Trump's plan that is a danger to Australia

Peter Hartcher 2:18 AM   Donald Trump has made an idiotic and potentially incendiary claim about one of the world's most flammable strategic tinder boxes.

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Latest Comment

Trump's weakness with women

Josephine Tovey dinkus

Josephine Tovey 4:23 PM   It's perhaps not surprising that a former owner of three beauty pageants, Donald Trump, has helped turn his party's campaign into a shallow "Mrs America" pageant between potential First Ladies.

The NBN is already out of date

The latest State Of The Internet report from content delivery network provider Akamai does not paint a pretty picture ...

Laurie Patton 4:16 PM   Australia has fallen to 60th in global Internet speed rankings. If we fell to 60th in the Olympics medal tally there'd be a national outcry.

Never read the terms and conditions?

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The Age, Money, Melbourne, FINE PRINT COVER:
Pic by Marina Oliphant.

Noah Feldman 4:06 PM   Online contracts should not be binding unless they are short and easy to read.

Why armed guards don't make airports safer

Belgian soldiers patrol at Zaventem Airport in Brussels on Wednesday last week after dozens were killed in bombings at ...

Thomas R. Mockaitis 3:46 PM   Sophisticated terrorists find it easy to circumvent obvious security measures that do more to ease public fears than make travel safer.

Comments 1

Turnbull's campaign doesn't need Abbott

Peter Reith

Peter Reith 5:37 PM   Only the delusional conservatives would think throwing Tony Abbott into the Liberals' election campaign would be a great idea.

Comments 123

How parties use Facebook to win your vote

Political messages that go to everyone are old hat. Now parties can tailor their messages for individuals.

Skye Laris 9:00 PM   This year political parties will know what each of us cares about and will be able to tailor their campaign advertising to the specific voters who receive it.

Comments 1

Why we need to scrap the $100 note

High denomination notes make it easier for drug traffickers to move cash across borders.

Alexander Smith   Even with 300 million $100 bills already in circulation, few Australians ever see our largest bill. Even fewer ATMs actually dispense them.

Comments 54

Anonymous sources: it's how politicians lie

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Michael Gawenda 5:03 AM   There is something seriously wrong when politicians can tell the media one thing on the record then say the opposite anonymously.

Comments 50

US gambles on sea power in China contest

Hugh White dinkus Dinkus

Hugh White 12:00 AM   In the massive build-up of its aircraft carrier fleet, the US may be giving China a big advantage.

Comments 2

Drugs in sport: personal costs keep growing

SMH editorial dinkus

9:00 PM   Players, through unwarranted trust, ignorance or complicity, are paying a hefty price with their careers and health. And the ultimate price, according to a NSW Supreme Court jury was paid by former Cronulla player Jon Mannah.

MARCH 29

Letters to the Editor

SMH letters dinkus

9:22 AM   At last some really sensible factual comment on the impact of negative gearing and reduced capital gains tax.

Column 8

Column 8

9:00 PM   "Furthering the discussion on medical black humour regarding one's imminent demise," adds Michael Nossiter, of Manly (Column 8, last week), "my favourite, from my Accident and Emergency background."

In the Herald: March 29, 1966

In the Herald dinkus

Jacqui Martinez 12:00 AM   Mr Joern Utzon said the only basis on which he would return to work on the Opera House was as architect in sole control of the project, the Herald reported on this day in 1966.

Terrorist attacks need an agile response

Jacinta Carroll dinkus

Jacinta Carroll   We should examine how we can speed up investigations to learn from future incidents.

Comments 16

Nursing homes can be a good option

Neil Jeyasingam dinkus

Neil Jeyasingam   They get a bad wrap, but nursing homes are a better option than only having walls to talk to.

Comments 20

Don’t bet yet on an early election

Amanda Vanstone.

Amanda Vanstone   Keep a close watch on the self interest of the crossbench senators.

Comments 135

Empty houses and artificial scarcity

The number of dwellings standing empty in our major cities could more than account for the notional supply shortfalls.

Laurence Troy and Bill Randolph   For the government to subsidise investors to leave properties standing empty is both a taxation lunacy and a national scandal.

Comments 10

Belgium must stop living in denial

A child looks on during a vigil for the victims of the Brussels attacks at the Belgium Consulate in Montreal, Canada, on ...

Jean-Michel Paul   Islamic State is responsible for the terrorist attacks in Brussels, but they were also symptoms of a profoundly Belgian failure.

Coalition brings out big guns for New England

SMH editorial dinkus

Tony Windsor's campaign in New England is calculated to neutralise what the sitting member Barnaby Joyce claims as his primary advantage: his position of influence as Deputy Prime Minister.

MARCH 28

Letters to the Editor

SMH letters dinkus

It's about time that our politicians stopped blaming young teachers who are "not up to scratch" for our falling standards.

Column 8

Column 8

"Mixing up measuring scales is certainly not confined to hardware items," points out Kevin Harris.

In the Herald: March 28, 1902

Officers of the Bushveldt Carbineers in South Africa. Lieutenants Handcock (far left) and Morant (with dog) were ...

Jacqui Martinez   Shooting of unarmed Boers

Why women are left out of bagging rights

Annabel Crabb

Annabel Crabb   Like our brains, women's bags have to do 10 things at once. And that's tiring enough, even before tax.

Sugar tax, a form of prepaid health insurance

Peter FitzSimons dinkus

Peter FitzSimons   Calls for Australia to adopt a tax on sugary drinks has been followed by predictable howls of protest, decrying the "nanny state".

Australian laws are failing working women

Anika Wells dinkus

Anika Wells   Australia's working women need leadership from our major parties to improve workplaces and allow them to successfully juggle motherhood and careers.

To have or not to have, that's the question

Matt Wade

Matt Wade   How mothers and fathers bargain over babies is increasingly important for the whole society, not just individual families.

Comments 45

Donor conceived children win small victory

Kirsty Needham

Kirsty Needham   The cry of betrayal had resonated in the corridors of NSW Parliament. It was an unlikely alliance that took action.

Pay up or lose your links to the world

Charles Waterstreet.

Charles Waterstreet   Telstra and Foxtel used to be great mates, with each other, and with me. The internet has changed the rules, and the playing fields and the goal posts.

MARCH 27

Letters to the Editor

SMH letters dinkus

Following the rise and rise of the telegenic Malcolm Turnbull the Goldstein branch of the Liberal Party has acknowledged the appeal to the electorate of the handsome face and the winning smile.

PM doesn't have to be the messiah this Easter

Sun-Herald editorial dinkus.

As conscientious participants in our Australian democracy let us take time this weekend to consider the election that will be held this year, sooner or later, and the choices we face.

Highlights

With friends like Malcolm, equality is far away

What is the point of a gay-friendly prime minister if he can't slap down those keen on perpetuating teenage hate, angst and suicide?

Apology

In last Monday's paper, the Herald reported the details of an alleged sexual assault under the headline "The horrifying untold story of Louise".

Turnbull, stop dithering on tax reform

The Turnbull government has yet to explain why we need tax reform. Meanwhile, Labor is strangely coherent on tax policies.

Why you really should pay a sugar tax

We know we've got a problem when it comes to sugar and obesity.

Class clown Joyce has centre stage to prove himself

Barnaby Joyce's capacity for populist revolt made him famous and effective. But the new Nationals leader will have to control his bluster if he is to be taken seriously.

Great irony of Ruddock's human rights appointment

I've heard of being kicked upstairs but this is ridiculous. I know people get promoted to their point of incompetence, but the UN? The Vatican? These are not incompetence-friendly situations.

Nauru: How long can we keep lying to ourselves?

The history of asylum seeker policy in Australia will be remembered as a story of how successive governments legislated their lies to justify a world of make-believe borders and compliance.

Fine art of ignoring the UN

One key point of illumination from Julian Assange's announcement on Thursday is the rich impotence of the United Nations.

Banks are using us to hedge their bets

We only need a tiny part of the financial services industry – the rest is just speculation and it doesn't stand up to close scrutiny.

Raising the GST to 15% is fiscal folly

If Australia goes down the path of increasing the GST to 15 per cent, it will be on the way to joining that collection of West European countries which are the highest taxed countries in the world.

Why Tony Abbott should leave politics

... and a few other Liberal MPs such as Bronwyn Bishop and Philip Ruddock should stop being so selfish and move on.

Disgrace oddity - how I tried to help David Bowie

Thirty years ago the writer interviewed David Bowie - and blew it entirely.

From the desk of our chief comment moderator

Fairfax Media's chief comment moderator Rob Ashton discusses the most-commented stories of the year, and offers advice for those who get rejected.

15 of our best comment pieces of 2015

Highlights from the Herald's opinion pages in 2015 - our most-read, most-discussed, most-shared pieces (plus a few editors' favourites).

In defence of the hangover

The common or garden hangover is a terrible and wonderful thing, a device of startling ingenuity designed (one can only assume) by the bloodless Calvin himself.

Bystanders struggle to do the right thing

I boarded my flight from Paris, happy to be going home. Until I met the man in the seat next to mine.

Why New Year's Eve is the most hypocritical night

One of my starkest New Year's Eve memories comes from when I was at university in New Zealand. I was at a house of a friend of a friend, and in that house I saw a man demonstrating his talent at opening beer bottles using his mouth.

The Australian fair go is dead

Elizabeth Farrelly: Why are we OK with this? How did the fair go slip so seamlessly into tooth and claw? Or was it always thus?

Captain's speech doesn't represent the Ravenswood I know

Throughout my time at Ravenswood, I experienced an environment that encouraged hard work, equality of standing, humility, and gratitude – virtues that I believe are the very foundation of the school itself.

Where to now for a newly unseated PM

Peter Hartcher: The government may have moved on, but Tony Abbott is still adjusting to his new reality and coming to grips with life beyond the prime ministership.

Big karma hits big pharma

Paul Sheehan: When a venture capitalist bought the rights to a drug and increased its price by 5500 per cent, there was widespread outrage. Now comes corporate revenge against corporate evil.

Islamic State thrives as big boys squabble

Waleed Aly: Force will not wipe out Islamic State because it is a byproduct of a much bigger conflict that needs to be resolved first.