Foreign fighters for Israel – beyond the reach of Australian law?
Greg Barns

Foreign fighters for Israel – beyond the reach of Australian law?

While the government vows to block the return of Australian women and children from Syria, hundreds of Australians who have served with the Israeli Defence Force face little scrutiny on their return – despite serious allegations of war crimes in Gaza.

Recent articles in Politics

President Trump: Give back the money and stop grabbing more
Jeffrey D. Sachs

President Trump: Give back the money and stop grabbing more

The White House and Congress can and should provide relief to American families who bore the costs of illegal tariffs. The administration has the responsibility to design such relief.

ASIO fails to gag the ABC
Paddy Gourley

Gourley on Government

ASIO fails to gag the ABC

ASIO’s pre-emptive attack on a Four Corners investigation into the Bondi killings was vague, thinly evidenced and ultimately counter-productive.

The Liberal Party collapse and the myth of restoration
Sasha Klumov Attard

The Liberal Party collapse and the myth of restoration

The Liberals’ talk of “renewal” looks less like reform than ritual – invoking origins to avoid confronting decline. The real lesson is not about personalities, but how power loses legitimacy when it drifts from reality.

How consultocracy became a national security blind spot
Tom Sinkovits

How consultocracy became a national security blind spot

Espionage today is less about weapons than insider access to economic policy. Australia’s muted response to the PwC scandal reveals a serious failure to treat economic intelligence as a core national security asset.

Iran on the brink
Alison Broinowski

Iran on the brink

After decades of US-backed regime-change wars across the Middle East, Iran now stands alone. A new conflict would deepen regional instability and test Australia’s willingness to say no.

Remembering Robert Macklin – truth, courage and clarity
Jessica Perini

Remembering Robert Macklin – truth, courage and clarity

Pearls and Irritations contributor Robert Macklin has died aged 84. His brilliant writing combined political critique, historical insight and moral urgency, leaving a lasting mark on Australian public debate.

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.

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.



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