Pearlcast episode

Pearlcasts

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

Go to Pearlcasts
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.



The Coalition decision that locks the Liberals out of the cities
Crispin Hull

The Coalition decision that locks the Liberals out of the cities

By returning to Coalition with a declining National Party, the Liberals have doubled down on policies and demographics that alienate urban voters and younger Australians.

Valéria Chomsky responds to Epstein controversy
Aaron Maté

Valéria Chomsky responds to Epstein controversy

Noam’s overly trusting nature, in this specific case, led to severe poor judgment on both our parts... we express our unrestricted solidarity with the victims.

Capital gains tax reform could reshape Australia’s housing market
Jago Dodson,  Liam Davies

Capital gains tax reform could reshape Australia’s housing market

As debate over capital gains tax returns to parliament, longstanding concessions are again under scrutiny for their role in driving housing speculation, inequality and intergenerational imbalance.

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.

Why Australia should consider boycotting the World Cup
John Frew

Why Australia should consider boycotting the World Cup

International sport is never separate from power. When nations participate in global tournaments, they confer legitimacy on the political and institutional arrangements that make those events possible.

Best of 2025 - Message from the editor
Catriona Jackson

Best of 2025 - Message from the editor

Off the back of last week's huge protests for Palestine in Australia, the global movement to end the genocide continues to grow.

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.

Why higher taxes make more sense than higher interest rates
Michael Keating

Why higher taxes make more sense than higher interest rates

Rather than cutting public spending to restore the budget balance and reduce inflationary pressures, it would be better to increase taxation.



Latest on Palestine and Israel

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.

The Zionist lobby, antisemitism and Herzog
John Menadue

The Zionist lobby, antisemitism and Herzog

Australia’s political and media response to Gaza, including the invitation to Israel’s president, reflects the influence of pro-Israel lobbying and the shrinking space for lawful criticism.

What Australia’s past might teach Israel about its future
Dennis Altman

What Australia’s past might teach Israel about its future

President Herzog’s visit might be useful if he could be persuaded to ponder the lessons Australia might offer.

Isaac Herzog is accused of inciting genocide in Gaza. He shouldn’t be welcomed to Australia
Chris Sidoti

Isaac Herzog is accused of inciting genocide in Gaza. He shouldn’t be welcomed to Australia

Writing in the Guardian on Thursday UN Commissioner Chris Sidoti laid out the reasons Isaac Herzog should not be welcome in Australia, and urged the Prime Minister to correct his terrible mistake in inviting him.


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

Support our independent media with your donation

Pearls and Irritations leads the way in raising and analysing vital issues often neglected in mainstream media. Your contribution supports our independence and quality commentary on matters importance to Australia and our region.

Donate

More from Pearls and Irritations


Latest letters to the editor

Cheers for Chandran Nair

Wendy Hoy — Brisbane, Queensland

Chandran Nair writes of the hegemony of western bloc agendas in the priorities and presentations at the most recent Davos meeting of the World Economic Forum; he also cites the potential of alliances like the BRICS coalition to more effectively represent the needs and priorities of the rest of the world’s population. Health systems are in dire need of such approach, with new models targeting individual and collective good, developed and operated free of vested interests such as Pharma and Vaccine developers, and independent of control by external bodies like the WHO, in which they have little representation or...
Herzog visit a monstrous misjudgement of policy

Richard Llewellyn — Colo Vale

When you were first elected PM, Mr Albanese, you declared that 'people have always underestimated me'. Quite wrong: we overestimated you, thinking that you would step up to the crease and go into bat to correct the entrenched poisoning of a decent society that has taken place over years of LNP government. You have done no such thing; you have passed on to the keeper every hardball launched by 'interest groups' from mining, gambling, environmental, the military/industrial complex, the USA, and now, the genocidal extremist Zionist Israeli /IDF /Settler triumvirate that is trampling every aspect of human decency...
A National Day to unite, not divide

Mary Edwards — KILSYTH

What or who in our history would have Australians up on their feet cheering. I offer Matthew Flinders and his circumnavigation of Australia as that event and that man. He was the first man to circumnavigate Australia, with a special, separate circumnavigation of Tasmania, together with his colleague George Bass, thrown in for good measure. He was the first to refer to the continent, previously known as Terra Australis, as Australia, and to lobby vigorously with the British Admiralty for its formal adoption as the name of this continent. Importantly he had two indigenous men, Bungaree and Nanbaree,...
Tactical voting by Labor voters

Gilbert Elliott — Canterbury NSW

John Small writes that he voted Teal 1, Albo 2, not because I wanted the Teal candidate to be elected but because I support stronger environmental and conservation policies than those of the government. Surely that objective would be best served by voting Green? Maybe that's what Mr Small did, and voted for Hannah Thomas, unless he was of the view that David Bradbury counted as a teal. The only other candidates were Liberal, One Nation and Trumpet of Patriots.



Latest from Al Jazeera

Macron warns US trade ‘threats, intimidation’ towards EU not over
French president has urged the bloc to learn lessons from 'the Greenland moment' and undertake urgent reforms.
A coup that never was: Why UK’s Starmer faced major leadership challenge
Senior colleague tried to topple British PM, and top aides resign as Epstein files have ripple effects far beyond US.
Heavy gunfire heard near prison in Guinea’s capital, Conakry
Security forces deployed after gunfire heard near central prison.
Anticorruption efforts declining in democracies around the world: Watchdog
Transparency International says the average global score in its report is at its lowest level in more than a decade.
Humanitarian crisis deepens as South Sudan violence surges
Humanitarian operations have been impeded by attacks, looting and restrictions on movement.
US strikes civil nuclear agreement with Armenia, Russia’s former close ally
Visiting US Vice President JD Vance pledges as much as $9bn in potential investment in Armenia.