Human rights and compassion aren't dirty words
What a grim state of affairs it is when we vilify and stereotype people who care for homeless children as marauding activists.
Julia Baird is a journalist and author
What a grim state of affairs it is when we vilify and stereotype people who care for homeless children as marauding activists.
Would living longer really improve our lives?
It's quite apt that the term 'flamethrower' is so often used to describe feminist Clementine Ford.
Writing book acknowledgments can be so fraught. It should be a moment of triumph, cheer, relief. But there are so many potential pitfalls – forgetting people, sounding like a tosser, omitting crucial research assistance, sounding like a tosser, being excessively sentimental and sounding like a tosser.
When I saw the footage of former Auburn deputy mayor Salim Mehajer verbally abusing his estranged wife, Aysha, last week I was reminded about the difference between passionate intensity and love. About how to recognise signs of aggression, manipulation, abuse or control in even the most nascent relationship – and what not to tolerate and when to walk away.
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Well this is getting a bit embarrassing. While Hillary Clinton is making a serious and unprecedented bid for the White House, more and more Americans are asking questions about the experiences of Julia Gillard.
It has never been entirely clear why so many people like to draw penises on ballot papers.
Every now and then, the most well meaning comment can make me worry.
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