Why Biden deserves ‘a lot of credit’ for Gaza truce
Gaza should be controlled in the short run by a coalition of ‘the good guys’, writes academic Ran Porat as he praises Joe Biden for his role in the ceasefire deal.
Gaza should be controlled in the short run by a coalition of ‘the good guys’, writes academic Ran Porat as he praises Joe Biden for his role in the ceasefire deal.
This is what falling short of your high school or uni course targets really looks like, writes Tom Bowden.
Peter Dutton says he’s a strong leader but we’re about to find out if he’s strong enough to stop history repeated for his female deputy, writes Samantha Maiden.
Politicians are not the only people responsible for Australia’s social agenda, setting boundaries or guiding important changes, writes Sam Shahin.
If you think you’re progressive holding up a Hezbollah flag, you need to go back to left-winger school and brush up on the tenets of socialism, writes David Penberthy.
Are the Menendez brothers, who admitted to brutally murdering their wealthy parents in the family’s Beverly Hills mansion, victims or psychopaths? Julie Cross argues the jury is still out.
Anthony Albanese would love you to think Coles and Woolies are behind your battered bank balance. Don’t fall for it, writes Caleb Bond.
And under the harsh spotlight of prime time TV, VP candidate Tim Walz struggled to meet the moment against his Republican rival JD Vance, writes Tom Minear.
There are many complex problems the world faces, but the “total destruction of Israel would be the beginning of the end”, writes Alexander Downer.
Donald Trump is a political weathervane, but Tom Minear argues there is one belief he is so desperate to keep that he is siding with rivals accused of stunning crimes.
A former Australian Ambassador to the Middle East has weighed in on the escalating violence in Lebanon, and the projections are precarious for the Iran-backed Hezbollah.
Let’s hope this idea of paying attention to what Australians really think catches on, writes Caleb Bond.
Messing with negative gearing rules will only make an already tragic tale worse, writes Tim McIntyre.
The Reserve Bank’s call to keep rates on hold has been barely affected by the recent decision in the US, but there are indicators of when they’ll be dropped, writes John Rolfe.
Original URL: https://www.weeklytimesnow.com.au/news/opinion/page/14