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Opinion

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James Tedesco and Jared Waerea-Hargreaves.
Opinion
NRL 2024

However you slice it, it’s inevitable which teams are going to make the grand final

The Roosters and Sharks have to throw convention out the door if they’re to trouble the two premiership heavyweights.

  • by Andrew Johns

Latest

Sydney Swans fans celebrate after the siren against Port Adelaide.

Why a Swans win on Saturday will just be part of the natural order

Sydney won’t be shocked when the Swans win the AFL grand final. We’re just better at Aussie rules than anyone, especially Victorians.

  • by Peter FitzSimons
Peter Dutton is often short on detail.

Dutton has a peculiar obsession with details. Perhaps he could offer some of his own

We know Peter Dutton likes calling for details. It’s become his familiar response to just about anything the government puts up. But when it comes to his plan for a nuclear revolution? Well ...

  • by Shaun Carney

I cannot believe the number of fashion faux pas I’ve committed over the years

What was I thinking? Did I even have a mirror? Was I simply being sartorially satirical? Tongue-in-chic?

  • by Kathy Lette
LETTERS
Letters

Tweaking negative gearing can help everyone

Age readers respond to moves by Labor to change negative gearing.

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‘He will have a bit of a point to prove’: This Saturday, the time is right for Brodie Grundy to deliver

The timing was right for Sydney to secure Grundy, and the timing has been right for Grundy, who not only finds himself at a club that wants his style of ruckman, but faces an opposition that has lost its first-choice ruck.

  • by Michael Gleeson
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Opinion
Style

This old thing? It’s from that golden time before life got real

We all romanticise the past. Clearing out the wardrobe brings rose-coloured memories – and the occasional jolt.

  • by Genevieve Novak
Solomon Lew has placed spin-off of Smiggle and Peter Alexander on ice.

Top of Solomon Lew’s hit list – the government and executive defectors

The retail billionaire joins a long list of big-end-of-town businessmen who have taken issue with how Labor is performing.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Kalyn Ponga.
Analysis
NRL 2024

If Ponga is serious about winning a title at the Knights, it’s time to wear the green and gold

Kalyn Ponga’s stated ambition is to prioritise a premiership with Newcastle. His best chance of doing that is playing for Australia.

  • by Adrian Proszenko
Housing market

Negative gearing isn’t the cause of our housing crisis, so curbing it isn’t the solution

Widely perceived as a tax rort that has blown up our housing market, the objective truth is it is nothing of the sort.

  • by Steven Hamilton
Sydney school student Charlotte, aged 12, took her own life.
Opinion
Bullying

To protect the Charlottes of this world, we need to call bullying what it is – violence

We can’t afford to lose any more kids to suicide. So we must ditch our limited definition of bullying.

  • by Jenna Price
People gather at the scene of a building that was hit by an Israeli airstrike in Beirut’s southern suburbs.

Why Israel and Hezbollah won’t say they are at war

Israeli officials say they are not seeking war with Hezbollah and that it can be avoided. Hezbollah also says it doesn’t want a war but is prepared for one.

  • by Joseph Krauss
President Xi Jinping needs to step in to save China’s economy from falling into a deflationary spiral.

China’s government is MIA as central bank tries to save its economy

The People’s Bank of China has unleashed a blitz of measures to try to prop up a faltering economy and sinking sharemarket. But those alone won’t be enough.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
A mural in the centre of Erie, a bellwether town in a bellwether county.

Why my small town in Pennsylvania will decide the US election

Both Harris and Trump know that the road to the White House not only runs through swing states, but through swing counties like mine, too.

  • by Sarah Smiles Persinger
Steve Smith is caught by Brydon Carse.
Analysis
ODI

Why Head was kept in cotton wool and Cummins stayed home

Travis Head was missing from Australia’s first losing ODI team in nearly a year on the same day Pat Cummins made his return to bowling on the other side of the globe

  • by Daniel Brettig
Financial conflict in a relationship is often a symptom of a deeper problem.

My partner loves to spend, but I love to save. What should I do?

Financial conflict in a relationship is often a symptom of a deeper problem, so take a step back and figure out what’s really going on.

  • by Paridhi Jain
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Topping up your super can be beneficial, but it’s important to ascertain if it makes financial sense.

I’m just about to turn 75. Is it too late to top up my super?

Topping up your super can be beneficial, but it’s important to ascertain if it makes financial sense.

  • by Noel Whittaker
Bulldogs coach Luke Beveridge placed his premiership medal around injured skipper Bob Murphy’s neck after the 2016 grand final. Easton Wood (centre) was the acting captain on the day.

Premiership pickle: Why all the winning club’s players – not just the 23 – should get a medal

After the grand final, all the winning club’s players should be given a medal as acknowledgement for what great teams are – a collective. A gang. One.

  • by Bob Murphy

The cruellest part? Coles and Woolworths appeared to target battlers

In their duopoly, the big supermarkets have a licence to print money, which is premised on them not bleeding the Australian public dry.

  • by Allan Fels

What the big parties aren’t telling you about their housing ‘fixes’

We all want the housing crisis to be solved, but as a society, we’ve painted ourselves into a corner. The truth is, there are no easy solutions.

  • by Ross Gittins
The All Blacks perform the haka in Sydney.
Opinion
Wallabies

Did the Wallabies just miss their best chance to end Bledisloe drought?

A generation of kids has grown up without seeing Australia win the Bledisloe Cup. What is the future of the famous contest?

  • by Iain Payten
If Prime Minister Anthony Albanese wants to change negative gearing, he’ll need to fight for it. But it could be the right call.

If Albanese wants this fight, he’ll need to gear up for a big one

Negative gearing is a totemic policy because of the way any attempt at reform can be turned into an assault on aspiration or a scare about a tax grab.

  • by David Crowe
Letters
Letters

Inflation at checkout all the supermarkets’ fault?

Readers respond to the supermarket price manipulation claims, the footy and Peter Dutton’s nuclear policy.

Police on the scene in 1977.
Opinion
Crime

Easey Street arrest a credit to new technology and long-standing dedication

That this investigation was kept in motion through decades and may now finally deliver justice is proof of the progress in policing.

  • by The Age's View
Is childcare good for kids?
Analysis
Childcare

What the evidence says about whether we should send kids to childcare

Many parents feel guilty about outsourcing the care of their children, but it turns out childcare may actually help child development.

  • by Liam Mannix
Gisèle Pelicot, left, and her ex-husband Dominique Pelicot, right, during his rape trial, at the Avignon courthouse, in Avignon, southern France.
Opinion
Crime

I’ve treated too many men like Pelicot to be horrified by the French mass rape

As a forensic psychologist, I have encountered many sexual predators. All found ways to justify their acts. Conversations about consent and “rape culture” would not have prevented these horrific crimes.

  • by Ahona Guha
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Australian households could well be paying quite a cost for the high level of concentration in the marketplace, which can result in higher prices, weaker wages, less innovation, and less productivity.
Opinion
Inflation

Thought the pandemic made us miserable? Here’s why we’re more miserable now

“Australians are living through the most protracted period of economic misery since 2011,” says economic think tank CEDA.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu sits in a military vehicle during his Rafah visit.

Why Hezbollah’s best hope is for Israel to invade Lebanon

After October 7, Israel is not interested in red lines, and tragically, Lebanon will probably come to know the horror of that.

  • by David Livingstone
ARL boss Peter V’landys.

Racing’s war is over, but V’landys says Victoria has given NSW something new to worry about

The racing wars might be over, and his brainchild, the Everest, on the verge of being handed group 1 status, but Racing NSW boss Peter V’landys fears he finally has some competition.

  • by Danny Russell
In reality, brokers and investing platforms all do the same thing. There are far more important things to put your mind to.

Want to invest well? Stop fussing over fees and fancy apps

In reality, brokers and investing platforms all do the same thing. There are far more important things to put your mind to.

  • by Glen James
OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman.
Opinion
AI

The $22 trillion question hanging over Wall Street

Some of the world’s biggest technology investors have lined up to bet on artificial intelligence pioneer OpenAI. They will be banking on a big return.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
Marcus Bontempelli, Nick Daicos and Patrick Cripps at the 2024 Brownlow.

Cripps dominates, but was this really the greatest season ever played?

From Patrick Cripps’ record vote haul, to the stars who missed out, to the umpires and even whether the count itself dragged on for too long, we take a look at the key issues from the AFL’s night of nights.

  • by Jon Pierik
Tony Popovic.

Socceroos players may be anxious about Popovic, and that’s a good thing

It is fascinating that Football Australia has opted to swing heavily back towards an authoritarian managerial approach more like that of Ange Postecoglou.

  • by Emma Kemp
 Daniel Ricciardo
Analysis
Formula 1

Daniel Ricciardo’s big mistake in F1, and why he never made it to the top

He was the master of the big, bold overtake, but there was one issue that stopped the Australian from being world champion.

  • by Gary Anderson

OK, Colesworth, here’s how to repay the $11,250,000 you swindled from me

Since I don’t have the staying power for the ACCC’s upcoming federal court battle with you, here’s what we’re going to do.

  • by Michelle Cazzulino

Was Biden’s ‘hot mic’ China warning OTT? New footage of this mid-air bullying suggests not

The Australian government speaks reassuringly of a “stabilised” relationship with Beijing. China’s national broadcaster portrays a very different state of affairs.

  • by Peter Hartcher
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Luke Keary fronts the media on Monday.
Opinion
NRL 2024

The play that proved Keary is running the Roosters again

In his final days in the red, white and blue, and with halfback Sam Walker sidelined, the veteran half has emerged as their most important player.

  • by Andrew Webster
The Sydney Swans will face the Brisbane Lions in the 2024 AFL Grand Final.

Why every Victorian should be celebrating a double interstate AFL grand final

When the Brisbane Lions take on the Sydney Swans at the home of football this weekend, it will essentially be a FIFO event. And we could use a bit of their magic.

  • by Jason Murphy
Letters
Letters

The importance of playing fair

Readers respond to the Brownlow Medal voting system, the Gaza war and parking fees for visitors to the regions.

The former Beaumaris Hotel has been converted into apartments.

Once beautiful but neglected: My ‘Cinderella’ suburb is Melbourne’s mid-century belle

My parents’ first date in the 1950s was at a party in my now home suburb. The area was popular at the time with creative types such as writers, artists, actors, fashion designers.

  • by Fiona Austin
ACCC is taking action against Coles and Woolworths’ pricing strategies.

Deceptive discounts: Supermarkets going ‘Down Down’ for misleading customers

The ACCC alleges the lower-for-longer price discounts on everyday products from Coles and Woolworths were psychological bait.

  • by Elizabeth Knight
The AI craze has surprised Wall Street forecasters and spurred a race among strategists to keep up with a sharemarket rally.

Why this famous recession predictor might be wrong this time

A closely watched indicator is signalling that the US is on track to avoid a recession. But these are anything but normal times.

  • by Stephen Bartholomeusz
A review of Australia’s food and grocery regulations will consider increasing financial penalties on the nation’s supermarket giants for bad behaviour.
Analysis
Supermarkets

Coles and Woolies could be the perfect inflation villains

Everyone in this country relies in some way on the major supermarkets. It’s nigh on impossible to avoid them.

  • by Shane Wright

‘October surprises’ have changed US elections. Will they ruin Kamala Harris’ chances?

Vladimir Putin and Benjamin Netanyahu have calculated that their national and political interests will be much better served with Donald Trump in the White House.

  • by Bruce Wolpe
Business Council of Australia chief Bran Black (right) told Anthony Albanese corporate leaders think the country is “losing our way”.

How to avoid being conned by lobby groups using you to pressure the government

The recent onslaught from big business against Anthony Albanese is an example of lobbyists trying to pressure the government via the voters.

  • by Ross Gittins
Manly’s Tolu Koula on the ground concussed after the kick-off.
Opinion
NRL 2024

After the Koula concussion, the NRL’s cookie-cutter kick-offs need to change

The Manly centre was knocked out seconds into a must-win semi-final trying to tackle a man 20kg heavier. It’s time coaches think about their approach to the kick-off.

  • by Adam Pengilly
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Waiting for Albo: Is the PM really timid, or just tactical?

Everyone is treading water in this inflationary environment, wanting something, anything, to happen. In such circumstances, Anthony Albanese’s prudence is, well, prudent.

  • by Sean Kelly
Isaac Heeney at training in Sydney on Sunday ahead of the grand final.

Best, not fairest: Why the Heeney ban exposes an outdated Brownlow

When one considers the roll call of players who’ve won Brownlows, “fairest” was not close to an accurate description of a number of those champions.

  • by Jake Niall
Kensington Palace released a video featuring Prince William, Princess Catherine and their children enjoying idyllic family activities, including playing cards with their grandparents.

Family game night made me realise I have more in common with the royals than I thought

The truth is, we all know a family like the Middletons. But not only do I know one of these families – I am in one.

  • by Shona Hendley
Donald Trump dances after speaking at a campaign rally at Wilmington International Airport.

The porn scandal and the ‘Black Nazi’ Trump says is ‘better than Martin Luther King’

The Mark Robinson porn site scandal has come at a perfect time for Kamala Harris and the Democrats.

  • by Tony Diver