Voice date marks our Apartheid Day
How could Anthony Albanese sell us Noel Pearson’s Voice, a plan to forever divide us by race and guarantee that generations more of Aboriginal children live in poverty?
How could Anthony Albanese sell us Noel Pearson’s Voice, a plan to forever divide us by race and guarantee that generations more of Aboriginal children live in poverty?
Of all the reckless campaigns for the Voice, the hippy-sounding Listen, Learn, Love statement of the Australian Catholic Bishops is among the worst.
How can a man like Luis Rubiales stay president of the Spanish Football Federation when he’s shown not even Spain’s top women’s players are safe from an unwelcome mauling?
If what followed after Jesse Gardiner’s attack on Daniel Ierardo with a didgeridoo is a metaphor for Labor’s Voice campaign, then reality might one day smack you in the head, too.
How can we be sure police officer Derek Chauvin got a fair trial when so many people threatened violence if he walked free?
New Zealand’s foreign minister has taken wokeness to dangerous new levels by going soft on a brutal regime that has jailed a million Muslims.
Prince Philip’s funeral was regal and beautiful. But it lacked warmth, until this totally unscripted moment.
How many more must die in a vaccination program to protect us from a virus that’s not actually killing Australians?
From losing referendums to the prime ministership, every time Malcolm Turnbull fails he has the same tired excuse — someone else is to blame.
Despite being powerful enough to head up Australia Post, Holgate presented herself to a Senate committee as another fragile victim of toxic masculinity.
Meghan Markle says her pregnancy stops her from flying — but she’s wise not to embarrass herself beside Prince Philip’s grave.
Prince Philip was attacked for his rudeness and “racism”, but the way the Greens now jeer at his death tell us he was kinder than his critics.
Could any conservative get away with a “joke” like Tom Ballard’s? Don’t worry about COVID, he said, it “killed a lot of people in nursing homes, but I checked and they were all Liberal”.
Politicians, journalists and race activists are evasive about Sudanese crime rates but Stephane Shepherd is paying the price for saying we should not blame racism.
Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/andrew-bolt/page/70