A Sense of Place Magazine

Beautifully written stories on politics, social movements, photography and books

Page 6 of 52

The Collapse of Australia’s Ponzi Economy

By Paul Collits Australia’s economy has, as long as we can remember, relied upon mass immigration, including by, but not limited to, Asian students on a visa pathway, to keep the place afloat.  It is a Ponzi scheme. Since we… Continue Reading →

Virginia Woolf’s copy of her first novel was found in a University of Sydney library.

Mark Byron, University of Sydney One of just two copies of Virginia Woolf’s first novel, The Voyage Out (1915), annotated with her handwriting and preparations to revise it for a US edition, was recently rediscovered in the Fisher Library Rare… Continue Reading →

Australia’s Share Market of Deathly Hollows: $100b of equity passes from public to private hands in takeover binge

By Stephen Mayne: Michael West Media Australian companies worth billions of dollars are slipping into private hands at an alarming rate. Stephen Mayne explores what’s driving it and why it’s a worry.   After 38 years as a public company, vitamins group… Continue Reading →

World Economic Forum Forecasts: Creepy Top Ten Emerging Trends of 2023

TOTT NEWS The World Economic Forum (WEF) has recently published its Top 10 Emerging Technologies of 2023 report, which includes a look at a range of ‘innovative’ trends in the world. The WEF report “…outlines the technologies poised to positively impact society… Continue Reading →

Australia on Dangerous Ground: New Misinformation Bill a Threat to Democracy

Rebekah Barnett: Dystopian Down Under. A contentious new bill to crack down on misinformation and disinformation has drawn criticism for its potential to restrict free expression and political dissent. Notably, the government will be exempt from the proposed laws. Censorship will be… Continue Reading →

The Government, My Enemy: A Journalist records Covidian Australia’s Pandemic Over-reach

By Professor Ramesh Thakur: Spectator Australia. Medically idiotic, economically ruinous, socially disruptive and embittering, culturally dystopian, politically despotic: what was there to like in the Covid era? Billions, if you were Big Pharma. Unchecked power, if you were Big State…. Continue Reading →

Report finds Major Stadiums in Australia are using Facial Recognition

TOTT NEWS Heading out to the Melbourne Cricket Ground any time soon? What about Sydney’s Allianz Stadium? If so, you can expect to be captured by facial recognition technology in use at each of these venues. Sensitive biometric data is… Continue Reading →

This is the Way the World Ends: Australian author Nevil Shute’s On the Beach warned of Nuclear Annihilation.

Alexander Howard, University of Sydney. One of the most haunting poems of the 20th century, T.S. Eliot’s The Hollow Men (1925), concludes: This is the way the world endsNot with a bang but a whimper. In 1958, on his 70th… Continue Reading →

Queenslanders to get Free Flu Jabs after Dismal Uptake

TOTT NEWS The Queensland government has made flu jabs free for all ages until the end of August, as the state battles an 18.6% drop in uptake since last year. ‘Please take our flu jabs!’, is the message coming from… Continue Reading →

Now I am become Death, the Destroyer of Worlds. Who was Atom Bomb Pioneer Robert Oppenheimer?

Darius von Guttner Sporzynski, Australian Catholic University. Robert Oppenheimer is often placed next to Albert Einstein as the 20th century’s most famous physicist. He will forever be the “father of the atomic bomb” after the first nuclear weapon was successfully… Continue Reading →

From Out of Chaos: The Art of Ronan Dinneen

By John Stapleton Ronan tells it like this: “I had full on psychosis. But I kept drawing all the time. I was living in Saigon in Vietnam, ended up homeless. I was pulling the cameras out of the wall in… Continue Reading →

A Cluster of Monsters: Illegal Munitions, North Atlantic Expansion and Vassal States

By Paul Gregoire: Sydney Criminal Lawyers Blog At the White House last Friday, US national security advisor Jake Sullivan dropped it on the globe that the Biden administration, despite its having held off for a long as it could, will now be… Continue Reading →

Excess deaths Australia 2020-2023: Rebekah Barnett. Dystopian Down Under

Victoria is the biggest loser, modelling shrinks excess death rate by up to a third. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) released an update this week, ‘Measuring Australia’s excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic until the first quarter 2023’. Excess… Continue Reading →

The Wondrous Birds of the Himalayas and the Forgotten Victorian Woman Whose Illustrations Rewilded the Western Imagination

Maria Popova: The Marginalian. In these darkening times, when the powerful and the political class have become utterly corrupted, and indifferent to the concerns of ordinary people, there are, as a kind of counterwave, a significant number of people trying… Continue Reading →

Elon Musk launches new AI company to ‘understand reality’

TOTT NEWS Elon Musk has announced a new venture called ‘xAI’ that plans to “understand the true nature of the universe”. What will they ‘discover’? Billionaire Elon Musk launched an artificial intelligence company called xAI on Thursday, vowing to develop an AI… Continue Reading →

The Albanese Government’s craven desire to bolster the alliance with Washington

By Allan Patience: University of Melbourne. Pearls and Irritations. When will Australians realise, as former Australian Prime Minister Paul Keating has been unerringly consistent in arguing, that they are part of the cosmopolitanism and complexity of Asia, and not a Western… Continue Reading →

Ayn Rand: Love her or Loathe her, she has stood the test of time. Atlas Shrugged.

Alexander Howard, University of Sydney Our cultural touchstones series looks at books that have made an impact. Ayn Rand is “one of the most important intellectual voices in our culture,” wrote Gregory Salmieri, co-editor of the Blackwell Companion to Ayn… Continue Reading →

Are Authorities Using the Internet to Sap Our Instinct for Freedom?

Transcript of a Speech Given by Matt Taibbi, One of America’s Best Journalists. Racket News. The following text is from an address given at “Freedom Fest” in Memphis, Tennessee on July 13, 2023. You can follow Matt Taibbi’s excellent work… Continue Reading →

Australia Breaks Apart: A Book Review

By Paul Collits: Substack What exactly do you say when your country betrays you and disgraces itself before the world?  When you find out that it is run by thugs and goons?  When you realise that the institutions that you… Continue Reading →

Pandemic Leaders Were Biodefense Puppets and Profiteers

By Debbie Lerman: Brownstone Institute Scandalous incompetence. Profound stupidity. Astounding errors. This is how many analysts – including Dr. Vinay Prasad, Dr. Scott Atlas, and popular Substack commentator eugyppius – explain how leading public health experts could prescribe so many terrible pandemic response policies. And… Continue Reading →

‘Quite horrendous’: Dr John Campbell on West Australian Vaccine Safety Data. The Greatest Medical Scandal in Australian History.

By Rebekah Barnett: Dystopian Down Under Dr John Campbell, retired nurse educator and Covid data YouTuber, features the West Australian Vaccine Safety Surveillance 2021 report in a new video. “I was completely appalled by this report,” he says. Dr Campbell says… Continue Reading →

The Historic Wonboyn Lake Bush Fires of 2020: Stay and Defend. Lessons Learnt.

By Ian Williamson and John Stapleton Surrounded by nature reserves and national parks, Wonboyn Lake is a spectacular waterway nestled within the absolutely beautiful wilderness of the far south coast of New South Wales, Australia. Encircled by forests and remote… Continue Reading →

Vale Milan Kundera: His remarkable work explored Oppression, Inhumanity – and the absurdity of being Human

Jen Webb, University of Canberra Milan Kundera, that remarkable novelist, essayist, poet, philosopher and political critic, has died at the age of 94. It feels too soon, perhaps because in everything he wrote, he opened up new ways of thinking,… Continue Reading →

Fumigating Scott Morrison: Ridding Australian Politics of a Terrible Blight

By John Stapleton Want to shut up an Australian? Just ask them this: “When did you last have a good Prime Minister?” The incumbent, Anthony Albanese, is turning out to be worse than anyone could possibly have imagined. His predecessor,… Continue Reading →

Tech giant Meta to ‘Safeguard’ Australian Referendum Integrity, Arbitrate Truth

By Rebekah Barnett: Dystopian Down Under Meta platforms are a primary source of news for most Australians. Meta, Facebook’s parent company, is the latest international mega-company to get involved in Australia’s upcoming referendum regarding an Indigenous Voice to Parliament, after Pfizer pledged its… Continue Reading →

YouTube Censors Australian Politician’s Maiden Speech to Parliament

By Rebekah Barnett: Brownstone Institute Thirty minutes of truth bombs is how one Twitter user described Liberal Democrat John Ruddick’s maiden speech to the New South Wales (NSW) Parliament, Wednesday 28 June.  Indeed, Ruddick, who left the Liberal Party in 2021 after… Continue Reading →

Weaponising Banks against Men: False Allegations of Financial Abuse can now be used to Freeze Accounts

By Bettina Arndt: Substack Last week, Nigel Farage’s bank announced they were closing his accounts. The controversial UK politician had been with the bank for 40 years and was given no reason for the decision. Since then, Farage has tried unsuccessfully to… Continue Reading →

Trees, Whales, and Our Digital Future: George Dyson on Nature, Our Minds and Our Machines.

Maria Popova: The Marginalian. We at A Sense of Place Magazine are unabashed fans of New York based Bulgarian born polymath Maria Popova, whose transformative blog Brain Pickings entrances and challenges readers worldwide. Her first book, Figuring, is a fascinating… Continue Reading →

A Vice-Regal Stitch-up? How the Great, the Good and the Consultants fell in with Australian Governor-General’s Favourite Charity

By Jommy Tee: Michael West Media. When the Governor-General’s man knocks, you open the door. Simple. Many avenues of influence were used in the making of the $18m taxpayer-funded Australian Future Leaders Foundation.  When your charity has the GG’s David Hurley’s… Continue Reading →

400 years ago, Philosopher Blaise Pascal was one of the first to grapple with the Role of Faith in an age of Science and Reason

David Hoinski, West Virginia University In an apostolic letter released on June 19, 2023, Pope Francis praised the “brilliant and inquisitive mind” of the influential French philosopher Blaise Pascal, born on that date 400 years ago. When Pascal lived, at… Continue Reading →

A Submission to the Senate from Men’s Rights Agency

At the end of February 2023, the Labor Party unexpectedly introduced changes to the Family Law Act, without any pre-warning or discussion. A Sense of Place Magazine is publishing this submission in particular because of the one-sided nature of the… Continue Reading →

Prigozhin’s Folly: Seymour Hersch. Pearls and Irritations.

The Russian ‘revolt’ that wasn’t strengthens Putin’s hand. The Biden administration had a glorious few days. The ongoing disaster in Ukraine slipped from the headlines to be replaced by the “revolt,” as a New York Times headline put it, of Yevgeny Prigozhin,… Continue Reading →

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