One of the most surprising doctrines in Australian property law is adverse possession, sometimes referred to in popular language as "squatters' rights." To many people it appears almost unbelievable. How, they ask, can someone lose ownership of land simply because another person has occupied it for many years? Surely a registered title should be ab...
The doctrine of adverse possession, introduced in part 1, raises a question far deeper than boundary fences and limitation periods. It asks what property actually is. Does ownership arise because a government records your name on a certificate of title? Or does it arise because you possess, maintain, improve and productively use the land? These two...
A recent report from The Vigilant Fox has reignited controversy in the US over the hidden origins of flavour enhancers in everyday processed foods, raising uncomfortable questions about whether US consumers are unknowingly complicit in research derived from aborted foetal tissue. Some flavour compounds developed through this type of research have b...
The European Union has once again demonstrated its remarkable ability to bypass democratic resistance in pursuit of greater control over its citizens' private communications. In a recent episode that should alarm anyone concerned with civil liberties, the European Parliament effectively imposed an extension of the bloc's mass electronic surveillanc...
Nutrition advice has become remarkably good at telling us what to avoid. We are warned about excessive sugar, processed foods, trans fats, alcohol, and excess calories. Over the decades, fat has been condemned and partly rehabilitated, eggs have moved from dietary villain to respectable food, and carbohydrates have alternated between essential fuel...
The enduring question of why civilisations collapse has generated numerous influential theories. Oswald Spengler portrayed civilisations as organic entities progressing through life cycles of birth, maturity, decline, and death. Arnold Toynbee argued that civilisations flourish or fail according to how successfully they respond to challenges, with ...
Lee Kuan Yew (LKY) built one of the most extraordinary success stories in modern history. Expelled from the Malaysian Federation in 1965, Singapore stood as a vulnerable, resource-poor island plagued by unemployment, slums, and racial tensions. Through disciplined governance, meritocracy, anti-corruption drives, strategic openness to global capital...
Reports have emerged that Israeli intelligence warned the United States of a fresh Iranian plot to assassinate President Donald Trump; but what was US intelligence doing? Whether every detail of the intelligence ultimately proves accurate remains for investigators to determine, and the public will never know. Intelligence assessments are, after all...
Senator Joseph McCarthy remains one of the most reviled figures in modern American history, the very symbol of paranoid witch-hunting and reckless accusation. The term "McCarthyism" has become shorthand for baseless persecution, career destruction, and anti-intellectual hysteria. Yet a growing body of historical reassessment suggests the convention...
The Spectator recently highlighted a phenomenon many have observed with growing unease: America remains firmly in the grip of gerontocracy. Elderly leaders, some well into their eighties, continue to dominate the highest offices, clinging to power long after their physical and mental prime. Joe Biden's tenure, marked by visible decline, was only th...
The case of Päivi Räsänen has become one of Europe's most closely watched freedom of speech and religious liberty cases because it sits at the intersection of hate speech law, religious expression, and the limits of public debate. The controversy began in 2019 when Räsänen, a medical doctor, long-serving member of the Finnish Parliament, and former...
When most people think about the human body, they picture a single organism. We imagine ourselves as independent individuals, bounded by our skin and directed by our own DNA. Modern biology, however, is steadily dismantling this simple picture. Increasingly, scientists are discovering that each of us is less like a solitary organism and more like a...
Justin Trudeau has long mastered the art of the spectacle, turning Canadian politics into a never-ending parade of selfies, costumes, and performative gestures. The latest instalment, captured in Katy Perry's new video where the former prime minister hops around like an over-caffeinated rabbit, perfectly encapsulates the man's transformation from s...
With the passing of Derryn Hinch at the age of 82, Australia has lost one of its most controversial, fearless and unmistakable media personalities. The "Human Headline" was never a journalist who blended quietly into the background. He preferred to be at the centre of the storm, confronting politicians, judges, bureaucrats and criminals and paedoph...
A recent legal development in Australia signals a dangerous new front in the climate wars: the push for climate reparations. What began as symbolic virtue-signalling and international talking points is morphing into concrete legal and financial liabilities that could impose massive costs on Australian taxpayers, industries, and future generations. ...
Election seasons are filled with hyperbolic claims: "This is the most extreme candidate ever!" Both sides say it. But let's skip the rhetoric and run the experiment properly. Strip away the marketing, ignore the pragmatic compromises, and follow pure progressive ideology to its terminal velocity. What does the Ultimate Super-Duper Left Candidate ac...
The language of "betrayal" is common in critiques of globalist elites, who embody the transnational ruling class. It suggests a tragic fall from grace, as if these leaders once stood with their nations and peoples before selling them out. A clearer-eyed view recognizes something more fundamental: many of these elites were never truly on the side of...
Angus Taylor's recent speech attacking Pauline Hanson and One Nation frames the latter as the source of division and an "eternity of pain" for Australian politics. It is a familiar establishment line: paint principled dissenters on immigration, energy, and sovereignty as the real extremists while the major parties present themselves as sensible adu...
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's warm embrace of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, complete with major advances on trade, defence cooperation, and strategic alignment, marks another step in Australia's accelerating pivot toward India. Gifts on trade deals and security pacts sound pragmatic on the surface, diversifying away from China, tapping a...
A British lawmaker recently laid it out plainly on Joe Rogan's podcast: the systematic grooming, rape, and trafficking of thousands of vulnerable young girls in the UK was deliberately downplayed, ignored, and covered up for years, largely because confronting the perpetrators would upset the migrant vote and shatter the illusions of multiculturalis...
