Pollies: Show us your passports
THAT senior minister Josh Frydenberg is being mentioned in the citizenship farce shows the urgency of a real review.
THAT senior minister Josh Frydenberg is being mentioned in the citizenship farce shows the urgency of a real review.
AS ONE who is not particularly fond of ice cream, I could easily endure a summer lacking in Paddle Pops, Golden Gaytimes, Magnums and Cornettos, says Mike O’Connor. This summer he’s willing to put of 20kg to save the jobs of the Streets factory workers. Are you?
THERE are growing calls for a citizenship audit of federal politicians to put an end to federal parliament’s citizenship fiasco. But it’s not as easy as it seems. It would cause its own set of problems.
MANY are expressing outrage at Malcolm Turnbull’s decision to rule out an “indigenous voice to Parliament” as demanded in the Uluru Statement from the Heart. But this outrage ignores the fact that indigenous people already have their own voices.
CIVIL society does a much better job setting standards of behaviour than bureaucrats, writes James Morrow. Let’s start by allowing dogs in pubs.
Abbott has gradually drifted to the fringe of the debate within the Coalition by suggesting “climate change may be doing more good than harm”
ONE issue guaranteed to spark animated discussion at a barbecue or pub in Sydney is whether our city can accommodate more people, says Anthony Albanese.
FREEDOM and security need not be in conflict. Using technology to fight terror means the community does not need to live in fear, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull writes.
CAMERAS and facial recognition technology are everywhere, so why shouldn’t governments share data? David Speers writes.
AUTHORITIES had not even finished counting the dead from Monday night’s horror massacre outside the Mandalay Bay Hotel before the ghouls of the Left started scoring points off Las Vegas.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/journalists/james-morrow/page/160