Op-eds


Politicians take it to the op-ed pages

Politicians have always published op-eds but could the latest flurry of opinion pieces — Wilson Tuckey, Tony Abbott, Penny Wong — signal a change in how political communication takes place?

Abbott: This ETS shall come to pass

The government’s Emissions Trading Scheme is poor policy, says Tony Abbott in an op-ed for The Oz, but the Coalition would risk making it even worse by blocking it in the Senate.

ALSO

Does the world need a UN army?

The growing demand for international peacekeeping forces in places like Somalia means it is time finally to bite the bullet and give the UN a permanent, standing military capacity, argues Gideon Rachman.

From the desk of Ben Bernanke…

Currently in DC testifying before Congress, US Fed chief Ben Bernanke took some time out to pen an overview of his thoughts for the WSJ, outlining his plan for an exit strategy from the stimulus package.

Boris Johnson: We’re too spineless to walk on Mars

Britain needs to harden the f- up, or we’ll never see man walk on Mars, rambles London Mayor Boris Johnston in an op-ed for the Telegraph. More astronauts in schools!

Why Americans aren’t feeling stimulated

The $787 billion stimulus package crafted by Obama’s administration wasn’t engineered to maximize its economic impact. It was mostly a political exercise. That’s why it’s not working, says Robert Samuelson.

The cultural cringe of publishing industry protectionism

Scrapping parallel import restrictions ruin the Australian publishing industry, says Tim Wilson: it will be killed by “cultural cringe” from authors and publishers who want to stop it being globally competitive.

How Hollywood is neutering America

When teen sex symbols are being generated by clean and chaste films like Twilight and Harry Potter, you know there’s a problem.

Why journalism degrees should be scrapped

Journalism is not a profession like engineering, medicine or even law, says journalist Richard Sine: you can pick up most media skills on the job, and no-one dies if you stuff-up. Wannabe reporters would be better off honing their skills out in the real world.

Sarah Palin’s WashPo op-ed

In an opinion piece for the Washington Post, soon-to-be-former Alaska governor Sarah Palin makes her case against Obama’s cap-and-trade energy plan.

Palin and the politics of resentment

Sarah Palin’s combative resignation soliloquy, though much mocked by prognosticators of all political persuasions, has an equally vociferous and more powerful constituency, argues Frank Rich.

Why Twitter deserves the Nobel Peace Prize

Twitter’s role as a window to Iran in the fallout of the country’s presidential election warrants consideration for the Nobel Peace Prize, argues Mark Pfeifle. In other news: a thousand “social media commentators” just wet themselves.

Shafer: we’re entering a golden age of journalism

Just because the journalism business is going to hell, it doesn’t mean that journalism isn’t thriving, says Slate’s Jack Shafer — the technology at our disposal today would have the hacks of yesteryear salivating.

How Politico conquered Washington

Politico was launched as a short-term project by two print journalists to cover the 2008 presidential campaign — but it continues to prosper and defy all expectations, feeding an audience of six million ‘obsessives and insiders” every day. It is, says Michael Wolff a glimpse at the future of the media.

Tomorrow, when the climate war began

Climate change will kill us all, writes The Guardian’s James Lovelock — that is, unless we can find a ‘climate Churchill’ to lead us through an imminent climate war. Lord Kitchener must be feeling kinda left out.

Wolff: How many more years did Madoff get for being Jewish?

Bernie Madoff is Jewish. Most of the people he ripped off are Jewish. Did it affect his sentencing? Michael Wolff sure reckons so.

Politicians who vote against climate change guilty of treason

So the House passed the Waxman-Markey climate-change bill. Great, says Paul Krugman. But as for the 212 representatives who tried to say no, they’ve offended the planet.

Jackson coverage was overkill

American entertainment bows to what economists call “consumer sovereignty,” and Jackson’s popularity was a clear example of that, writes Tom Rutten. Still, the media had more important issues to discuss.

WaPo aims two necon guns at Barack Obama’s Iran policy

The Washington Post’s increasingly strident op-ed page offers a double-barreled neocon assault on President Obama’s Iran position today by Charles Krauthammer and Paul Wolfowitz. Joe Klein weighs in.

Bolt: Gillard will soon be the Aussie Margaret Thatcher

Julia Gillard, once a leader of the Socialist Forum, is now butting heads with the unions — and that’s exactly how she wants it, says Andrew Bolt.

Why I hate social media

Ad-man Matt Jones sticks his neck out and announces he hates social media, claiming it’s “the old marketing industry’s latest excuse to waste more money on bad ideas and lazy thinking.”

Who’d want to buy the Globe?

Most dailies aren’t worth much more than the dirt they own, says Jack Shafer. The New York Times Co. should stop trying to find a buyer for the Boston Globe and concentrate on making it better.

Just suck it up, newspapers

Newspapers have been crippled just as much by corporate profiteering, arrogance, elitism, and encroaching dullness as they have by the Internet and GFC, says Jerry Lanson.

Carney on Chaser-gate

The worst part of The Chaser’s “Make a realistic wish” skit is the extent of public acceptance of the sketch and its message, says Shaun Carney.

Korean War II

As China purchases American debt, the US lose their ability to pressure China over North Korea. America will rue the day, says Jeffrey Kuhner.