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Lamenting ‘toxic culture’ doesn’t change the fact that the SAS got away with murder

A toxic culture is an easy target, but culture does not exist as something separate; culture is what the soldiers and officers of the special forces did every day.

ADF chief General Angus Campbell (Image: AAP/Mick Tsikas)

Officers escape legal responsibility, but what about their moral accountability?

Officers in command of special forces in Afghanistan either turned a blind eye to bad behaviour or genuinely didn't know about it. Either way, it's unacceptable.

(Image: AAP/Australian Department of Defence)

The uniquely Australian violence of the Brereton war crimes report

Australia represents itself as the innocent abroad. But is that just to shield us from the fact that we may be worse than most, as our overseas wars tend to be a projection of unfinished violence at home?

(Image: AAP/David Mariuz)

Now more than ever our soldiers deserve compassion

We must hold those accused of committing war crimes to account. But we also need to examine how we treat our returning servicemen and women, many of whom suffer from PTSD.

(Images: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Seven caught in the middle of an unignorable story and the loyalty of Kerry Stokes

Seven West Media must walk the tight rope of its coverage of the Brereton SAS war crimes report and its chairman's support of military figures.

Alan Tudge (Image: AAP)

The Tudge report: the decade-long descent from Indigenous champ to infamous chump

In his 10 years in parliament, Alan Tudge has come a long way, as the last fortnight has shown.

(Image: AP/Matt Rourke)

Trumpism will live on. Here are 5 things Biden needs to do to weaken its grip

Trump may be on his way out, but his influence will linger. Here's what his successor needs to do to turn the tide.

Donald Trump has a go in a truck (Image: AP)

Trumps for the meme-ories: the most bizarre moments of Donald Trump’s presidency

It was the presidency that launched a thousand memes. Crikey remembers the strangest moments of the most bizarre presidency in history.

(Image: AAP/Mick Tsikas)

ScoMo loses the next election but decides to do a Trump. What happens next?

Australian democracy has enough structural weaknesses that it's not hard to imagine what's happening in the US happening here too.

South Australian Premier Steven Marshall (Image: AAP/David Mariuz)

Super strain? Super feign. No evidence to support SA’s claims of a more dangerous coronavirus 

Adelaide's health authorities are pushing stories of a 'particularly sneaky' strain of COVID-19. The only problem: there's no evidence.

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Former AMP boss Boe Pahari (Image: Private Media)

Dollars, sense and sexual harassment: when share price is all that matters

The AMP controversy proves it: companies will not remove accused harassers until the share price plummets.

From the recesses of the internet to the front page of The Australian: a bomb-thrower’s journey

Inspired by Sky. Cooked in a dark room. Delivered by the Oz. This is how a News Corp exclusive is made

Jay White in front of his home in Sydney's west (Image: Supplied)

How shonky providers are draining the accounts of people with disabilities

The NDIS says it has zero tolerance for fraudulent disability providers, but a former investigator tells Inq that fraudulent claims are all too common.

(Image: Supplied)

Sky’s the limit as online influence soars and the law struggles to catch up

Sky News' digital strategy has allowed its partisan video content to enjoy an explosive growth online.

Alan Jones and Miranda Devine on Sky News (Image: Sky News Australia)

Cosy relationships and a front organisation: how Sky News operates as a law unto itself

When the body in charge of regulating pay TV is stacked with Foxtel's own executives, why are we surprised when Sky News' baseless conspiracy theories go unchallenged?

Pope v Abbott … Bernardi v SA … a lockdown the Oz can get behind

News Corp not entirely opposed to lockdowns, you can always rely on Cory, and the AFP show us their priorities. Catch up with the latest tips and murmurs.

Xi Jinping and Scott Morrison (Images: AAP)

China gave us a list of stuff that makes them mad. Do they have a point?

Beijing's new dossier of 14 disputes with Australia doesn't tell us anything we didn't already know — but that doesn't mean they're wrong...

(Image: Adobe)

Finding a vaccine is just the beginning. The delivery will be every bit as critical

Jubilation over the imminent arrival of COVID-19 vaccines needs to be tempered by the reality that a fast, safe, efficient rollout across a continent like Australia will be highly complex.

NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian with NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet (Image: AAP/Dan Himbrechts)

A noisy budget hits the burbs: just how will the quiet Australian react?

While the NSW budget will get some ticks of approval, the question of whether the state will be able to brute-force its way towards growth is an open one.

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Seven caught in the middle of an unignorable story and the loyalty of Kerry Stokes

Seven West Media must walk the tight rope of its coverage of the Brereton SAS war crimes report and its chairman's support of military figures.

Alan Tudge (Image: AAP/Lukas Coch)

Year spins to a nauseating close. It might be funny if it weren’t so obscene

From Hollywood Hugh Marks to Alan Tudge to Gladys Berejiklian, 2020 has been a big year for the spin doctors.

Opposition Leader Anthony Albanese (Image: AAP/Mick Tsikas)

Once a mate, now a hate: the Oz is out to get Anthony Albanese

Unnamed sources have been briefing the Oz against the paper's former mate Anthony Albanese.


39 allegedly murdered by Australian special forces: the nation’s shame laid bare

Chief of Defence Angus Campbell described the alleged unlawful killings as a result of a toxic culture of 'ego, elitism and entitlement'.

(Image: AAP)

It’s not just special forces — the entire military has to change

The ADF has a culture problem that, in its worst manifestation, leads to abuse and war crimes. But when that problem is tacitly approved by command, how can it be fixed?

NSW Treasurer Dominic Perrottet (Image: AAP/Gaye Gerard)

Stamp duty v land tax: NSW takes a giant leap into the political unknown with good policy

With its stamp duty change, the NSW government is taking a political risk on — shock horror! — good policy.

Chief of Army Lieutenant General Rick Burr (Image: AAP/Rohan Thomson)

Can the top brass reform the very culture it supposedly controls already?

The defence bosses responsible for implementing any inquiry recommendations were all trained through the SAS themselves.

Here’s a story you won’t see in News Corp: Murdoch suppresses debate at own AGM

Rupert Murdoch continued his long and shameless record of suppressing shareholder participation and debate at this morning’s News Corp AGM.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg appears remotely during a US Senate committee hearing (Image: PA/Nash Greg)

Save us from ourselves pleads Zuckerberg as social giants attacked for calling out Trump

Under questioning from the US senate, social media giants showed a new nervousness surrounding how content should be regulated in the dying age of Trump.

(Image: AAP/Joel Carrett)

A CEO falls on his sword. An insider’s view

'[Hugh Marks'] scalp was not collateral damage. This was a planned execution.'

Former PM Malcolm Turnbull and editor-at-large at The Australian Paul Kelly appear on Q&A (Image: Q&A)

Finally, the Murdoch business model is wedged between news and politics

After decades in power, could it be that the News Corp business model is finally collapsing?