Spies Like Us: why the Government is still backing Woodside over Timor-LesteBy Rex Patrick | April 5, 2024Two decades after the Howard Government spied on Timor-Leste’s seabed boundary negotiating team, the Albanese ...
Songbirds and snakes. How to end the ‘Hunger Games’ of housing affordabilityBy Harry Chemay | April 3, 2024In this final instalment of the Housing Hunger Games series, Harry Chemay identifies all policy culprits and all ...
Censors Enthroned: the Misinformation and Disinformation BillBy Binoy Kampmark | April 3, 2024Should the government decide what news is appropriate, and what is not, for its people? "The sirens should be ...
Fake news or no news? The folly of the News Media Bargaining CodeBy Kim Wingerei | April 2, 2024Meta's announcement that Facebook will no longer pay (some) Australian publishers for their news content has again ...
No justice, and nowhere to go for the victims of Myanmar’s forgotten genocideBy Farah Abdurahman | April 1, 2024The holocaust in Gaza has eclipsed the long-standing genocide of the Rohingya people of Myanmar, 569 of whom died ...
Investigation: powerbroker Mark Leibler and Australia’s Zionist connections with Israel’s defence webBy Jommy Tee | March 31, 2024Australia giving Israel's bomb-maker Elbit Systems a $917m defence contract is just the latest in a long history ...
Has Four Corners done the Government’s dirty work in the David McBride prosecution?By Stuart McCarthy | March 30, 2024Why did ABC's Four Corners undermine the war crimes David McBride helped to expose? And why those with ultimate ...
Silent Bill Killer: who pillages Australians hardest? It ain’t groceries or power bills, and profits are up 534%By Joel Gibson | March 29, 2024If you reckon Woolies and Coles, Energy Australia or AGL are the worst culprits on cost of living, think again. ...
The Big Two: winemakers squeezed from both sides by Coles and WoolworthsBy Zacharias Szumer | March 28, 2024When dealing with the Liquorlands and Dan Murphys of this world, winemakers can be stuck between a rock and a hard ...
Big Sugar, Big Pharma: Sydney University compromised by academic research breachBy Andrew Gardiner | March 27, 2024Sydney University has stonewalled claims of failing to police serious conflicts of interest in its academic ...
US isolated on Israel’s Gaza massacre – only nation to abstain UN ceasefire voteBy Farah Abdurahman | March 26, 2024Tensions between the US and Israel escalated overnight when the US abstained from voting for an immediate ...
Housing Hunger Games: negative gearing catching fireBy Harry Chemay | March 25, 2024The Budget will soon show the booming transfer of more wealth via negative gearing to the already wealthy. Harry ...
Red Dawn or Red Daze? Abetz and Hastie ‘Wolverines’ hurt Australia’s interests in attacks on ChinaBy Robert Barwick | March 24, 2024A cabal of neo-conservative, anti-China politicians who call themselves the Wolverines, a nod to the 1980s Patrick ...
How fake gas frights and fanciful forecasts keep fossil fuels burning for longerBy Michael West | March 22, 2024High prices have crushed the consumption of gas, yet government and industry forecasters claim gas use will triple ...
Rex Patrick’s Federal Court win a victory for transparency and a loss for government secrecyBy Rex Patrick | March 21, 2024Does a change to a new Minister kill an ongoing FOI to the old Minister? Can a replaced Minister’s dirt be swept ...