Section: Analysis

Total Results: 1004


Dishi Rishi serves the dishy
2 Oct 2020 - 12:16pm

Did ‘Eat Out to Help Out’ cause a second wave? Many believe the Government's policy was a health disaster — but their evidence is shaky

Aveek Bhattacharya

Thursday, 1 October

01.10

Is Critical Race Theory racist? Trump has condemned the controversial teaching as 'un-American' and 'divisive'

Helen Pluckrose

Wednesday, 30 September

30.09

Has Covid become less dangerous? Your risk of death if you get infected now is much reduced from what it was in March

Tom Chivers

Monday, 28 September

28.09

Joe Biden is no radical Attempts by Republicans to paint him as a socialist stooge are comically wide of the mark

Michael Tracey

Friday, 25 September

25.09

The art of Trump’s diplomatic deals The President achieved in four years what the establishment couldn't in 40: a Middle Eastern accord

Leon Hadar

Thursday, 24 September

24.09

The intellectual shabbiness of Judith Butler Rather than bring helpful clarity to the trans debate, the revered professor engaged in wilful obtuseness and whataboutery

Sam Leith

Tuesday, 22 September

22.09

Is this the second wave? Sceptics who talk up 'false positives' are engaging in wishful thinking

Tom Chivers

Monday, 21 September

21.09

How patriotic Labour could crush Boris If Keir Starmer can steer clear of identity politics and close the values gap, his party will reclaim lost ground

Tim Bale

Friday, 18 September

18.09

The BBC needs to sack the suits Timid and out of touch, it is churning out banal bulletins and screwing up digital output

Ian Birrell

Wednesday, 16 September

16.09

Why everyone is stupid except me Twitter users love the Dunning-Kruger effect because it suggests your opponent is an idiot

Tom Chivers

Monday, 14 September

14.09

Matt Hancock’s ‘messaging’ is no better than Trump’s Fearmongering slogans like 'don't kill your gran' are the opposite of good political leadership

Freddie Sayers

Friday, 11 September

11.09

Africa’s catastrophic Covid response Blunt, panicky lockdowns across the continent are doing far more damage than the pandemic itself

Ian Birrell