Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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Friday essay: on the Sydney Mardi Gras march of 1978

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe 1978 Mardi Gras started as a peaceful march and degenerated into a violent clash with police. The Pride History Group

On April 27, 2015, Christine Foster, a Liberal Party councillor and the sister of the then Australian Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, moved a motion at the Sydney City Council calling for a formal apology to the original gay and...

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Why Was Stephen Fry Fried On Twitter?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageStephen Fry has kissed goodbye to Twitter

Twitter has become “a stalking ground for the sanctimoniously self-righteous”. So said Stephen Fry as he quit Twitter after being monstered for a joke he made at the BAFTA Awards.

As costume designer Jenny Beavan left the stage Fry, who was hosting the awards, commented: “Only one of the...

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More Articles ...

  1. Don’t be alarmed: AI won’t leave half the world unemployed
  2. Collaboration: Too much of a good thing?
  3. Making commercial surrogacy illegal only makes aspiring parents go elsewhere
  4. Australia's south west: a hotspot for wildlife and plants that deserves World Heritage status
  5. Bad news at Fairfax and The Independent, but quality journalism will roll on
  6. Is big policy a big political risk for Bill Shorten and Labor?
  7. Business confidence and tax reform key to Turnbull government re-election: CEDA
  8. Australia can learn from Indonesia’s experience before relaxing its media laws
  9. Rising extreme weather warns of ecosystem collapse: study
  10. What is ransomware and how to protect your precious files from it
  11. Tim Minchin's Come Home Cardinal Pell is a pitch-perfect protest song
  12. Folly of treating all refugees as would-be terrorists solves neither problem
  13. Labor gains in polls, but Coalition still holds clear lead
  14. Selling ports and other assets: why anti-competitive deals to boost prices cost the public in the end
  15. What does concussion do to the brain?
  16. If Islamic State is based on religion, why is it so violent?
  17. The 'c-word' may be the last swearing taboo, but doesn't shock like it used to
  18. Digital payment providers yet to win war on cash
  19. Going on safari? Research shows ecotourism can help save threatened species
  20. How online advertising can work in a world of ad blockers
  21. Mental health woes are rife in the arts – no wonder
  22. Modern tablets with pens may save handwriting from certain death by computer
  23. Council workers spraying the weed-killer glyphosate in playgrounds won't hurt your children
  24. No, pesticides are not causing microcephaly in Brazil
  25. Work, Play, and the zany blurring of the public and private self.
  26. Morrison still hopeful of modest relief on tax bracket creep
  27. Dja Dja Wurrung barks are Australian art – the British Museum should return them
  28. New app helps people with neurological conditions practise speech
  29. Energy star ratings for homes? Good idea, but it needs some real estate flair
  30. UK companies poised to act on forced labour, but Australia lags behind
  31. Do Wi-Fi and mobile phones really cause cancer? Experts respond
  32. Palaszczuk's first year in office: an unanticipated success
  33. An uneasy marriage: planners, public and the market struggle to work well together
  34. The earthquakes keep on coming for Christchurch
  35. Child lead exposure linked to aggressive crime later in life: study
  36. Hidden housemates: meet the moulds growing in your home
  37. Too much help with homework can hinder your child's learning progress
  38. What will happen to baby Asha?
  39. Islamic State lays claim to Muslim theological tradition and turns it on its head
  40. Three myths on negative gearing the housing industry wants you to believe
  41. How people mis-read risk in their super product disclosures and what it could mean for their returns
  42. Questions to ask your teenager about music and mental health
  43. Regional TV fights back as more programmes are 'broadcast' online
  44. Chemmart's myDNA test offers more than it can deliver
  45. Changes to Senate voting may be needed but should not be rushed
  46. We can't eradicate drugs, but we can stop people dying from them
  47. The marriage plebiscite: No 'time out' on anti-discrimination laws
  48. A first step on negative gearing, but not much more
  49. We can close the Indigenous nutrition gap – here's how
  50. Female genital cutting common in Indonesia, offered as part of child delivery by birth clinics

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