Should Australia copy Canada and New Zealand on immigration policy?
Abul Rizvi

Should Australia copy Canada and New Zealand on immigration policy?

Canada and New Zealand cut migration sharply and saw modest rent falls – but only alongside weaker labour markets and stronger housing supply. The lesson for Australia is not imitation, but stability.

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Terrorism – a blow back from western violence in Muslim countries
John Menadue

Terrorism – a blow back from western violence in Muslim countries

Terrorism dominates political debate and media coverage in Australia despite causing relatively few deaths. The deeper causes – western military violence, state power, and selective moral language – are rarely examined.

How a nuclear test that never happened became news
Fred Zhang

How a nuclear test that never happened became news

A US allegation that China conducted a secret nuclear test was widely reported despite clear evidence to the contrary, highlighting how security claims are too often treated as facts before they are proven.

How Australia should fix capital gains tax
Bob McMullan

How Australia should fix capital gains tax

The 50 per cent capital gains tax discount departs from the original purpose of taxing real gains, entrenches inequality and unfairly advantages wealth over work.

Water bankruptcy is no longer a future threat
Julian Cribb

Water bankruptcy is no longer a future threat

Across large parts of the world, water demand now permanently exceeds supply. This is not a temporary crisis but a condition of irreversible scarcity driven by overuse, climate change and population pressure.

How John Howard reshaped Australia – and not for the better
Crispin Hull

How John Howard reshaped Australia – and not for the better

Many of Australia’s most pressing social and economic problems can be traced to policy choices made during the Howard years, from housing and inequality to wages, tax and public services.

Why security-first critical mineral policy risks slowing the energy transition
Marina Yue Zhang

Why security-first critical mineral policy risks slowing the energy transition

Western efforts to secure critical mineral supply chains from China are increasingly driven by security logic. That approach risks raising costs, slowing decarbonisation and undermining the global energy transition.

Values, ethics, fear – Australian women and children in the Al Roj Camp
George Browning

Values, ethics, fear – Australian women and children in the Al Roj Camp

Politicians frequently appeal to Judaeo–Christian values, yet retreat from them when fear dominates debate. The test is whether those values guide policy when it is hardest to apply them.

Capital gains tax should increase
Michael Keating

Capital gains tax should increase

Reducing the capital gains tax discount would make the tax system fairer, raise much-needed revenue and have little effect on housing supply, given how constrained that supply already is.

Albanese’s real opponent is not Angus Taylor
Jack Waterford

Albanese’s real opponent is not Angus Taylor

Coalition turmoil has handed Anthony Albanese political space few prime ministers enjoy. Whether he uses it to govern with purpose – or continues to drift – is now the central question.

Australia’s moral failure over women and children in Syria
Chas Keys

Australia’s moral failure over women and children in Syria

Australian citizens and their children remain stranded in Syrian camps as political fear eclipses care, responsibility and legal obligation – with damaging consequences for public decency.

Malcolm Fraser and Fraser Island
Bruce Thom

Malcolm Fraser and Fraser Island

One year after the 1975 Dismissal, Malcolm Fraser overruled state pressure and commercial interests to halt sand mining on K’Gari – a decision that reshaped Australia’s environmental history.

Death tolls, settlements and the closing space for a two-state future
Noel Turnbull

Death tolls, settlements and the closing space for a two-state future

New research confirms that far more Palestinians have been killed in Gaza than first acknowledged, while settlement expansion and political rhetoric point to deeper structural realities.



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