You can connect just about anything to the US president-elect if you believe in yourself.
It’s the end of the road for Gillian Triggs as Human Rights Commissioner begins her long goodbye.
Don’t like being called a sexist? What are you, some kind of misogynist or something?
Election result still has many reeling, covering policy debate with hearts over heads
Bill Shorten plays up to the new nationalism while the Nationals get steamrolled in NSW.
At the Human Rights Commission, staff must be drowning in an ocean of complaints.
And so long, Mr C, it’s time that we began to laugh and cry, cry and laugh about it all again.
The new journalism on show: Why talk to sources when you can scroll through Twitter?
Will Canada need to stop the canoes to block Americans fleeing across the northern border?
In the face of attacks, won't somebody think of the poor Human Rights Commission?
Plus: A call for our skilled migration policy to give way to the politics of feelings.
And sometimes the CFMEU parlays the toiler’s trade into first-rate blue-collar poetry.
While the Courier-Mail profits from The Oz’s hard work, Bill Leak’s defenders grow louder.
The Age scratches its head over connection between more prisoners, less crime.
Just what exactly did they “will never be settled in Australia” mean, then?
Plus: Higher power prices, higher density, and a defence of the FBI’s James Comey.
Defending your right to say whatever you want ... so long as you do it with profanity
Halloween is racist cultural appropriation, or an opportunity to have a bit of fun
Not a naughty boy, Bill’s just ‘a very colourful, passionate Australian of enormous artistic ability’.
Plus: Americans riled up about the presidential race are going at it sledgehammer and tongs.
Forget what you may have heard, they’re just like us. So long as they don’t vote One Nation.
The Age worries about Wonder Woman at the UN, but what about the Saudis?
In some circles, nature-loving sharks are more welcome visitors than neoliberal people.
Meanwhile, real activism means facing the power structures in the back of a paddy wagon
*Except when it does; perhaps Cut & Paste needs to make a little bet with Barry O’Farrell.
An international shift is under way, but the US is not about to disintegrate.
Malcolm Turnbull’s plan to engage the US president-elect is shared by many leaders around the world.
The Left doesn’t get Donald Trump’s victory over political correctness.
Sneerers are disgusted with democracy for giving people a voice.
Is confidence in sport like pregnancy? Can you be half confident? Some would suggest not. You’re either confident or not.
The world is awash with politicians in the early phase of reacting to Donald Trump.
The tide is turning against offshore manufacturing, but today’s smart factories barely need workers.
Hopefully, diplomacy can avert a trade war with China that could harm Australian interests.
Modern politics is caught between populism and a political insider class, neither of which is very palatable.
Enterprise agreements between building giants and unions hit subcontract options.
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