With the election of Italy’s new Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, feminists should have been rejoicing.
But there is no fanfare for a leader who represents everything the establishment despises.
Read my latest for The Spectator Australia.

With the election of Italy’s new Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, feminists should have been rejoicing.
But there is no fanfare for a leader who represents everything the establishment despises.
Read my latest for The Spectator Australia.

Bugs are on the menu at 1000 Australian schools. From crickets and mealworms to cockroach milk, the World Economic Forum think this is the future of food.
In a video taken at one school, students are being encouraged to consume chips made from powdered crickets.
There may be attempts to normalise this, but there is nothing normal or healthy about it. And the potential consequences of consuming insects could be dire.
Read my latest for The Spectator Australia.

Language is a powerful vessel. If you control it, you can control the masses and ‘the truth.’ Over the last few years, we have seen it co-opted by ideologues who seek to manipulate truth to suit their own agendas. Definitions and meanings have been altered, distorting the lines between what is true and what is a government fiction.
In my latest piece for The Spectator Australia, I detail several examples of this perversion of the English language from the last two and a half years, and explore the social repercussions.

Just a month after allowing them to work again, Queensland’s Department of Education has now decided it is appropriate to ‘discipline’ unvaccinated teachers by cutting their pay for 18 weeks for refusing to take the jab.
This discriminatory and likely unlawful policy is nothing short of a blatant abuse of power.
Read all about it in The Spectator Australia.

‘I’m just going to come out and say what we’re all thinking – the Voice to Parliament is state-sanctioned racism. No matter how well-intentioned, it is going to backfire horribly, leaving one race of individuals with arbitrary powers above those of other Australians.’
My take on the Voice to Parliament for The Spectator Australia.
