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My month in the classroom – Issue XXIII
The Government continually expects teachers to deal with problems of its (the Government's) making.
Pandexit, please: The need for a Covid end date – Issue XXIII
The rolling Covid mandates and restrictions sidestep the most important question: what is the end-game?
Vaccine passports are here, no matter what the Government might say – Issue XXIII
Our busy body elite loves nothing more than to tell people what to do and to allow government to restrict the freedoms of the people.
A murder most foul: Olly Stephens and the scandal that never was – Issue XXIII
The life of a boy was taken, not just by the boys who took it, or by the girl who lured him, but by the culture which corrupted their minds and made them capable of a murder most foul.
The wording matters – Issue XXIII
'Reporting' on the vaccination of healthy teenagers has been riddled with the addition of certain (totally unnecessary) words that are very likely to have shifted the views of their readers.
Bob Dylan versus the philistines – Issue XXII
The babyish tantrum-mongers have convinced the world that their outbursts are the embodiment of civil rights courage, so that anyone who expresses any doubt about the official version of 'trending' case is treated as an apologist for evil itself.
How do we protect our green and pleasant land? More conservatism – Issue XXII
If we get to ‘net zero’ while crippling our economy, we are likely to end up facing the results of climate change caused by other nations while lacking the financial ability to adapt to our changing situation.
The futility of protest – Issue XXII
The success or failure of a protest movement is predetermined. The regime has the ability to make the good bad and the bad good.
Children of Saturn: A youth broken by lockdown – Issue XXII
Without solid evidence of a student's academic ability, universities are worried about grade inflation, and this generation is unfairly stuck with that shadow looming over them for the rest of their lives.
Looking through the haze – Issue XXII
It is not the non-existent 'war on drugs' that has failed; it's de facto decriminalisation.
A review of ‘The Producers’, Mel Brooks – Issue XXII
Mel Brooks is undoubtedly the godfather of parody films.
A review of ‘Dreams From My Father’, Barack Obama – Issue XXII
Obama can tell a story, but he does so with just the ordinary competence of an educated man and the ordinary prejudices of any other man.
Long distance train travel? It's equal parts romance and torture – Issue XXII
Flying from city to city can make you believe that the world is just urban drabness. See the world roll by from the train, however, and you appreciate just how vast things are.
The real education scandal – Issue XXII
In the world of Covid hysteria, we did everything we could to ensure pupils reached their target grade, even to the point of telling kids their work wasn't "an accurate reflection" of their ability and having them do the test again.
How the Tartan Trump gets away with it – Issue XXII
Why have our journalists not been driven to blind rage by Orange Woman Bad syndrome? If Trump was 'Cheeto Hitler', isn't the similarly coloured Mrs Sturgeon 'Irn Bru Mugabe'?
The heritage sector's attack on our history – Issue XXII
When the National Trust is blacklisting its own properties due to links to colonialism, something is rotten in the leadership of the heritage sector.