Methinks the fools protest too much
MILLIONS of Australians came together on Thursday and celebrated their nation. But it was the angry rabble who made all the headlines, Piers Akerman writes.
MILLIONS of Australians came together on Thursday and celebrated their nation. But it was the angry rabble who made all the headlines, Piers Akerman writes.
ABOUT two hours before dawn on the East Coast Australian time, Donald J. Trump was sworn in as the 45th President of the US, sending a dramatic signal that the world has changed, Piers Akerman writes.
AS much as it may discomfort the multi-culti crowd, Australia must realise that there are some appalling aspects of Islamic culture that can never be embraced here — forced marriage, Piers Akerman writes.
THE current imbroglio with Indonesia highlights the failure of our military and our intelligence services to understand the intricacies of Indonesian politics.
THE best thing about January 2017 will be the presence of a new American President, writes Piers Akerman.
WE should be concerned at the apparent determination of the South Australian government to smash the Commonwealth through the “negotiation” of bogus treaties with self-proclaimed Aboriginal nations.
WHO would have thought that Borat’s native Kazakhstan could teach Australia a thing or two about learning? Piers Akerman writes.
Kitching may be the ticking time bomb needed to finally shred any skerrick of credibility Shorten retains.
OPPOSITION Leader Bill Shorten’s retro Labor Party has vowed to block the Turnbull government’s plan to impose a lifetime visa ban on those who attempted to enter illegally by boat.
PRESIDENT-elect Donald Trump has harvested the grapes of wrath and the vintage isn’t looking as bad as his media and celebrity critics predicted.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/journalists/piers-akerman/page/29