Blenheim Palace
An elegant advocate for Van the man
John Vanbrugh: The Drama of Architecture by Charles Saumarez Smith
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The Book of JO’B
James O’Brien’s aggressive incuriosity is becoming ever more embattled as his worldview crumbles
The rise and fall of Nicola Sturgeon
The former SNP leader squandered her talents in a classic tale of hubris
Fear and fury in Belfast
Violence spiralled out of control in Northern Ireland in the aftermath of a shocking crime
The screaming spires
Oxford University must clarify where it stands on academic freedom
Nigel Farage, community leader
The logic of multiculturalism is turning on its architects
The resistible centrism of Mark Gatiss
Why a centre-left worldview struggles to understand dissent
Why we should explore space
Space exploration lifts the human spirit: rather than asking “Why?”, we should ask “Why not?”
The right-wing case for social media
X and other platforms can be vital sources of unfashionable information and dissenting opinions
The great recoupling
Our politicians have a bizarre sense of costs and benefits when it comes to energy
Graphics, games and occult entities
A retrospective of Treister’s work reveals the frictions in the artist’s motivations
Scotland’s cold and durable fire
John Swinney is proving that in politics what matters most is simply showing up
Indefinite leave, unlimited access
While Westminster fixates on survival, a deeper battle will decide whether mass migration becomes a permanent and costly feature of the state
The Muslim modernisers
Muslim reformers do not innovate; they renew by seeking to mend what is broken
Warm home, wrong decision
Ministers are once again choosing the most politically convenient response to rising energy costs, not the most effective one
The problem of midwit misinformation
Iran, insurance and how smart people lose sight of the truth
Stella Creasy hates questions
For many politicians, being disagreed with is proof that they are right
