• Lessons to learn from the Great War

    Soldiers head off to battle in WWI after two bullets set off the Great War.

    Posted February 17, 2014 14:37:46

    Two bullets in Sarajevo ended years of peace and launched the 20th century on a path that would make it the bloodiest in human history.

    But the Great War was by no means inevitable and the search for a culprit is the wrong one. Starting the war was a tragedy, not a crime.

    As the 100-year anniversary of WWI nears it is time to reflect on what lessons can be learnt from the battles of the past.

    Topics: world-war-1, history, death, world-politics

Business Analysis

  • When Toyota shifted just down the road to Altona, its importance to the local economy skyrocketed. Where to now?

    Toyota workers should be forgiven for not sharing the optimism that other job opportunities abound, writes Andrew Porter.

  • Toyota manufacturing plant at Altona Australian disease

    Australia consciously chose economic goals that left manufacturers in the cold, and the chickens are now coming home to roost, writes David Llewellyn-Smith.

  • No politician wants to pose for photos in an office full of computers. No photo op, no subsidy

    While the media and politicians continually argue over subsidies for car manufacturers and food makers, the struggles of the technology sector go unnoticed, writes Renai LeMay.

  • Workers carry documents in Sydney Not just red tape

    If the requirements for gender diversity reporting are diluted, so too will be the efforts to see more women at the top of businesses, writes Catherine Fox.

  • Tony Abbott and Joe Hockey peruse the budget-in-reply speech Budget blues

    Joe Hockey plans to usher in the "age of responsibility", but any golden welfare Australia may have enjoyed was over a while ago, writes Greg Jericho.

You Said It

  • The manufacturing industry closures are in regional areas, have historical/cultural baggage, and employ blue-collar workers. The people losing jobs are going to have a tough time finding work again, and the whole region will suffer flow-on effects for many years to come.

    Darren on No photo ops, no industry subsidies via story comment.

  • It doesn't matter if Paul Howes is positioning himself as the next Bob Hawke or the under-appreciated Bill Kelty, there is no hope for a tripartite agreement between employer unions, employee unions, and the government while the Abbott Government is hell-bent on ideological and cultural warfare.

    Fred the Big Cat on Beyond the straitjacket of unions vs business via story comment.

  • It's funny how we all think she got what she deserved, while simultaneously knowing that if anyone got thrown in a rat-infested jail in Australia for 20 years just for a big bag of grass we'd all be marching on the streets.

    Mitor the Bold on Our Schapelle: a smuggler for all seasons via story comment.

Watch

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    Officials are investigating a bus bombing that killed at least four people on Egypt's border with Israel [Reuters]

  • Ellen Page comes out

    Actress Ellen Page delivers a rousing and emotion speech at the inaugural Time to Thrive conference. [Youtube]

Your Photos

Clouds darken sky in town of Coober Pedy

Wet weather brought some much needed rain to the northern South Australia town of Coober Pedy on February 14, 2014.