13 Apr 2020.pdf[ ]97 Kb
27 Mar2020

Coronavirus: It will be unhealthy to ignore the cost of all this

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

While the response of federal and state governments to the spread of COVID-19 is understandable, there must be a danger of going too far.


Click or tap here to access the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Coronavirus_Grim reaper will kill off our words first_Mon 13 Apr 2020.pdf)Coronavirus_Grim reaper will kill off our words first_Mon 13 Apr 2020.pdf[ ]97 Kb
21 Mar2020

COVID’s covert impact will alter the face of politics

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

 


On March 24, 1976, as the US prepared to celebrate its ­bicentenary, president Gerald Ford faced a decision­ which could only damage his chances of winning the ­election that was to be held that ­November.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (COVID’s covert impact will alter the face of politics_Fri 20 Mar 2020.pdf)COVID’s covert impact will alter the face of politics_Fri 20 Mar 2020.pdf[ ]148 Kb
13 Mar2020

Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it

In one of his last works, written a decade after he had defined ­enlightenment as “daring to know”, Immanuel Kant identified what he regarded as one of the greatest threats to reason: the human tendency to seek, in ever-changing realitie­s, a sign of the End of Days.

Click or tap here to access the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it_Fri 13 Mar 2020.pdf)Cosmic catastrophe always there if you look for it_Fri 13 Mar 2020.pdf[ ]146 Kb
21 Feb2020

Foolish ‘alien’ ruling turns indigenous gap into a chasm

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Whatever its intentions, the High Court’s decision in Love and Thoms does indigenous Australians no favours.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

10 Feb2020

China’s flawed reaction to the coronavirus

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

When the great cholera epidemics of the 19th century began in 1820, no one had any idea what had struck. Here was a disease of astonishing ferocity, as terrifying as the plague and seemingly as unstoppable, that was rapidly making its way from the Far East towards Europe.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's webpage (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (China’s flawed reaction to the coronavirus_Mon 10 Feb 2020.pdf)China’s flawed reaction to the coronavirus_Mon 10 Feb 2020.pdf[ ]112 Kb
27 Jan2020

Thinking for ourselves — precious and threatened

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Seventy-five years ago, as the war raged with unrelenting ferocity, Australia’s daily papers reported, typically in a snippet at the bottom of page 4, that on what is now Australia Day a “terrible concentration camp” had been captured at Oswiecim, in southwestern Poland.

Click/tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

 

 

20 Jan2020

Roger Scruton, heroic champion of art and truth

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It may be the fate of most public intellectuals to become more and more public and less and less intellectual; it was never that of the late Roger Scruton.


Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Roger Scruton, heroic champion of art and truth_Mon 20 Jan 2020.pdf)Roger Scruton, heroic champion of art and truth_Mon 20 Jan 2020.pdf[ ]740 Kb
13 Jan2020

Bushfires: Pennies on prevention could save the states millions

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With the flames still raging, it is too early to tell how great the losses from this season’s bushfires will be. Already now, however, the ­commonwealth government has pledged $2bn for a National Bushfire Recovery Agency, while the NSW government has announced an additional $1bn in recovery funding.


Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Bushfires_Pennies on prevention could save the states millions_Mon 13 Jan 2020.p)Bushfires_Pennies on prevention could save the states millions_Mon 13 Jan 2020.p[ ]128 Kb
06 Jan2020

Bushfires a chance to restore our national character

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As the children, “running and running, running to a standstill”, brought news to the volunteer firefighters in Patrick White’s The Tree of Man of yet another outbreak in the terrifying fire at Durilgai, “passionate volumes of smoke towered above the bush, and in that smoke (writhed) dark, indistinguishable bodies, as if something were being translated forcibly into space”.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Bushfires a chance to restore our national character_Mon 6 Jan 2020.pdf)Bushfires a chance to restore our national character_Mon 6 Jan 2020.pdf[ ]87 Kb
20 Dec2019

'Exhausted majority’ can rejoice over a year of averted catastrophes

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

How fortunate is the true love in the Twelve Days of Christmas! From the first partridge in a pear tree to the last drummer drumming she receives exactly 364 gifts: a present for each and every day of the year to come, excluding Christmas Day.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (‘Exhausted majority’ can rejoice over a year of averted catastrophes_Fri 20 Dec )‘Exhausted majority’ can rejoice over a year of averted catastrophes_Fri 20 Dec [ ]723 Kb
13 Dec2019

Adjusting to climate risks is only prudent

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

According to Kenneth Hayne, former High Court judge and commissioner of last year’s financial services royal commission, Australian company directors need to spend more time worrying about climate change.

Click or tap here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf version.

Attachments:
Download this file (Adjusting to climate risks is only prudent_Fri 13 Dec 2019.pdf)Adjusting to climate risks is only prudent_Fri 13 Dec 2019.pdf[ ]352 Kb
29 Nov2019

Why Australia’s Jews also hope that it’s not time for Jeremy Corbyn

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

According to Ephraim Mirvis, the Orthodox Chief Rabbi of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, “the overwhelming majority of British Jews” are “gripped by anxiety” at the possibility of a Labour victory.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (password required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Why Australia’s Jews also hope that it’s not time for Jeremy Corbyn_Fri 29 Nov 2)Why Australia’s Jews also hope that it’s not time for Jeremy Corbyn_Fri 29 Nov 2[ ]90 Kb
01 Nov2019

A tunnel, a light … but Brexit express a mystery train

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With the House of Commons finally­ agreeing to an early election, the polls point to a substantial Conservative victory.

That is partly because Boris Johnson — who was widely dismissed as a clown when he took over the party’s leadership at the end of July — has raised support for the Tories from the catas­trophic low of 20-25 per cent it had reached before he became Prime Minister to 35-40 per cent today.

You can read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.  

Attachments:
Download this file (A tunnel, a light … but Brexit express a mystery train_Fri 1 Nov 2019.pdf)A tunnel, a light … but Brexit express a mystery train_Fri 1 Nov 2019.pdf[ ]146 Kb
25 Oct2019

There’s need for secrecy — it’s a question of balance

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


There’s need for secrecy — it’s a question of balance

As the blacked-out front pages of Monday’s newspapers reminded us, a free press is the foundation of liberty. In a world in which the abuse of power comes as no surprise, its vigilance helps to expose injustice, deter those who would perpetrate it and ensure governments are held to account.

Read the oped here (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (There’s need for secrecy — it’s a question of balance_Fri 25 Oct 2019.pdf)There’s need for secrecy — it’s a question of balance_Fri 25 Oct 2019.pdf[ ]131 Kb
11 Oct2019

These minnows would besmirch the names of giants

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

“Extinction rebellion” is not a protest against governments — it is a protest against the voters who elected them. And its message to those voters is as simple as it is manifestly undemocratic: adopt our policies or we will make your life impossible.

Click or tap here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (These minnows would besmirch the names of giants_Fri 11 Oct 19.pdf)These minnows would besmirch the names of giants_Fri 11 Oct 19.pdf[ ]109 Kb
04 Oct2019

China celebrates — but history is certain to catch up

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As China’s leaders celebrated 70 years of Communist Party rule on Tuesday, the fate of the Soviet ­empire hung like a ghost over the jackboots and missiles parading through the streets of Beijing.

 Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (China celebrates — but history is certain to catch up_Fri 4 Oct 2019.pdf)China celebrates — but history is certain to catch up_Fri 4 Oct 2019.pdf[ ]117 Kb
20 Sep2019

Acting in the interests of shareholders matters

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The Committee for the Economic Development of Australia last week released the results of a survey of the attitudes the general public and corporate leaders have to business.

Launched to great media fanfare, Company Pulse 2019 contributed to a torrent of commentary about the need for companies to act more ethically.


Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.


Attachments:
Download this file (Acting in the interests of shareholders matters_Fri 20 Sep 2019.pdf)Acting in the interests of shareholders matters_Fri 20 Sep 2019.pdf[ ]63 Kb
13 Sep2019

Trying to redefine museums: a disease of our times

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Last Saturday, at a packed conference in Kyoto of the International Council of Museums, delegates voted overwhelmingly against an ill-conceived proposed change to the internationally accepted definition of the nature and functions of a museum.

Click here to read the op-ed at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for the pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Trying to redefine museums_a disease of our times_Fri 13 Sep 2019.pdf)Trying to redefine museums_a disease of our times_Fri 13 Sep 2019.pdf[ ]102 Kb
06 Sep2019

Brexit reveals what parliament thinks of the people

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

For the past few months Britain has been a nation busily engaged in building its own funeral pyre.

This week Britain leapt into the roaring flames.

Perhaps something will be saved from the conflagration but, regardless of how Brexit ends, it is becoming harder and harder to believe that Britain will ever be the same again.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf version.

Attachments:
Download this file (Brexit reveals what parliament thinks of the people_Fri 6 Sep 2019.pdf)Brexit reveals what parliament thinks of the people_Fri 6 Sep 2019.pdf[ ]101 Kb
30 Aug2019

Some trade wars have been a win for the world

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The platitude du jour, repeated at every turn by the Treasurer and the governor of the Reserve Bank, is that no one wins a trade war. Pleasing as that homily may be, it reflects neither theory nor experience.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Some trade wars have been a win for the world_Fri 30 Aug 2019.pdf)Some trade wars have been a win for the world_Fri 30 Aug 2019.pdf[ ]122 Kb
16 Aug2019

Trump is living up to a long U.S. tradition

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Trump is living up to a long U.S. tradition

With the turmoil in Hong Kong, and now the apparent explosion of a Russian nuclear propulsion ­device, focusing attention on the threats Australia faces, there is a growing chorus of voices casting doubt on the stability and predictability of American foreign policy — and hence on the wisdom of continuing to rely so heavily on the alliance.

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

21 Jun2019

Labor’s response to Setka follows same old union script

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Whatever one thinks of John Setka, this much is clear: expelling him from the ALP will do nothing to prevent the lawlessness that has become the hallmark of the Construction Forestry Maritime Mining and Energy Union.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

14 Jun2019

China’s future clouded by the road not taken in 1989

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian 


On June 4, 1989, as the tanks rolled into Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, Lech Walesa’s Solidarity movement won a landslide victory over its communist rivals in the first democratic elections to be held in Poland — indeed, in Eastern ­Europe — since its forcible integration into the Soviet bloc.

Click here to read the oped at The Australia's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (China’s future clouded by the road not taken in 1989_Fri 14 June 2019.pdf)China’s future clouded by the road not taken in 1989_Fri 14 June 2019.pdf[ ]118 Kb
24 May2019

Albanese cannot just be Labor’s new contortionist

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Like Aldous Huxley, I am capable of being very stoical about other people’s misfortunes — and never more so than when they afflict Labor and the disastrous policies it took to the election.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's webster (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Albanese cannot just be Labor’s new contortionist_Fri 24 May 2019.pdf)Albanese cannot just be Labor’s new contortionist_Fri 24 May 2019.pdf[ ]81 Kb
13 May2019

Labor’s tax attack on savings counter-productive

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian (with Jonathan Pincus)

Labor’s tax attack on savings counter-productive

Australia may find ­itself next week on the path to the largest peacetime tax increases since Federation. It is not simply the magnitude of the tax rises that makes Labor’s plans exceptional — both in historical terms and relative to global trends — it is that they are so heavily focused on penalising saving.

Click here to read the oped at the Australian's website or check back here in a week to download a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (Labor’s tax attack on savings counter-productive_Mon 13 May 2019.pdf)Labor’s tax attack on savings counter-productive_Mon 13 May 2019.pdf[ ]150 Kb
10 May2019

Shorten’s religious-like belief overshadows debate

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

According to Labor and the Greens, climate change is fundamentally a moral issue. That, they say, means there is no need to cost their policies, which must simply be accepted as the right thing to do.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (subscription required) or check back here next week to download a pdf
 

12 Apr2019

NBN remote from ground control

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It is, as Gibbons said about Corsica, easier to deplore the fate, than to describe the actual condition, of the National Broadband Network.

And with the campaign now under way, Labor’s announcement that, if elected, it will launch yet another review of the NBN only makes the network’s future all the more uncertain.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf version.

 

Attachments:
Download this file (NBN remote from ground control_Fri 12 Apr 2019.pdf)NBN remote from ground control_Fri 12 Apr 2019.pdf[ ]197 Kb
08 Apr2019

We’ve just made it easier for corruption to flourish

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Having proven herself to be a phoenix rather than a cooked goose, Gladys Berejiklian should move as quickly as she reasonably can to contain the effects of a recent decision by the NSW Court of Criminal Appeal.

Legal reasons preclude a ­detailed discussion of the substance of that decision. Briefly stated, it quashes the convictions of a former senior politician in the ­Keneally Labor government, and of his close political ally, to whom that politician granted a lucrative licence. After a lengthy investigation, the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption concluded that the grant of the ­licence involved the misuse of public office. It also found the politician’s ally complicit in the ­offence, with those conclusions being confirmed by a trial that sent both men to jail for lengthy terms.

Click here to access the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

22 Mar2019

Jihadis, neo-Nazis — they have always been brothers

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Jihadis, neo-Nazis — they have always been brothers

How often in recent years have we thought, as Hannah Arendt did on learning of the death camps, “many things are possible, but this ought not to have happened”? Now, after another week of terrorism, and yet more innocent blood, we also think: this will not end.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

15 Mar2019

Liberals’ heart has been hollowed out

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With the opinion polls showing no improvement in its prospects, any remaining optimists in the Coalition look increasingly like wishful sinkers.

The end, when it comes, will leave plenty of scope for recriminations; as ministers and members pack up their offices, blame is the one thing that will not be in short supply. The question, however, is to understand the broader forces at work.

Click here to read the oped at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

08 Mar2019

Public deserves right to pass judgment on courts

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Last month, the NSW Land and Environment Court ruled against a proposed coalmine at Rocky Hill in a decision I criticised in these pages. Since then, public debate about that decision, which is likely to have far-reaching effects, has been astonishingly muted.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

01 Mar2019

Abuse of academic freedom can never be condoned

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

According to Tim Anderson, who was sacked from the University of Sydney last month, academic freedom entitles him to display, as teaching material, the flag of the state of Israel with a swastika ­superimposed on it.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

22 Feb2019

Absurd Rocky Hill decision tarnishes rule of law

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

While the Queensland government’s review of the Adani project is a farce, the decision of the NSW Land and Environment Court to block the proposed coalmine at Rocky Hill is a tragedy.


Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.

15 Feb2019

Rudd’s tangle over broadband legacy

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Now that we are almost as abundantly endowed with ex-prime ministers as we are with coal, it is perhaps unsurprising that emissions from the former have grown to rival those from the latter. But even in a crowded field, Kevin Rudd’s claim that “it was never ­envisaged that the NBN generate a commercial rate of return” merits a special place in the greatest moral challenge facing mankind.

08 Feb2019

Why fill the tumbrels with middlemen?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Even those who delight in life’s ­little ironies will have been troubled to see the major culprits, in this case the banks, emerge from the ­financial services royal commission with what so far is barely a scolding, while the mortgage brokers and financial advisers, who were bit players in the drama, are hauled to the guillotine.

Click here (login required) to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week for a pdf. 

01 Feb2019

China might dance to Trump’s tune – for a while

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As US and Chinese negotiators struggle to reach agreement ­before higher American tariffs on Chinese goods come into effect on March 2, it is increasingly clear that the Trump administration has two distinct, and potentially inconsistent, goals.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website or (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
 

 

Attachments:
Download this file (China might dance to Trump’s tune – for a while_Fri 1 Feb 2019.pdf)China might dance to Trump’s tune – for a while_Fri 1 Feb 2019.pdf[ ]87 Kb
25 Jan2019

We came, we saw, we made the very best of it

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

We came, we saw, we made the very best of it
As long ago as January 26, 1817, only a few years after the colony of NSW had come into existence, some 40 guests celebrated its founding at the Sydney home of Isaac Nichols, a former convict who was the settlement’s postmaster.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week rto download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (We came, we saw, we made the very best of it_Fri 25 Jan 2018.pdf)We came, we saw, we made the very best of it_Fri 25 Jan 2018.pdf[ ]93 Kb
18 Jan2019

Are we headed towards high noon for democracy?

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

In 1923, as the Weimar Republic struggled with chaos, the German polymath Carl Schmitt wrote a short but enormously influential book, The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy. Schmitt later destroyed his reputation through his collaboration with the Hitler regime. But if his work is increasingly cited, it is because its contemporary resonance is undeniable.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf version.

Attachments:
Download this file (Are we headed towards high noon for democracy_Fri 18 Jan 2019.pdf)Are we headed towards high noon for democracy_Fri 18 Jan 2019.pdf[ ]88 Kb
04 Jan2019

Donald Trump wall is a tall order, but migrant issue is heating up

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Lost in the shouting match over the partial shutdown of the US government were the striking findings of a study released late last year. The study, carried out by demographers from Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, concludes that the number of illegal migrants in the country has been greatly ­underestimated.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf.


 

Attachments:
Download this file (Donald Trump wall is a tall order, but migrant issue is heating up_Fri 4 Jan 201)Donald Trump wall is a tall order, but migrant issue is heating up_Fri 4 Jan 201[ ]119 Kb
21 Dec2018

Less time for the present even as cost of giving declines

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As the global economy sputters and stockmarkets sag, a mere $140,000 will buy the pick-me-up to which every family aspires: the full kit of the Twelve Days of Christmas, from the first partridge to the last drummer, with all the doves, hens, geese, swans, maids, ladies, lords and pipers in between.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (log in required) or check back here next week for a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Less time for the present even as cost of giving declines_Fri 21 Dec 2018.pdf)Less time for the present even as cost of giving declines_Fri 21 Dec 2018.pdf[ ]270 Kb
14 Dec2018

If you have true Faith, prepare to defend your rites

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

In a year best characterised as “plot by Dostoevsky, script by Groucho Marx”, it was perhaps fitting that the Senate celebrated Christmas by considering legislation that would have prevented Christian schools from teaching the doctrines of Jesus Christ.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (If you have true Faith, prepare to defend your rites_Fri 14 Dec 2018.pdf)If you have true Faith, prepare to defend your rites_Fri 14 Dec 2018.pdf[ ]104 Kb
07 Dec2018

Spirit of Ajax won’t help Liberals

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Watching Malcolm Turnbull’s recent conduct, it was hard not to think of Enoch Powell’s famous conclusion to his biography of ­Joseph Chamberlain. “All political lives,” Powell wrote, “unless they are cut off in midstream at a happy juncture, end in failure, because that is the nature of politics and human affairs.”


Click here to read the article on The Australian's website or check back here next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Spirit of Ajax won’t help Liberals_Fri 7 Dec 2018.pdf)Spirit of Ajax won’t help Liberals_Fri 7 Dec 2018.pdf[ ]193 Kb
16 Nov2018

Frenchman with a forked tongue

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

“Patriotism is the exact opposite of nationalism,” France’s President Emmanuel Macron declared on Armistice Day, before adding, in a thinly disguised swipe at US President Donald Trump, “those who say ‘my interests first, regardless of others!’ rob a country of what gives it greatness: its moral value”.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a PDF. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Frenchman with a forked tongue_Fri 16 Nov 2018.pdf)Frenchman with a forked tongue_Fri 16 Nov 2018.pdf[ ]89 Kb
09 Nov2018

It’s a mess, but history shows that the US can rebound

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The American people spoke on Tuesday, but quite what they said will remain contentious for years to come. What is certain, however, is that American politics will be as tumultuous in its next phase as it was in the last.

Click here to read the article at the Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (It’s a mess, but history shows that the US can rebound_Fri 9 Nov 2018.pdf)It’s a mess, but history shows that the US can rebound_Fri 9 Nov 2018.pdf[ ]196 Kb
02 Nov2018

Leninist logic says China must be checked, and soon

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As Bill Shorten noted in his address to the Lowy Institute on Monday, China is likely to remain Australia’s largest trading partner “for the foreseeable future”. However, that doesn’t mean our interests are necessarily aligned.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Leninist logic says China must be checked, and soon_Fri 2 Nov 2018.pdf)Leninist logic says China must be checked, and soon_Fri 2 Nov 2018.pdf[ ]143 Kb
26 Oct2018

It’s time liberals put away childish things

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
It’s time liberals put away childish things


One of the beauties of democracy is that when things don’t work out, there is plenty of blame to spread around. What happened in Wentworth is no exception.


Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (It’s time liberals put away childish things_Fri 26 Oct 2018.pdf)It’s time liberals put away childish things_Fri 26 Oct 2018.pdf[ ]116 Kb
05 Oct2018

Greed is a deadly sin perhaps, but it helps drive our economy

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Greed is a deadly sin perhaps, but it helps drive our economy


Anyone who has followed the evidence being given in the financial services royal commission will not be surprised that Kenneth Hayne refers to “greed” more than 50 times in the interim report.

Click here to access a copy at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (Greed is a deadly sin perhaps, but it helps drive our economy_Fri 5 Oct 2018.pdf)Greed is a deadly sin perhaps, but it helps drive our economy_Fri 5 Oct 2018.pdf[ ]199 Kb
28 Sep2018

Thumbs down for Trump’s man? it’s spiteful theatre

Posted in Op eds

 

Today in The Australian

It is hard not to feel uneasy about the treatment being meted out to Brett Kavanaugh, Donald Trump’s nominee for the US ­Supreme Court.

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back next week to download a pdf.

 

 

Attachments:
Download this file (Thumbs down for Trumps man_its spiteful theatre_Fri 28 Sep 2018.pdf)Thumbs down for Trumps man_its spiteful theatre_Fri 28 Sep 2018.pdf[ ]525 Kb
21 Sep2018

Common sense has died along with truth and trust

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Perhaps the royal commission is the new form of the Last Judgment. As the wicked are exposed and the innocent — should there be any — exonerated, the commissioner, observing the proceedings from an elevated podium, impassably records their fate.

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back next week to download a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Common sense has died along with truth and trust_Fri 21 Sep 2018.pdf)Common sense has died along with truth and trust_Fri 21 Sep 2018.pdf[ ]136 Kb
14 Sep2018

Like Sweden, we’re ripe for the anti-immigration vote

Posted in Op eds


Today in The Australian

After repeated rampages in Melbourne by African gangs, Australians are hardly likely to find the election results in Sweden surprising. With a sharp rise in violent crime, including a wave of attacks using hand grenades, since the country received an influx of refugees, the anti-immigration Sweden Democrats emerged this week as the kingmakers in what is certain to be a hung parliament.

Click here to read the oped at the The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf of the article.

Attachments:
Download this file (Like Sweden, we’re ripe for the anti-immigration vote_Fri 14 Sep 2018.pdf)Like Sweden, we’re ripe for the anti-immigration vote_Fri 14 Sep 2018.pdf[ ]264 Kb
31 Aug2018

History of regicide can shed light on Turnbull’s downfall

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With Australians scratching their heads and wondering what that was all about, Shakespeare’s dictum, “uneasy lies the head that wears a crown” has received a solid workout in the public debate. 

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf of the article.
Attachments:
Download this file (History of regicide can shed light on Turnbull’s downfall_Fri 31 August 2018.pdf)History of regicide can shed light on Turnbull’s downfall_Fri 31 August 2018.pdf[ ]400 Kb
24 Aug2018

Our political class lacks moral courage

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Exactly 50 years ago, I spent my birthday protesting against the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. At a co-ordinated time, I believe it was Prague’s midnight, a minute of silence was observed in places that circled the globe.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's webpage (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf.

Attachments:
Download this file (Our political class lacks moral courage_Fri 24 Aug 2018.pdf)Our political class lacks moral courage_Fri 24 Aug 2018.pdf[ ]704 Kb
19 Aug2018

Road to a big Australia is in poor repair

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Like a python that has swallowed a pig, we are struggling to digest the population bulge the resources boom left behind. Unless immigration levels are reduced, the costs of that adjustment will only continue to mount, undermining public support for the migration program and jeopardising our ability to continue reaping the large gains migration brings.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's webpage (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (Road to a big Australia is in poor repair_Fri 17 August 2018.pdf)Road to a big Australia is in poor repair_Fri 17 August 2018.pdf[ ]571 Kb
10 Aug2018

Fuel-efficiency regulation impact draft is a fantasy

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Fuel-efficiency regulation impact draft is a fantasy

Just two good things can be said for the government’s draft regulation impact statement on “improving the efficiency of new light vehicles”.

Click here to read the oped at The Australian's webpage (login required) or check back here next week for a pdf.
 

Attachments:
Download this file (Fuel-efficiency regulation impact draft is a fantasy_Fri 10 Aug 2018.pdf)Fuel-efficiency regulation impact draft is a fantasy_Fri 10 Aug 2018.pdf[ ]181 Kb
08 Aug2018

NEG might be the answer but Turnbull needs to explain why

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian: "NEG might be the answer but Turnbull needs to explain why"

 Experts agree that a steady diet of fudge, cream pies and french fries is far healthier than consuming grains and vegetables. Or at least they do in 2173, according to Woody Allen’s movie Sleeper (1973).


Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.   

 

 

03 Aug2018

Labor’s broader narrative resonates at the ballot box

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

That genius of modern politics, Edmund Blackadder, could have had Labor in mind when he said “we in the Adder Party are going to fight this campaign on issues, not personalities … because our candidate doesn’t have a personality”.

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf.  

Attachments:
Download this file (Labor’s broader narrative resonates at the ballot box_Fri 3 Aug 2018.pdf)Labor’s broader narrative resonates at the ballot box_Fri 3 Aug 2018.pdf[ ]572 Kb
27 Jul2018

ACTU counts on Shorten to change the rules, AER on Turnbull

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Were there a prize for the slogan that best captures the spirit of the age, it would surely go to the ACTU’s “Change the Rules!”

Stingy bosses? “Change the Rules!” Mean-minded bankers? “Change the Rules!” Spiking electricity prices? “Change the Rules!”

Click here to read the article at The Australian's website (login required) or check back here next week to download a pdf. 

Attachments:
Download this file (ACTU counts on Shorten to change the rules, AER on Turnbull_Fri 27 Jul 2018.pdf)ACTU counts on Shorten to change the rules, AER on Turnbull_Fri 27 Jul 2018.pdf[ ]143 Kb
20 Jul2018

With NATO and Putin, Trump’s cleaning up after Obama

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With NATO and Putin, Trump’s cleaning up after Obama

In a widely acclaimed column in last weekend’s The New York Times, Bret Stephens argued that Donald Trump’s foreign policy aimed at one result and one result only: “The collapse of the liberal international order”, even at the cost of leaving America hated, feared and alone.

Attachments:
Download this file (With NATO and Putin, Trump’s cleaning up after Obama_Fri 20 Jul 2018.pdf)With NATO and Putin, Trump’s cleaning up after Obama_Fri 20 Jul 2018.pdf[ ]256 Kb
29 Jun2018

Asylum-seekers shake up European Union and America

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

As the EU’s heads of government gather to discuss policies towards asylum-seekers, migration is causing political turmoil throughout the developed world.

22 Jun2018

Tax policy: Coalition, Labor plans offer clear choice

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
 
With Pauline Hanson deciding to support the government’s proposed tax changes, Australians now face a stark choice between competing visions of our fiscal ­future.


Attachments:
Download this file (Asylum-seekers shake up European Union and America_Fri 29 Jun 2018.pdf)Asylum-seekers shake up European Union and America_Fri 29 Jun 2018.pdf[ ]140 Kb
15 Jun2018

Checks are needed to bring the ABC’s facts division to heel

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Well, that will teach senator ­Fraser Anning a lesson. And it should be a warning to us all. If you thought the ABC’s Fact Check was about checking facts, think again.
 
 
Attachments:
Download this file (Checks are needed to bring the ABC’s facts division to heel_Fri 15 Jun 2018.pdf)Checks are needed to bring the ABC’s facts division to heel_Fri 15 Jun 2018.pdf[ ]262 Kb
25 May2018

Freedom of religion plays out in every facet of life

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With the government having received the report of the religious freedom review, both Labor and the Coalition have promised at least to retain the protections that are now in place.




Attachments:
Download this file (Checks are needed to bring the ABC’s facts division to heel_Fri 15 Jun 2018.pdf)Checks are needed to bring the ABC’s facts division to heel_Fri 15 Jun 2018.pdf[ ]262 Kb
18 May2018

Royal fairytales recount our nation’s blessings

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
With planeloads of tourists descending on London for the royal wedding, and an expected television audience in the hundreds of millions, Britain’s royalty remains the greatest show on earth.


Attachments:
Download this file (Royal fairytales recount our nation’s blessings_Fri 18 May 2018.pdf)Royal fairytales recount our nation’s blessings_Fri 18 May 2018.pdf[ ]298 Kb
11 May2018

Even the innocent are lost to this virtual lynch mob

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
Even the innocent are lost to this virtual lynch mob

Eric Schneiderman, the attorney-general of New York who resigned on Monday just hours after being accused of sexual misconduct, apparently suffers from Portnoy’s Complaint, which Philip Roth defined, on the first page of his novel by that name, as “a disorder in which strongly felt ­altruistic impulses are perpetually warring with extreme sexual longings, often of a perverse ­nature”.


Attachments:
Download this file (Even the innocent are lost to this virtual lynch mob_Fri 11 May 2018.pdf)Even the innocent are lost to this virtual lynch mob_Fri 11 May 2018.pdf[ ]189 Kb
05 May2018

Karl Marx: flawed visionary sowed seeds of clarity and chaos

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Karl Marx, who was born on May 5, 1818, has not had much luck with centenaries.
When his first centenary was celebrated in 1918, the international socialist movement he had fought so tirelessly to create had been torn apart by World War I, with the revolutionary turmoil in Russia inducing further convulsions.


Attachments:
Download this file (Karl Marx_flawed visionary sowed seeds of clarity and chaos_Sat 5 May 2018.pdf)Karl Marx_flawed visionary sowed seeds of clarity and chaos_Sat 5 May 2018.pdf[ ]301 Kb
27 Apr2018

Financial system will be rebooted only to fail again

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


If there is a lesson to be drawn from the trail of horrors uncovered by the banking and financial ser­vices royal commission, it is the folly of forcing ever greater financial risk on to people who lack the skills to manage it.


20 Apr2018

We love a big Australia — but not so fast

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

It is true that Melbourne, with just half London’s population, covers six times London’s area, as Shaping a Nation, the research paper on migration released earlier this week by the Treasury and the Department of Home Affairs, claims. But it hardly follows that Melbourne should, or sensibly could, aim to achieve London’s population density.


Attachments:
Download this file (We love a big Australia — but not so fast_Fri 20 Apr 2018.pdf)We love a big Australia — but not so fast_Fri 20 Apr 2018.pdf[ ]199 Kb
13 Apr2018

Kevin Rudd’s 2020 summit symphony fell flat

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

Listening, on the eve of its 10th anniversary, to recordings of the Rudd government’s 2020 Summit, it was hard not to be reminded of Rossini’s quip about Wagner. “One cannot judge Wagner’s ­Lohengrin from a first hearing,” said the maestro, “and I certainly do not intend to hear it a second time.”

Attachments:
Download this file (Kevin Rudd’s 2020 summit symphony fell flat_Fri 13 Apr 2018.pdf)Kevin Rudd’s 2020 summit symphony fell flat_Fri 13 Apr 2018.pdf[ ]214 Kb
06 Apr2018

Trump’s tariffs, China’s attitude spell trouble for world trade

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

For all his bellicose rhetoric, ­Donald Trump’s trade policy is not a major departure from the traditional American stance. But with China mounting an aggressive response, the world trading system is under greater threat than it has been for decades.


Attachments:
Download this file (Trump’s tariffs, China’s attitude spell trouble for world trade_Fri 6 Apr 2018.p)Trump’s tariffs, China’s attitude spell trouble for world trade_Fri 6 Apr 2018.p[ ]249 Kb
23 Mar2018

Labor could make all super earnings taxable but that would require political honesty

Posted in Op eds


Today in The Australian

After a week of taxation claim and counterclaim, 10 propositions are essentially uncontested.

First, Labor’s elimination of the full reimbursement of imputation credits will replace a system where dividends received by Australian residents are taxed at their personal income tax rates by one in which all dividends are taxed at no less than 30 per cent, even if that rate is well above the rate which would apply to any other taxable income that taxpayer might receive.


Attachments:
Download this file (Labor could make all super earnings taxable but that would require political hon)Labor could make all super earnings taxable but that would require political hon[ ]143 Kb
16 Mar2018

Shorten’s squeeze on nest eggs benefits nobody

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

When imputation credits were made fully reimbursable, Labor wasn’t merely supportive — it was positively gushing.

Calling attention to the benefits full reimbursement would provide to a “low-income person who earns a little investment income”, Peter Cook, Labor’s then deputy leader in the Senate, claimed paternity for the policy, which Labor had taken to the previous election.

Attachments:
Download this file (Shorten’s squeeze on nest eggs benefits nobody_Fri 16 Mar 2018.pdf)Shorten’s squeeze on nest eggs benefits nobody_Fri 16 Mar 2018.pdf[ ]242 Kb
02 Mar2018

CFMEU thugs emboldened by Bill Shorten’s embrace

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian


Bill Shorten has a plan for dealing with union thuggery: he will make it legal. Addressing members of the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union last October at Queensland’s Oaky North coalmine, where CFMEU protesters allegedly threatened to rape the children of non-striking workers, the Opposition Leader promised to tear up Australia’s industrial relations law.

Attachments:
Download this file (Shorten’s squeeze on nest eggs benefits nobody_Fri 16 Mar 2018.pdf)Shorten’s squeeze on nest eggs benefits nobody_Fri 16 Mar 2018.pdf[ ]242 Kb
16 Feb2018

The Productivity Commission gets it wrong on Economics 101

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

The god of long reports makes sure no one reads them. Having released its 600-page draft report on competition in the Australian financial system, the Productivity Commission would do well to keep the candles at that god’s shrine burning

Attachments:
Download this file (The Productivity Commission gets it wrong on Economics 101_Fri 16 Feb 2018.pdf)The Productivity Commission gets it wrong on Economics 101_Fri 16 Feb 2018.pdf[ ]182 Kb
02 Feb2018

Tax system and regulation are stifling productivity growth

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian

With Australians settling back into work after the summer break, last week’s release of the latest estimates of productivity growth suggests we are still struggling to increase the efficiency with which we use the nation’s resources.

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