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As we review 2025, the temptation is to look for neat summaries and settled conclusions.

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Grace Tame, free speech and the return of political punishment
Greg Barns

Grace Tame, free speech and the return of political punishment

Calls to strip Grace Tame of her Australian of the Year award over her protest speech highlight a troubling slide towards political punishment and selective free speech.

An incomparable job, an honoured place as Founder
David Armstrong

An incomparable job, an honoured place as Founder

John Menadue, and the late Susie Menadue, did an incomparable job in conceiving, establishing, growing and nurturing Pearls and Irritations as a brave and independent alternative to the conformity of Australia’s legacy media.

Angus Taylor looks like a leader on paper – but the job is bigger than that
Michelle Grattan

Angus Taylor looks like a leader on paper – but the job is bigger than that

Angus Taylor has all the on-paper qualifications to be opposition leader. But what's needed now is a miracle worker to lift the struggling Liberal Party from its existential crisis.



Iran’s comprehensive peace proposal to the United States
Jeffrey D. Sachs,  Sybil Fares

Iran’s comprehensive peace proposal to the United States

A regional peace settlement grounded in Palestinian statehood, international law and mutual security guarantees offers a real alternative to perpetual conflict.

Counting protesters down – how the Adelaide protest against Herzog was reported
Paul Heywood-Smith

Counting protesters down – how the Adelaide protest against Herzog was reported

The Adelaide protest against the visit of Israel’s president drew thousands and passed peacefully. Yet its treatment in the media raises familiar questions about whose voices are amplified, whose are minimised, and how protest is framed for public consumption.

The Epstein case: power, institutions and the question for Australia
Janine Hendry

The Epstein case: power, institutions and the question for Australia

The Jeffrey Epstein case is often treated as an exceptional crime enabled by extraordinary wealth. In reality, it reveals how institutions respond when allegations threaten powerful people – and why Australia should not assume it would act differently.

Saving Meanjin is a victory – sustaining it is the real test
Angela Glindemann

Saving Meanjin is a victory – sustaining it is the real test

Meanjin’s return to Brisbane under QUT stewardship has been widely welcomed, but it also exposes deeper tensions about arts funding, cultural value and what sustainability really means for literary journals.

Is Hanson planning to copy Trump on mass deportation?
Abul Rizvi

Is Hanson planning to copy Trump on mass deportation?

One Nation’s promise to deport 75,000 undocumented migrants echoes Donald Trump’s approach, but the logistics, costs and risks of such a policy are far greater than the rhetoric suggests.

Message from the Editor-in-Chief
John Menadue

Message from the Editor-in-Chief

Pearls and Irritations is entering a new phase, with Editor-in-Chief John Menadue stepping back from day-to-day leadership and new appointments strengthening our future.

Do we really need a Minister for Social Cohesion?
Paddy Gourley

Gourley on Government

Do we really need a Minister for Social Cohesion?

Calls for a new Minister for Social Cohesion reflect anxiety about Australia’s civic health, but risk mistaking rhetorical panic for structural failure – and policy symbolism for effective governance.

From protest laws to writers’ festivals – Chris Minns overreaches
Tony Smith

From protest laws to writers’ festivals – Chris Minns overreaches

From protest laws to public commentary on writers and festivals, the NSW premier’s interventions reveal a troubling impatience with dissent and democratic restraint.



Latest on Palestine and Israel

Iran’s comprehensive peace proposal to the United States
Jeffrey D. Sachs,  Sybil Fares

Iran’s comprehensive peace proposal to the United States

A regional peace settlement grounded in Palestinian statehood, international law and mutual security guarantees offers a real alternative to perpetual conflict.

The Herzog visit and the Israelisation of antisemitism
Peter Hooton

The Herzog visit and the Israelisation of antisemitism

Inviting Israel’s president to Australia in the wake of the Bondi attack has blurred the line between antisemitism and legitimate criticism of Israel, weakening rather than strengthening social cohesion.

Cowardice dressed up as authority on Sydney’s streets
Stuart Rees

Cowardice dressed up as authority on Sydney’s streets

The violence surrounding protests against the visit of Israel’s president was not an accident of crowd control. It reflects a deeper political failure – where authority suppresses dissent rather than confronting uncomfortable truths about Gaza, protest rights and democratic responsibility.

When peaceful protest is allowed to work, democracy works
Catriona Jackson

When peaceful protest is allowed to work, democracy works

Melbourne’s mass protest against the visit of Israel President Isaac Herzog showed how large, diverse crowds can assemble peacefully when police exercise restraint and common sense. Sydney’s response points to a deeper failure of judgment about protest, power and democracy.

Salt, light and the visit of Isaac Herzog
Frank Brennan

Salt, light and the visit of Isaac Herzog

As controversy surrounds the visit of Israel’s president, Frank Brennan reflects on how Australians might respond with moral seriousness, legal clarity and a commitment to justice for all.

Herzog greeted by mass protest despite limits on marching
Alison Broinowski

Herzog greeted by mass protest despite limits on marching

Denied permission to march, thousands still gathered in central Sydney to protest the visit of Israel’s president. The demonstration revealed both the scale of public anger and the state’s increasingly fraught response to dissent.

Inviting a foreign president to Bondi’s commemoration divides rather than unites
Raghid Nahhas

Inviting a foreign president to Bondi’s commemoration divides rather than unites

Inviting a foreign head of state to commemorate an Australian tragedy blurs citizenship, religion and geopolitics – and risks undermining social cohesion at a moment that demands unity.

Antisemitism laws, double standards and Australia’s unfinished reckoning
George Browning

Antisemitism laws, double standards and Australia’s unfinished reckoning

Proposals to legislate new antisemitism definitions raise hard questions about identity, equality before the law, and why Australia continues to avoid confronting its most entrenched forms of racism.


John Menadue's book on Israel's war against Gaza

Israel's war against Gaza

Media coverage of the war in Gaza since October 2023 has spread a series of lies propagated by Israel and the United States. This publication presents information, analysis, clarification, views and perspectives largely unavailable in mainstream media in Australia and elsewhere.

Download the PDF

Latest on China

Confucianism, not coercion – China’s long export of a governance philosophy
John Hopkins

Confucianism, not coercion – China’s long export of a governance philosophy

Claims that China is exporting authoritarianism rest on a shallow reading of both Chinese political tradition and how governance ideas actually travel. A longer historical view points instead to Confucianism – a philosophy that has shaped governance across East Asia for centuries.

Australia unlikely to follow US downgrade on China threat
Marcus Reubenstein

Australia unlikely to follow US downgrade on China threat

The US National Defense Strategy signals a softer, more pragmatic approach to China. Australia’s silence on the shift exposes how detached its defence posture has become from both reality and its own national interests.

The China AI panic misses what history keeps teaching us
Fred Zhang

The China AI panic misses what history keeps teaching us

Warnings that China must be cut off from advanced AI chips echo a familiar pattern. History suggests technology bans rarely slow China down – and often do the opposite.


John Menadue

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More from Pearls and Irritations


Latest letters to the editor

Don't mention the root causes

Hal Duell — Alice Springs

The deadly explosion from Gaza of Palestinians was the predictable blowing of a pressure cooker. For years the roughly two million Palestinians in Gaza had been living under a full air, land and sea blockade imposed by Israel. Israel also had its hand on the taps controlling water, fuel, medicine, food and movement. Occasionally they would dial a tap down a bit. They called it cutting the grass. To preface the litany of Israeli atrocities in Gaza with a reference to the events of October 7 as the monstrous Hamas-led attack is an attempt to seize and shade the narrative....
Increase taxes

John tons — adelaide

In 2026 we will be faced with both state and federal elections. Here in SA the theme among some of the parties is that they will cut taxation; a theme that will no doubt frame much of the narrative for most opposition parties. It is time that we called this out. The real debate should centre on who pays the taxes and what do we use those tax dollars for. The aim should be to shift the tax burden on those most able to pay - the top 10 per cent of society be they individuals or corporations...
AUKUS vs India: a strategy and cost critique

Ravin Nair — Canberra, ACT

John Queripel's critique of AUKUS offers a powerful fiscal warning, but his comparison to India’s Project 75(I) deal rests on a false equivalence. Comparing a $10 billion conventional fleet to a $368 billion nuclear one ignores the immutable geographic realities Australia faces. India’s German-designed diesel-electric boats are excellent littoral assets for regional two-front threats. However, they lack the endurance required for Australia’s vast maritime approaches. As ASPI notes, nuclear propulsion (SSN) provides the persistent, high-speed range that conventional boats – limited by battery and fuel – cannot match. For Australia, a conventional fleet would be exhausted before even...
Menadue understands power of lobbyists

Simon Tatz — Melbourne

John Menadue understands better than most the power of foreign lobbyists on Australian governments. From the alleged cover up by Prime Minister Whitlam of the Balibo 5, to Australian government's refusal to recognise the Armenian genocide, or the way they seemingly won't prevent a powerful trading ally from spying on activists in Australia, this country has long been captive to foreign pressures. Why Israel is seen as different to Indonesia, Turkey, China, India or US, or held to a different standard, isn't surprising in the current environment.



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Syrian army takes control of al-Tanf military base as US troops pull out
Syria's defence ministry says its forces have taken control of the strategic base amid coordination with the US.
Ex-Pakistan PM Imran Khan left with 15% vision in right eye, court told
Pakistan Supreme Court orders medical review after report reveals severe vision loss of jailed former premier.
Several assassination attempts targeted Syria’s al-Sharaa, ministers: UN
UN report reveals five foiled ISIL assassination plots against Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and top ministers.
At least 21 dead in ferry sinking in northern Sudan’s River Nile State
At least six people are rescued, while efforts are ongoing to locate about a dozen people still missing, officials say.
Bangladeshis turn out for historic election after Hasina’s downfall
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Bangladesh election live results 2026: By the numbers
Nearly 127 million eligible voters are electing the next prime minister and parliament for a five-year term.