Genetics
“I’m afraid the news is not good …”
Our confidence in doctor diagnosis is sadly misplaced
Most Read
Gary Stevenson is wrong about wealth taxes
The popular economist is irritating, but more importantly he is mistaken
What is wrong now was wrong before
Julia Gillard should not pretend that the “unintended consequences” of the gender debate were unknowable
Ethnic minorities are abandoning Labour
It is not just Muslim voters who have been abandoning the Labour Party
Remembering 2020
It is important to remember what an irrational and hostile time it was
From the Desk of Lord Kronsteen
When a sketchwriter faces awkward questions, only a billionaire’s dictated letter of support will do
Soft-Play Britain
Britain’s governing class talks of growth and grandeur but focuses on planters and paint schemes
Leaving it all in the ring
The great British bullfighting hopeful, Alexander Paul
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
These green and printed lands
How William Caxton developed Englishness, and how his Englishness is breaking down
The miracle of the magical migrants
Is a man’s identity is fluid when he steps on British soil, but calcified on African soil?
The strange birth of woo-woo
The glitzy LA supermarket chain and the Buddhist food cult behind your wellness smoothie
Zack Polanski’s war on carrots
Cheap food is not evidence of exploitation but of competition — something Adam Smith understood long before Zack Polanski
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
Broken windows
If small instances of disorder are neglected, greater ones will soon be committed
