A letter of our year 12 school leavers, ahead of schoolies week
Dr Seuss, in Oh, The Places You'll Go! might have had you in mind.
Dr Seuss, in Oh, The Places You'll Go! might have had you in mind.
Hello, my name is Madonna King, and I was wrong. I didn't believe, for one moment, that a narcissist as ignorant and vile as Donald Trump would be supported so strongly, across so many different voting groups.
Why the race to attribute blame when something terrible unfolds?
We've lost our trust in so much but one thing will help earn it back.
Donald Trump is a dill. But his support for the sexual assault of women - because that's what he was doing in the 2005 video - is downright dangerous.
We could blink, and wake up next year with One Nation forming part of a Queensland government.
Just imagine if you did what Liberal MP Steven Irons did. That is, you charged your customers, or clients, or patients $2000 to fly to your own wedding
Broadside delivered by American education expert Professor Diane Halpern, who says her claim is based on analysis and reviews of 1.5 million students.
Dastyari's pickle also raises another issue that is becoming just as big in the minds of many voters - and that's the increasing spectre of Chinese involvement in Australia.
Sometimes, probably like many mothers, I think of leaving a note for my husband, in case I die.
We could soon effectively rely on foreign aid to run electricity.
On the face of it, and in theory, 62 might be a touch too old to give birth to a child; for that reason the questions being raised by the case of a Tasmanian woman and her 78-year-old partner is understandable.
It's an image that should stay with us forever. Here in Australia, where we have the best of everything, a child is strapped to a bare restraint chair.
Western politics is more divided and bitter than at just about any time in the past century – but in America at least it's united by one thing.
Isn't it time we just left Gordon Nuttall alone?
Queensland's message to Malcolm Turnbull last Saturday was simple: TURN off the BULL.
The same-sex marriage plebiscite, scheduled in the weeks after Malcolm Turnbull's likely victory on Saturday, will upstage any of the nastiness we've seen in recent politics.
Sometimes it takes an 11-year-old to nail it. "Why are the politicians saying bad things about the other side," my daughter asked yesterday, "and not saying what they would do".
If Howard returned, a friend says, he would walk into PM's office.
A royal commission into our banks is needed for exactly the reasons the banks' bosses say it is not.
OK, Bill Shorten probably shouldn't have called Donald Trump barking mad.
Book tells tale of how group of women escaped perpetrators.
Another week, another bill in the mail from Campbell Newman's ill-disciplined approach to politics.
Why doesn't the murder of Lynette Daley warrant bigger headlines, and more talk?
Having played a leading role in putting the LNP into opposition, Jeff Seeney is now keeping them there.
The decision to overhaul voting has the strong capacity to change Annastacia Palaszczuk in the eyes of voters.
Politicians can act contrary to the public interest but they need to run with the crowd on this one.
Malcolm Turnbull's lost his mojo, and the Australian public along with it.
Ex-leaders - ousted by voters or their own parties - return to play themselves before live audience.
Prime Minister wants a tough building industry watchdog while fresh cloud looms over Arthur Sinodinos.