We’re paying for a revolution led by social activists
Activists with Elsa Tuet-Rosenberg’s radically sectarian worldview have effectively taken over institutions across corporate, non-profit and government sectors.
Activists with Elsa Tuet-Rosenberg’s radically sectarian worldview have effectively taken over institutions across corporate, non-profit and government sectors.
Australia lags behind the UK when it comes to the transparency around our own gender clinics. In effect, these clinics operate in an evidence-based wilderness.
This International Women’s Day, any honest feminist should be able to agree that one woman’s rapist can never be another woman’s freedom fighter.
Having joined the movement for gay liberation years after significant rights had been achieved, Mardi Gras organisers would prefer to invent new modes of oppression.
The denial of sex differences has not eradicated sexism but instead has led to the neglect of women’s health needs and the emergence of new forms of prejudice unimaginable just a decade ago.
Most Australians are not anti-Semitic, and most have a reflexive distaste for the bile Ford spews. But her reach among young people is substantial.
Should our schools have Instagram accounts that post images of children online? If you ask marketing professionals, they will tell you that it’s not just desirable, but essential.
Today’s young female radicals do not use violence or terror to further their goals, but it would be a mistake to assume they are incapable of causing harm.
On Australia Day we should celebrate achievements like compulsory voting – and the democracy sausage.
Can we just cut the guilt trip we hang on our kids about the Stolen Generation and climate change
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/claire-lehmann/page/3