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Opinion

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The risk of defaulting on a loan is on the rise for young Australians, but its a crisis that should concern all of us.

Young people are taking on more debt. We should all be worried

The risk of defaulting on a loan is on the rise for young Australians, but its a crisis that should concern all of us.

  • by Victoria Devine

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There are very few circumstances where you’re able to access your super early.

I’m successful and well-off. Can I access my super early?

There’s no way to exclude yourself from the age pension to access you super early. But there are ways to plan, so your finances don’t rely on your super.

  • by Paul Benson
The new aged care act is rights-based.
Opinion
Aged care

Vigilance must be maintained in aged care sector

The nation was horrified by the state of the aged care sector before the royal commission. We can never be complacent about the quality of care.

  • by The Herald's View
Strickland House, Sydney.

Photo: Getty Images

If Dutton’s given up on the teal seats, how about a nuclear reactor in Vaucluse?

The Coalition’s embrace of nuclear power may be a sign of surrender in teal-town. Pity the moderate candidates suffering the progressive fallout.

  • by Daisy Turnbull

‘I’m not anti-nuclear, I’m anti-bulls---’: Why this energy expert says Dutton’s plan ignores reality

One of Australia’s foremost voices on energy futures says doing anything other than pursuing renewables with enthusiasm right now is not paying attention to what’s going on.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
Tax time doesn’t have to be painful if you follow a few simple tips.
Opinion
Hip pocket

A stage 3 payday is on the way. Here’s how to maximise it

Take-home pays are set to rise from the end of this month thanks to the stage 3 tax cuts. Don’t let your newfound wealth go to waste.

  • by Dominic Powell
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Peter Dutton’s proposed nuclear power plants would be built at seven sites around the country.

They cast Peter Dutton as a wolf. Here’s why they’re wrong

Commentators have widely written off the opposition leader as awful. Voters, it seems, are warming to him.

  • by Parnell Palme McGuinness
Jacque Ginberg and his granddaughter Alexa in New York.
Opinion
Family

I was barely around for my kids. As a Grananny I get a second chance

I’ve worked as a diplomat in war zones across Yugoslavia and the DR Congo but nothing prepared me for how tough and reward it would be to care for infants.

  • by Jaque Grinberg
Clayton Oliver was held to 14 possessions against North Melbourne.
Analysis
AFL 2024

Can Clayton Oliver be great again in 2024?

Perhaps it was the randomness of rotations though it’s hard to imagine a scenario where Clayton Oliver at his pomp would have been allowed anywhere near the pine with the game on the line.

  • by Andrew Wu
Microsoft says new Copilot+ PCs represent a new era for laptops.

Why your next laptop will be the smartest of the lot

In the 1980s, the best laptop let you edit documents on the go. Today they can produce their own documents and images on demand, and process anything they see and hear.

  • by Tim Biggs
My first Business Class experience was delightful - but it ruined me forever
Opinion
Air travel

The unexpected downside of finally experiencing business class

How am I supposed to go from proper cutlery and a flatbed to arguing over an armrest?

  • by Thomas Mitchell
O.pposition Leader Peter Dutton addresses an official luncheon with Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Monday.

Has ‘pro-China’ Peter Dutton morphed from a hawk into a dove?

The big story of the Chinese premier’s visit was one that few have remarked upon: the opposition leader’s strikingly softer rhetoric on China.

  • by Matthew Knott
Wind turbines on the ocean

Wind-powered future the perfect answer to the burning climate question

While one side of politics is touting an expensive, potentially dangerous solution to our future energy needs (nuclear) which probably wouldn’t be operational in my lifetime, congratulations to our federal government for taking a sensible approach which will help take us another step closer to zero carbon emissions.

Miranda Otto as Mrs Virginia Ambrose, the new head of model gowns, in the ABC series <i>Ladies in Black</i>.
Opinion
Retail

I was a terrible Grace Bros employee, but I hope department stores don’t check out

Department stores were always places where women were in charge. Losing them entirely would leave a gap in our social fabric.

  • by Jacqueline Maley
Josh Canham
Opinion
Wallabies

The unluckiest omission from Joe Schmidt’s first Wallabies squad

It’s a relatively big squad for this time of year and the absence of Melbourne Rebels lock Josh Canham, therefore, is something of a surprise.

  • by Paul Cully
Latrell Mitchell with NSW fans this week.

Why the best laid plans of Madge and men go awry in Origin

There are four players who’ll run onto the MCG that will be targeted by their opponents.

  • by Roy Masters
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There’s nothing like a trip to the local chemist to understand how much physical pain is being endured by your fellow citizens.
Opinion
Illness

I thought the human body was beautiful, then I went to the chemist

I’ve suddenly seen the local pharmacy for what it is: a house of pain.

  • by Richard Glover
Fun with words
Opinion
WordPlay

I watched it for research. So was I unsatisfied or dissatisfied with The Fall Guy?

Who says you can’t have fun with words at the multiplex?

  • by David Astle
An interrogation of 65 different credit card providers reveals clawbacks of various benefits over the past decade.

Credit cards perks are being slashed – is yours still worth it?

Over the past decade, various benefits that once came with credit cards have been slowly dropped.

  • by Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon

Why Dutton’s nuclear power plan is so Soviet

Peter Dutton’s newly unveiled nuclear manifesto is a peculiar fit for the party of free enterprise, private investment and entrepreneurialism. But what will the political fallout be?

  • by Peter Hartcher
Your super fund shouldn’t leave you hanging as you approach retirement.

How can super funds help us retire happy? Here are eight ideas

Most super funds are not yet accustomed to managing the needs of retirees, but the winds of change are gathering.

  • by Bec Wilson
France’s Kylian Mbappe wears a face mask as he runs during a training session in Leipzig, Germany,

Can a national hero like Kylian Mbappe stop the rise of the far-right in France?

Before President Emmanuel Macron’s stunning decision to dissolve parliament and call a snap poll, France’s reckoning with the hard right was scheduled for 2027.

  • by Rob Harris
Simon Letch

Chinese doping scandal has muddied the waters for clean athletes in Paris

Athletes lining up at next month’s Olympics, with no known doping skeletons in the closet, face a harsh reality of the unknown unknowns.

  • by Darren Kane
Opinion
Parenting

It’s not selfish not to want kids. It’s selfish to have them

I’ve had three babies and none were born of an act of altruism. Every time I had a child I did so for me.

  • by Kerri Sackville
Greenery fills a Marseille street, in contrast to the greyness of Katherine Place near Southern Cross Station.
Opinion
City life

This French city was once a crime hub. It could teach Melbourne how to green its laneways

Melbourne spent millions in a failed attempt to green its grey laneways. A successful scheme shows the better way to beautify the city comes from empowering residents.

  • by Justine Costigan
Peter Dutton has proposed building seven new nuclear power stations.

Dutton’s nuclear plan lacks logic and detail

It seems that Peter Dutton, in promoting an ill-thought-out nuclear energy plan, has succeeded in his true objective, namely undermining the drive towards renewable energy.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping and US President Joe Biden.

China’s bid to topple the US has hit a wall

The 21st century was meant to be China’s time to dethrone the US as the world’s leading economy. Not so fast.

  • by Daniel Moss
Inspector Amy Scott, recipient of the Commissioners Valour Award during a press conference at the NSW Police Academy in Goulburn, NSW.
Editorial
Police

In praise of courage and discipline at Bondi Junction

The unforgettable footage of NSW Police Inspector Amy Scott running towards danger reminds how the human spirit can give meaning to life even amid death and horror.

  • The Herald's View
Guzman y Gomez’s $300 million man, co-CEO Steven Marks at the ASX on Thursday when the company made its public debut.
Analysis
Food & drink

The Aussie burrito-maker that makes Nvidia look dirt cheap

The Guzman y Gomez float was an astounding success, which makes justifying the jaw-dropping valuation on the stock much harder for investors.

  • by Colin Kruger
Peter Dutton’s nuclear plan for Lithgow has elicited quite a reaction from the old Shamrocks.

Thank you, Mr Dutton. With Lithgow going nuclear, the Shamrocks are daring to dream

The old Lithgow Shamrocks rugby league players are prepared, pro bono, to get involved. One has already googled “how to build a nuclear power plant”.

  • by 'Rampaging' Roy Slaven
Letch

Frighten kids from social media? That would be a free ad to lure them

Banning or attempting to scare children from social media won’t work. It might only push them towards more harm.

  • by Malcolm Knox
Errol Gulden was best on ground in the last derby.
Analysis
AFL 2024

Five burning questions ahead of the second Sydney derby of the AFL season

The Swans are flying without a care in the world, while the Giants would love another win to help get their season back on track. We take a closer look at Saturday’s huge clash.

  • by Vince Rugari
Former AFL CEO with performer Meat Loaf ahead of the 2011 grand final.
Analysis
AFL 2024

Blast from the past? Push for Andrew Demetriou to become next AFL chairman

An influential club president believes the former AFL CEO would be a formidable opponent to the NRL’s boss.

  • by Caroline Wilson
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Premier Li Qiang’s in Perth this week.

Pandas can’t paper over Australia’s differences with China

Premier Li Qiang’s visit was the culmination of hard work by the government to recalibrate the relationship with China. But it also exposed differences that cannot be papered over with diplomatic niceties.

  • by Lisa Visentin

I mentored the next British PM. Here’s what Australians need to know about him

Keir Starmer does not have the charisma of Boris Johnson or Tony Blair, but charisma in politicians is much overrated.

  • by Geoffrey Robertson
Royce Hunt, Spencer Leniu and Connor Watson.

Is Connor Watson, pound-for-pound, the NRL’s most valuable player?

Salary cap management is all about value. So what price do you put on players who can change a game in 20 minutes?

  • by Dan Walsh
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Catherine, Princess of Wales, made her first public appearance over the weekend.

Catherine gets it – being honest doesn’t always feel terrific, but it gets the job done

The princess’s glossy My Fair Lady return was a masterclass in not just doing what you do best to keep the masses happy, but in controlling the narrative.

  • by Kate Halfpenny
Josh Giddey playing for the Boomers against Venezuela in Melbourne last year.
Opinion
Paris 2024

‘I was going to throw red wine in his face’: Boomers coach Goorjian’s staunch defence of Giddey

The national men’s basketball coach insists the point-guard has come out the other side of the scandal that has shadowed him this NBA season.

  • by Andrew Webster
Andrew Bragg and Max Chandler Mather

The unusual political pairing squaring up against Labor on housing

Max Chandler-Mather and Andrew Bragg have little in common - except for a shared conviction that the federal government’s agenda on housing is behind the times.

  • by Paul Sakkal
Past and present Media Watch hosts. [L-R] Richard Ackland, Paul Barry, Stuart Littlemore, Monica Attard

Should Paul Barry be the last journalist to host Media Watch?

With Barry about to end his 11-year tenure in the hot seat, the ABC could hand over the task of keeping the outlets honest to someone outside the so-called media bubble.

  • by Calum Jaspan
If you’re a gun in the office, people might start chasing you up for all sorts of extra work.

The hidden cost of being too good at your job

Sometimes, less really is more when it comes to sustainable success and wellbeing, so try putting in a bit under 100 per cent.

  • by Shadé Zahrai
The Australian Public Service is moving to centralise merit lists for senior executive roles.

Should I be brutally honest in my exit interview?

Knowing when to hold back in an exit interview can be a valuable skill, but sometimes it’s worth speaking up.

  • by Jonathan Rivett
Illustration: Simon Letch

Dutton’s nuclear plan contains a fib, but there’s also a fact in its favour

The opposition leader’s numbers seem plucked out of the air, but renewable projects aren’t coming anywhere near fast enough to fill Australia’s looming energy gap.

  • by David Crowe
The Horizon apartments in Sydney.

The apartments created by Harry Seidler that are like a ‘vertical village’

One of Australia’s most gifted architects, Seidler was always up for a challenge.

  • by Stephen Crafti
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Opinion
Column 8

Raptors grandstanding again

With a Concord flight.

Opinion
Education

I hope my teachers don’t read this because they’re busy switching off

The right to disconnect is critical for teachers’ wellbeing – and that of their students.

  • by Jenny Allum
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Peter Dutton’s proposed nuclear power plants would be built at seven sites around the country.

The real reason Peter Dutton wants nuclear power

There is no Coalition nuclear plan, except to get re-elected (“Dutton hits the nuclear button”, June 20). No nuclear power plants will ever be built here.

Eddie Jones of Australia soaks during a press conference speaks Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023, in Tokyo. Jones was named as new coach of the Japan national rugby team on Dec. 13. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)
Opinion
Wallabies

Eddie Jones wants to smooth out the rough edges of his Wallabies story. But some spiky parts won’t budge

The recently departed Wallabies coach is back on the Test rugby scene with Japan this weekend. And so is Jones the podcast salesman.

  • by Iain Payten
Donald Trump on the campaign trail.

Trump redux a clear and present challenge to our foreign policy

The problem facing Australia’s foreign policy under another Donald Trump presidency? Many of his utterances seem shaped by 1950s American daytime games shows.

  • The Herald's View
Peter Dutton announces the Coalition’s nuclear policy

Coalition’s nuclear utopia could put renewables on ice

When the opposition leader unveiled his plan to give nuclear power primacy in the nation’s energy mix, certainty for investors in wind, solar and battery assets vaporised.

  • by Elizabeth Knight