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.

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Authoritarianism is undermining climate action – and time is running out
David Spratt

Authoritarianism is undermining climate action – and time is running out

The global rise of authoritarianism is weakening climate governance just as warming accelerates and tipping points draw near. This failure now poses a direct threat to our future.

Why building again on the Hawkesbury floodplain risks disaster
Chas Keys

Why building again on the Hawkesbury floodplain risks disaster

The NSW government’s decision to revive development on the Hawkesbury floodplain ignores long-established flood risks, evacuation limits and the growing impact of climate change.

Why sanctions have entrenched conflict with North Korea, not resolved it
Eugene Doyle

Why sanctions have entrenched conflict with North Korea, not resolved it

Sanctions on North Korea have neither halted its nuclear program nor produced stability, while imposing heavy costs on civilians and regional security.

Climate sceptics dominate the noise, not the numbers
Noel Turnbull

Climate sceptics dominate the noise, not the numbers

Despite political denial and media distortion, majorities in Australia and the United States accept climate change is real, human-caused and demands action.

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.

Fairness, not just growth, is the key to productivity
Rev. Charissa Suli

Fairness, not just growth, is the key to productivity

As the federal government sharpens its focus on productivity, the question is not whether growth matters, but who it is for, and at what cost to justice, dignity and social cohesion.

From Les Misérables to Trump – what happens when moral certainty hardens
Adrian Rosenfeldt

From Les Misérables to Trump – what happens when moral certainty hardens

Polarisation is often described as ideological. But its deeper cause may be moral – a loss of the capacity to recognise goodness in those who disagree with us, and the consequences that follow.

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.

Environment: Small-bodied and short-lived, tiny freshwater fish play big roles in ecosystems
Peter Sainsbury

Environment: Small-bodied and short-lived, tiny freshwater fish play big roles in ecosystems

A threatened Aussie tiddler flashes a fin for tiny freshwater fish worldwide, toxic PFAS chemicals are all around us and deep inside us and never go away, and illegal gold mining in Congo destroys the environment and communities.

On the emails between Jeffrey Epstein and Noam Chomsky
Vijay Prashad

On the emails between Jeffrey Epstein and Noam Chomsky

Vijay Prashad reflects on the Jeffrey Epstein revelations, his personal history, and the profound sense of betrayal and moral shock they have provoked.

What is the next chapter for Australia’s embattled writers festivals?
Alice Grundy

What is the next chapter for Australia’s embattled writers festivals?

The cancellation of Adelaide Writers’ Week has exposed how culture wars, funding pressures and climate risk are reshaping Australia’s literary festivals – and putting their future in doubt.

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.



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