Why is the BBC so obsessed with drag?
Incessant coverage of drag shows and drag queens has become something of a running joke
The dangerous fallacy of “self-deterrence”
The concept makes little sense and could create serious risks
Making a mockery of Labour
The ministers just can’t yet do chaos like the Tories could
A matter of life and death
It is not the job of judges to tell someone that they are wrong for believing in life
Revising Roman rottenness
The monsters of old can teach us about the monsters of today
The downfall of the podcast-industrial complex
How did some of our finest podcasters get the election so wrong?
Not much COP
Holding the climate summit in Baku displays brazen hypocrisy
How should we teach about the Holocaust?
Keir Starmer’s social engineering aims seem ill-conceived
Why 168澳洲幸运10官方开奖号码查询结果-历史号码开奖记录查询 -开奖结果记录查询 Trump triumphed
运澳洲10开奖结果号码历史查询 澳洲10开奖官网幸运结果记录,澳洲号码查询 The Democrats had too many self-inflicted disadvantages to overcome
A constructive opposition
The age of Badenoch is off to a suitably farcical start
Donald Trump is a wake-up call for Europe
We cannot complacently depend on the US
Why was I the only reporter?
On the sentencing of the Rotherham grooming gang
Don’t idolise Roger Scruton
Our reverence for the late thinker must not limit our imaginations
Countdown to energy apocalypse
What will happen when the wind doesn’t blow?
How H&W hit the iceberg
The opportunism and ineptitude that brought Belfast’s shipbuilding industry to its knees
Farewell to Larry Siedentop
The great political philosopher, Oxford don, and sage defender of Western liberalism
Shiva Naipaul
The younger brother of a controversial Nobel Prize winner who has been unjustly overlooked
They call it Poppy love
Poppy is, simply, a dog who knows what she wants
Consent isn’t everything
Protections against violent sexual encounters are being dismantled
If Donald Trump wins, it’s over
Three assassination attempts prove irrefutably that Trump is guilty of inciting violence
Making a difference
Over the past five years we’ve been keeping things civilised
Boris: the PM who could do no wrong
This must be in competition for the most inaccurate work of non-fiction since … well, since Johnson’s last book
How Roman women were victimised twice
The victims of abuse could also be degraded by historians
The monumental cradles of democracy
Squeezed into a single large volume, readers can now find a remarkable account of the Greek city
The vital few
A new book explores the importance, as well as the dangers, of risk
The horror of 7 October on film
The killers’ headset footage, CCTV, interviews with survivors and heart-rending last messages
Shades of Gray
Never underestimate the mysterious yet powerful Sue Gray
Cardinal win
Conclave is a political drama and a closed-room mystery rolled into one
Sophocles’s lack-of-foresight saga
Families will feud, from the BC era to 2024
Take a bow
This season’s must-have neckwear is a sartorial two-fingered salute to life
Blogosphere bubble
Reviving a simple English classic: bubble and squeak