Muslim voters: Don’t let rage cloud strategy
Zia Ahmad

Muslim voters: Don’t let rage cloud strategy

politics

During our extended family gathering for dinner on Eid Day, Monday 31 March, hosted by my niece, Shakeeba Siddiqui, and her husband, Khalique Sajjad, in Edmondson Park, there was a robust discussion about the upcoming federal election with invited guests Nathan Hagarty MP, state member for Leppington and Charishma Kaliyanda MP, state member for Liverpool.

Making science great again – or not
Alistair Woodward and Stephen Leeder

Making science great again – or not

In the US, the freshly installed administration of President Donald Trump is attempting to drastically reshape science. Here we focus on interventions that are relevant to epidemiology and public health.

AUKUS on track? No, Australia needs Plan B now
Peter Briggs

AUKUS on track? No, Australia needs Plan B now

Last Monday’s AUKUS Security forum at the National Press Club heard arguments of those seeking to support the status quo. It was argued that criticism undermines AUKUS and risks turning the possibility that the US will not be able to spare Virginia class SSNs for sale to Australia from an ‘if’ to certainty.


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

An arresting American Gaza challenge
Richard Cullen

An arresting American Gaza challenge

Recent US commentary backing President Trump’s extraordinary American Gaza takeover project has regularly stressed how critics should come up with a better plan.

The stock market: an instantaneous referendum
Michael Edesess

The stock market: an instantaneous referendum

Large movements in the stock market can cause unexpected events beyond it to happen very quickly.

‘Selling a pup’: Is this election a populist contest after Trump?
Stephen Alomes

‘Selling a pup’: Is this election a populist contest after Trump?

In 2025, after nearly 50 years of global neoliberalism since Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, the rich have got richer and inequalities have grown.

Nuclear power: Fukushima’s lessons for Australia
Tessa Morris-Suzuki

Nuclear power: Fukushima’s lessons for Australia

In November 2011, eight months after the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear disaster, I travelled with Japanese colleagues to Iitate, a village some 50 kilometres from the stricken power plant.

Nuclear power is not safe, it’s more dangerous than ever
Laurence McCook

Nuclear power is not safe, it’s more dangerous than ever

Media and campaign coverage of the rekindled pitch for Australia to embrace nuclear power has focused on the poor economics, the protracted timelines of implementation, and dubious real-world benefits as a climate strategy.

Can our human species be rescued?
Bob Douglas

Can our human species be rescued?

Our own human species is in grave danger of becoming extinct in the not-too-distant future, and there is no systemic global effort underway to minimise this threat. A series of “existential threats” have been highlighted by many scientists.

Averting Iranian nuclear crisis calls for return to diplomacy
Wen Ying

Averting Iranian nuclear crisis calls for return to diplomacy

The Iranian nuclear crisis has reached a critical point. The JCPOA, or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, an agreement reached in 2015 to keep Iran’s nuclear program peaceful, will expire in October.

If I were the minister for health...
Mary Chiarella

If I were the minister for health...

When preparing for this, I did look back at what I had written in 2022 on the same topic and I’m sad to report, dear reader, that our current minister hasn’t implemented many of my innovative suggestions from last time, apart from some minor parts of my suggestions about workforce planning.

Latest on Palestine and Israel

United Nations General Assembly votes to demand Israel end Palestinian occupation, Australia abstains
Brad Ryan

United Nations General Assembly votes to demand Israel end Palestinian occupation, Australia abstains

The United Nations General Assembly has overwhelmingly voted in favour of a Palestinian resolution demanding Israel end its unlawful presence in Gaza and the occupied West Bank within a year.

The Melbourne synagogue fire: Antisemitism, political meddling and exceptional victimhood
Binoy Kampmark

The Melbourne synagogue fire: Antisemitism, political meddling and exceptional victimhood

In his ongoing campaign to pad and shield criticism of Israel in the conduct of its war of gross bloodletting in Gaza, Israels Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rarely misses a beat to attack critics. It has become clear that even mere disagreement from long standing allies suggests wobbliness and tilting in the direction of antisemitism.

Trump's plan for Gaza heralds an age of naked fascism
Sawsan Madina

Trump's plan for Gaza heralds an age of naked fascism

I watched Trump's joint press conference with Netanyahu, in utter disbelief. Not that the idea, or indeed the practice, of ethnic cleansing of Palestine is new. But at that press conference the mask has fallen. Recently, fascism has been on the march everywhere, but that press conference seemed to herald an age of naked fascism.

Was Israel complicit in the 7 October 2023 massacre?
John Stace

Was Israel complicit in the 7 October 2023 massacre?

The dreadful atrocities by Hamas on 7 October 2023 horrified the world and triggered the destruction of Gaza, the deaths of more than 50,000 Gazan men, women and children and the wounding of tens of thousands more.

South Africa asks ICJ to order halt to Rafah massacre as 110,000 Gazans flee advancing Israeli troops
Pearls and Irritations

South Africa asks ICJ to order halt to Rafah massacre as 110,000 Gazans flee advancing Israeli troops

The move comes as Australia, in a significant break from Israeli and US policy, voted yes in the UN General Assembly to upgrading Palestines UN membership status. The resolution passed with 143 countries voting in favour, nine voting against, and 25 abstentions.

UN vote: Newspaper raises irrelevant questions about an ICJ decision
Paul Heywood-Smith

UN vote: Newspaper raises irrelevant questions about an ICJ decision

The exclusive 'US urges Australia over UNs Israel vote, published in Tuesdays The Australian by Ben Packham, demands a response.

ICC applies for arrest warrants against Netanyahu, Sinwar
The Cradle News Desk

ICC applies for arrest warrants against Netanyahu, Sinwar

The ICC chief prosecutor accused Israeli and Hamas leaders of war crimes while repeating false claims against Hamas and downplaying Israeli violence against Palestinians, writes The Cradle news desk.

Resilience amongst ruin: 12 months of genocide and resistance in Gaza
Ramia Abdo-Sultan

Resilience amongst ruin: 12 months of genocide and resistance in Gaza

Just weeks into Israels current genocide in Gaza, I spoke with my cousin as she watched the violence unfold from her home in Khan Yunis. She declared, We are used to this; it is temporary and will pass.


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.

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Latest on China

US LNG crippled as Australia seizes US$1.5b trade overnight
WIN News analysis

US LNG crippled as Australia seizes US$1.5b trade overnight

china economy politics usa

What happens when the world's second-largest economy suddenly pulls the plug on billions of dollars in US energy exports without warning, without negotiation and without a single public signal? You get a global energy market in shock and Washington scrambling for answers.

How Xi woos world business leaders as Trump intensifies trade war
Zichen Wang

How Xi woos world business leaders as Trump intensifies trade war

On the morning of Friday, 28 March, Xi Jinping met representatives of the international business community at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

In every China-US war game scenario I've seen, America has lost
Chris Barrie

In every China-US war game scenario I've seen, America has lost

Global security alliances are in turmoil, and Australia needs to critically rethink its defence and foreign affairs policies.


More from Pearls and Irritations


Latest letters to the editor

Peter Henning gets Gaza & Labor right

Tony Kevin — Canberra

Thank you Peter Henning. We needed such a detailed timeline of how the Labor elite is trying to destroy Senator Fatima Paymans determined drive to recall Labor to its principles on Gaza. This has been a sad and disillusioning week. Labour is doing itself immense damage and losing its voter base in seats with large immigrant-based populations. The power over the Labor Party of the alliance of Australian Zionism and the old white political power elites has been challenged by Paymans idealism and courage. The result will be very damaging to Labor at the next election: it will face...
What the nurses said

Hans Rijsdijk — Albion Park Rail

This article by Tony Kevin brings again into focus the unsavoury practices of the Zionist movement. However, I would like to hear from the two nurses at the centre of this affair. Maybe I've missed it, but I have seen no comments whatsoever from the two nurses themselves. Have they been silenced? Are they silent by choice? Why did they agree to the interview? What do they think now about their comments? Surely, their comments would be of great public interest?
A witty take on US-China Summit

WANG XIANGWEI — Hong Kong

Heard a witty take on the US-China summit concluded in San Francisco, leveraging a popular Chinese idiom: both sides admitted that they may not pee in the same pot but vowed to ensure they will not pee on each other. Thanks for reading Wang Xiangwei's Thought of the Day on China
Chinese naval codes

Geoff Taylor — Perth

Peter Cronau raises the key question: Why wouldnt Defence have been monitoring transmissions from the ships from when they were first off Queensland? Of course, the warning to aircraft would have been in plain language. But if you think of the cracking of the German Enigma code and of the Nazi high command code during WWII, how good is Defence at reading encrypted codes from other navies? After all, right now Russia, Iran and China are conducting joint naval exercises in the northwest Indian Ocean (yes, thats the one that touches Australia for thousands of kilometres), according to Al...



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