Greens jump the shark with latest leftist lunacy
If you like a flutter and you voted for the Greens at the last election, please rethink your values and priorities, writes Peter Gleeson.
If you like a flutter and you voted for the Greens at the last election, please rethink your values and priorities, writes Peter Gleeson.
Supporters of the Voice to parliament proposition are playing lawyers tricks by hiding their planned model or models. None of its principal proponents can define it any more than they can define reconciliation, writes Piers Akerman.
Anthony Albanese claims he has recveived a warm reception in Europe because of his lunatic climate change policies, but those cheering him rely on nuclear and are also resurrecting coal power plants.
The soft sentence for a teenage menace who killed a happy couple and their unborn child while out walking their dog highlights an Australia-wide problem. They should be throwing away the key, writes Peter Gleeson.
It’s not just Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews’ response to COVID-19 that is to blame for the state’s woes, but the whole culture of dictatorial leadership that has corroded the once-proud state, Piers Akerman writes.
That the ABC is endemically biased is so obvious that no one except the Greens doubts the fact, writes Piers Akerman
Craig Kelly’s confrontation with the ambitious Tanya Plibersek was dramatic but Prime Minister Scott Morrison should never have castigated him over it, writes Piers Akerman.
The Labor Party doesn’t represent the people anymore. It represents Labor hacks who owe their loyalty to Labor factions, Piers Akerman writes.
Defence has dumped the useless ARH Tiger helicopters in favour of better ones. Why aren’t they doing the same with their hopeless sinking submarine contract, writes Piers Akerman.
Trump has accepted some blame for the mob that invaded the Capitol this week, but the seeds of dissent were planted four years ago, writes Piers Akerman.
It is going to take a lot more than a single word change in the national anthem to unite Australians, writes Piers Akerman.
Looking to 2021, we must be extremely wary of those who seek to manipulate the tragedies of the past year and incorporate them in a new self-serving and woke narrative, Piers Akerman writes.
Cardinal George Pell’s prison diary may not sound like an uplifting read, but its narrative reveals a man who has grown, transcended even, through his trials.
Those who claim first drug offenders should be let off with a caution because they are just experimenting ignore the tragic reality that a first dose can be just as lethal as a second or a 30th, Piers Akerman writes.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/blogs/piers-akerman/page/13