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SMH Editorials

Former Greens senator Scott Ludlam has resigned after discovering he held dual citizenship.

A risk for all sides from Greens chaos

Scott Ludlam has made an honest, though extremely careless and costly mistake.When governments rely on the narrowest of margins to get their legislation passed, we can expect the validity of every vote to be scrutinised.

Trump presidency's dishonesty exposed

Donald Trump jnr admits with the benefit of hindsight he might have done things differently.

Who knows for sure why anything goes viral on the internet. There's a bright future for the person who can figure that out. Surely, though, the reason ABC political editor Chris Uhlmann's assessment of Donald Trump's performance at the G20 meeting took off was that it showed Americans from the perspective of an informed outsider just how far and fast the reputation of not just the US Presidency but of the US itself is falling under Trump.

Relief but no resolution in Mosul's fall

Iraq's Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi holds a national flag upon his arrival in Mosul on Sunday to mark the defeat of ...

With much of the city in ruins, thousands of lives lost and more than a million people displaced from their homes, there will be limits to celebrations of the liberation of the Iraqi city of Mosul. The situation remains complex and dangerous even in "peace".

First language of Sydney key to culture celebration

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Bujarri Gamurruwa … That's g'day (or perhaps something more formal) in the Gadigal language of the Eora nation. We greet our readers this way to mark NAIDOC week, the annual celebration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander culture, in the year of the 50th anniversary of the referendum which was the first step in recognising the rights of Aboriginal Australians.

London tower fire has lessons for Sydney

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The inferno in London's Grenfell Tower has rung alarm bells across the globe. As British authorities scramble to check cladding on high-rises and struggle to cope with large-scale evacuations, the whole government approach to social housing is now under attack. But the fire was still smouldering when wider repercussions started to emerge. If a design flaw in the tower contributed to the blaze, then buildings elsewhere could have a similar problem.

Old phones: from waste to valuable resource

Editorial dinkus.

They're launched each year with a fanfare: the latest model mobile phones are held aloft to cheering crowds by their designers and promoters, photographed in loving close-up like jewels or miracles of nature, exhibited 20 metres wide on billboards, or flashed across the internet on fan sites and ads. And their appeal is instantaneous and almost universal.

And the winner from this week's footy weep-a-thon is: the AFL

Shattered: Boyd Cordner faces the press after the NSW State of Origin loss.

Who is weeping more copiously, the Rugby League fans of this state who watched their team snatch defeat from the jaws of victory on home ground in State of Origin II? Or the long-suffering followers of Rugby Union who had to witness the Wallabies' ignominious loss to Scotland

Danger of over-reach on citizenship changes

Minister for Immigration and Border Protection Peter Dutton during a doorstop interview in Canberra over the citizenship ...

Playing to the crowd can sometimes, paradoxically, undermine precisely the democratic values that underpin the privilege of Australian citizenship, especially when it involves a cynical appeal to fear.