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How religion shapes football fandom
The meaning of football is intertwined with the meaning of faith
Labour’s mercurial kingmaker
The eventful career of Josh Simons, the man who gave up his seat for Andy Burnham
In defence of Lara Bird
There is nothing weird or dishonest about having a dual existence
Why has Keir Starmer been so unpopular?
He was the perfect embodiment of a failing system
The hitch with the Hitch
How Christopher Hitchens brought me back to Christ
The battle between sacred and profane
When the divine law appears to clash with our sense of justice, can it truly be considered divine?
Where is Britain’s vision?
Modern Britain has acquired a lack of national purpose, except for policies that are self-harming
Unusual summer reds
Think exotic spices, maraschino cherries and curly shoes
Saved from the flames
We should feel fortunate indeed to have the Aeneid
The errata of history
Misprints are just one in a catalogue of literary disorders
Will London fall?
If the Greens take London, what might happen to policing?
North Korea’s rogue state development
How Kim Jong Un is embracing the modern world
What the reparations debate says about Britain
Social and ideological shifts mean that we face an increasingly divided future
The sleep of reason
Sir Mark Rowley’s forgotten police thriller reveals the assumptions, anxieties and moral universe of Britain’s managerial elite.
Albion’s re-enactors
Beneath Restore Britain’s rhetoric lies an impulse to retreat from history itself
Women should not have to apologise for their rights
There is nothing cruel about women wanting single-sex spaces
