Oil, gas and coal boom shatter decarbonisation myth
To become a renewable energy superpower a nation needs a lot of cheap coal power, as China and Indonesia show. Canberra hasn’t got the memo.
To become a renewable energy superpower a nation needs a lot of cheap coal power, as China and Indonesia show. Canberra hasn’t got the memo.
It’s clear Europeans don’t like mass immigration from North Africa, they don’t like the high cost of renewable energy, and they hate the general rise in the cost of living.
It’s not clear how Noa Argamani and the three other hostages’ rescue will play into the nihilistic calculations of Hamas. But one young woman’s rescue is a new symbol of hope for Israel.
Is the Bible hate speech? For Australian institutional life now to become so irrationally hostile to Christianity is a mark of madness, a terrible cultural mistake.
The genius and unpredictability of democracy, specifically Indian democracy, has again asserted itself with Narendra Modi’s re-election.
In Joe Biden’s recent speech to a predominantly black college he stoked racial grievance and hostility to gain a political advantage.
The Conservatives under Rishi Sunak are set to suffer their worst defeat since Tony Blair walloped John Major in 1997. Enter Sir Kier Starmer – the UK’s Albo – who will eventually lead the most left-wing government in British history.
Many will rejoice that Trump has been convicted of something. But when Bill Clinton was impeached his poll numbers rose markedly. Millions of Americans will see this as a corrupt process.
China’s military behaviour around Taiwan gets riskier and more coercive – does a weakened, divided west pose an opportunity for the CCP?
That UN agencies mourn the Butcher of Tehran as they seek to arrest democratic Israel’s leaders presents the morally inverted, politically corrupted nature of what passes for liberal internationalism today.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/greg-sheridan/page/10