Dan Cheslett
Dan Cheslett is an English writer.
All the single ladies
Instead of trying to persuade reluctant women into motherhood, policymakers should focus on helping enthusiastic parents have larger families
Auntie’s autumn
Rather than wage war on the Beeb, a Reform government should strip it of its monopoly and force British broadcasting to compete again
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Grooming gangs and the truth
We should not give ammunition to deniers of the grooming gangs scandal
Babies need women
Leaving children with only men who are not their parents is foolish and dangerous
Stop ignoring the Islamisation of our democracy
The British state is bending to Islamism, not attempting to defeat it
Why has Keir Starmer been so unpopular?
He was the perfect embodiment of a failing system
Britain should have voted against reparations
The moral and historical arguments for “reparatory justice” are bogus
Let’s scrap the Table Tax
The state should stop using our cafes, pubs, and restaurants as a cash cow
Fast cars fit for old-school stars
Speed and sophistication once shared the same side of the street
Farewell to an intellectual giant
Patrick Nash pays tribute to the late
David Abulafia, fastidious champion of
Oxbridge’s academic standards
The imprudence of Dame Prue
Dame Prue Leith is spreading errors about assisted suicide
Profile: Alec Douglas-Home
The quintessential Tory grandee who
was the last of his kind: a politician
motivated by service to his country
Too starstruck to see Marilyn’s faults
Only Some Like It Hot endures, though not because of anything Monroe does in it
The truth about the “Quiet Revival”
Churches have been growing in Britain — just not all of them
The lonely death of Henry Nowak
We must draw lessons from a horrendous and disgraceful case
Knowingly crass and conflicted
This American culture is hegemonic because even to steal from it is to propel it
Has the arts sector learned nothing?
Tripling down on identity politics and censoriousness would be fatal
