Since arguing we should show our children tough love if they experience anxiety, I have been accused of “stigmatising” parents and even supporting child abuse. Spare me – it’s math class, not the Battle of the Somme, writes Victorian Shadow Minister for Education Matthew Bach.
The hiring of "sensitivity readers" to trawl through his entire body of work and find words that may offend is the latest salvo in a relentless war on language by those who think they know better than we do, writes Piers Morgan.
The appalling public perception of the royal couple – and what could have been for them – was hilariously summed up by the Comedy Central sitcom, writes Angela Levin.
Since arguing we should show our children tough love if they experience anxiety, I have been accused of “stigmatising” parents and even supporting child abuse. Spare me – it’s math class, not the Battle of the Somme, writes Victorian Shadow Minister for Education Matthew Bach.
The hiring of "sensitivity readers" to trawl through his entire body of work and find words that may offend is the latest salvo in a relentless war on language by those who think they know better than we do, writes Piers Morgan.
US presidents have visited war zones before in Iraq and Afghanistan - but those were very different. They were US wars and visits to areas controlled by the US military, and they didn't risk incurring the wrath of a superpower like Russia, writes Annelise Nielsen.
The appalling public perception of the royal couple – and what could have been for them – was hilariously summed up by the Comedy Central sitcom, writes Angela Levin.
The transfer of US warplanes to Kyiv would almost entirely erase the already fading red line between direct and indirect Western involvement – pushing the Russian leader to adopt end-game tactics in Ukraine, writes Professor Joseph M. Siracusa.
If the Voice is established, the moderates who seek reconciliation will risk losing control of our heritage to the radicals who seek decolonisation, writes Dr. Sherry Sufi.
Siren voices in the West are telling us Putin will inevitably and eventually win the Ukraine war, but both history and military science tell us something very different, writes Nigel Jones.
Not even our classrooms — a place where students should be allowed critical thinking — are exempt from the discouragement of critical thinking on the referendum for an Indigenous Voice, writes Warren Mundine.
Labor's stubborn refusal to fund either side of the Voice debate is a clear sign that Albanese knows his policy can't win solely on its own merits, writes Daisy Cousens.
The UN Secretary-General's warning that the world is heading towards war with its "eyes wide open" isn't far off the mark. Almost everywhere you look Moscow is taunting the West, and doing so very deliberately, writes Alexey Muraviev.
While the US has impounded more than 1,000 shipments of Chinese-made solar panels under the suspicion they were made with forced labour, the Albanese government has been all too silent, writes Nick Cater.
The systematic targeting of those who promote the much-anticipated release is fundamentally ill-liberal and gives fans the false impression they should be ashamed of themselves simply for playing a video game, writes Nicholas Sheppard.
For Nikki Haley to emerge as the Republican candidate, she he will have to fight her way through a crowded field with no real blueprint to follow, writes Annelise Nielsen.
The withdrawal from Ukraine will share the same feeling of regret - that sense that America overcommitted to a war it had no business winning - as the conclusion of the US combat role in south-east Asia, writes Professor Joseph M. Siracusa.
Stefanovic visited Taiwan to find out how prepared the island nation is for a Chinese invasion as part of a special investigation for the new Sky News Australia documentary Are We Ready For War?
For US President Biden to barely mention Ukraine in his annual State of the Union address on Tuesday night is as disappointing as the German Chancellor shamefully rejecting President Zelensky's urgent request for fighter jets, writes Piers Morgan.
Biden's rhetorical remark, asking if there's a leader in the world “who'd change places with Xi Jinping”, was the kind of hard ball flourish that will put the Chinese Communist Party on notice, writes Stephen Loosley.
Dressing up as Satan in a red tunic while dancers performed a devil-worshipping ritual around him did nothing but make a mockery of the political beliefs of the 210 million Christians in the US, writes Piers Morgan.
The President on Tuesday will talk about his plans to tackle inflation and climate change. But he will be delivering his speech in the shadow of a big, Chinese balloon that many say he took way too long to shoot down, writes Annelise Nielsen.
China's surveillance balloon was a giant middle finger to America, and the subsequent US response now sets the stage for the communist power to retaliate in the world's most contested airspace, writes Professor Joseph M. Siracusa.