Extremely Online
Information rage
Jacob Siegel’s new book The Information State is profound and troubling
Most Read
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 misfits of Middagh Street
What a bunch: gifted and impossible to live with
Beware the British ICE
Mass deportation of Muslims will not solve antisemitism, but feed feelings of alienation
The EU must change course on energy
European industry is finally standing up to irrational EU climate policies
Paean to a green and pleasant land
The finest living example of that perennial English type, the countryman-writer
Kemi always gets it right
Whatever the crisis, the Conservative leader invariably discovers that events have vindicated her.
Sport’s regime changes
Canadian snooker has gone the way of Hungarian table tennis
Knowingly crass and conflicted
This American culture is hegemonic because even to steal from it is to propel it
Standing up for cultural freedom
We must follow the example of brave artists who oppose censorship
The artist formerly known as Nero
The life and death of Rome’s last Julio-Claudian emperor revealed every Roman fear about the dangers of one-man rule
Countryside counter-attack
A ban on trail hunting reveals a government more interested in cultural punishment than rural survival
