Aldi
Zack Polanski’s war on carrots
Cheap food is not evidence of exploitation but of competition — something Adam Smith understood long before Zack Polanski
Most Read
The Book of JO’B
James O’Brien’s aggressive incuriosity is becoming ever more embattled as his worldview crumbles
I don’t trust the British state
British institutions simply are not functioning in the interests of the people they are meant to serve
The rise and fall of Nicola Sturgeon
The former SNP leader squandered her talents in a classic tale of hubris
Nigel Farage, community leader
The logic of multiculturalism is turning on its architects
The screaming spires
Oxford University must clarify where it stands on academic freedom
The hidden bureaucracy shaping Britain’s university curriculum
Putting an end to ideological capture must start with the Quality Assurance Agency
The shadow of the thorn tree
Christian culture must combine tradition and modernity
A second Northern Ireland?
How the SNP squandered a major opportunity for independence
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
Manic and messianic
The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui, Royal Shakespeare Company
The great recoupling
Our politicians have a bizarre sense of costs and benefits when it comes to energy
Eat less chicken
Industrial farming is bad for the environment but it is also cruel
A culture of death
Street gangs and online provocation are fuelling a morbid subculture in British life
Boriswave denialism
Britain’s ruling class has used dependence on cheap labour as an economic strategy, and cannot see any other option
