One Battle After Another
The film of the year?
One Battle After Another is a marker for the rest of the industry
Most Read
The establishment is still living in an immigration fantasy land
It is influential left-wingers, not the broader public, who have deluded themselves on mass migration
American strategy in Iran is wiser than it seems
President Trump’s intervention will leave the world safer than it was
Saint Nicola
Nicola Sturgeon wants sympathy for her husband’s crimes—but after years spent avoiding awkward questions, her latest reinvention may be the hardest sell yet.
On Britain as a capitalist command economy
It is neither neoliberal nor socialist but a secret third thing
Rewatching the English
English identity has become too surreal and discomfiting to define
Brave new world or fools’ paradise?
For Dubai’s quarter of a million British expats, the Iran war is a mere blip in a luxurious lifestyle
Manchesterism is dead in the water
Andy Burnham already appears to have abandoned hope for meaningful change
When imitation is more then just flattery
An informative and entertaining history of plagiarism in its many forms
The case against Project Spire
The Church of England should abandon this misleading and expensive exercise in virtue signalling
The revolt against the public
The establishment cannot accept ordinary citizens having power
Where are all the ambitious Scots?
Whole sectors were once dominated by Caledonian migrants
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
Brexit was not an act of economic self-harm
Whatever you have heard, UK-EU trade is doing just fine
Why do we still have social housing?
A decade working in Social Housing taught me that the sector’s perverse incentives guarantee the perpetuation of the very poverty it exists to eradicate
A magnificent navy on land
The state of the British Armed Forces triumphantly vindicates Parkinson’s Law
QAnon for centrist dads
Peter Chappell’s What If Reform Wins is less a political forecast than a Westminster panic attack in novel form
