Weekend Open Forum
The weather is warning up and so is the poilitical temperature. Here's the place to start the conversation.
While the rest of the country was swept up in the Matildas hype, I couldn't bring myself to cheer them on. Here's why.
With a flailing and ineffective policy program, the Prime Minister looked desperate at last week's Labor conference.
Legitimising previously underground industries could have long-term negative implications for the participants.
There are more damning revelations about the Biden family business dealings. It begs the question of just how crooked are America's first family?.
Age (and wisdom) usually tempers the hardest of warrior's hearts but the thought of sacrificing youthful lives on political altars is appalling.
The government's frenzied rush to easy housing affordability pressures is set to make home prices even more unaffordable.
The announcement by the Soros-backed Open Societies Foundation that it's ceasing European operations suggests a significant shift in geopolitics could be underway.
The contrast between Labor's pre-election presentation and the post-victory policy reality turns attention to the Prime Minister's history with the Fabian Society.
Entrenching inequality based on race is something straight out of Animal Farm. The book was supposed to warn about Stalinism, not a blueprint for our politicians.
In a nation seemingly divided by its finances, the wisdom of building a financial moat is lost on many who have yet to experience hardship.
The Prime Minister levels slurs at those who oppose his far-left fringe referendum agenda for the country. He's wrong on all counts.
The signs are there that the economy is on the skids, but the worse it gets for most of us, the better it is for some.