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Why am I filled with nostalgia for a pre-internet age I never knew?

latest 20

The Guardian

Isabel Brooks

In Hong Kong, my daughter was dazzled by futuristic tech – and I glimpsed the world she’ll grow up in

latest 10

The Guardian

Kojo Koram

Are there billions more people on Earth than we thought? If so, it’s no bad thing

latest 20

The Guardian

Jonathan Kennedy

As Ice deports children, what futures do we lose?

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The Guardian

Ariel Dorfman

A dystopian surveillance fear has become reality in Texas

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The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

What does a crystal ball tell gen Z about the future?

latest 6

The Guardian

Tom Mcilroy

Sussan Ley wants to keep the Coalition together – but caving on net zero won’t help her win back seats

After another scrappy week for the faltering Coalition, Bridget McKenzie on Thursday called for the National party to stop talking about itself. No...

latest 6

The Guardian

Tom Mcilroy

Ella Baron on Donald Trump’s unhappiness at the ‘taco’ jibes – cartoon

latest 5

The Guardian

Jonathan Freedland

It’s easy to dismiss Robert Jenrick’s fare-dodging stunt. But he understands something Keir Starmer doesn’t

There is no shortage of reasons to dislike and dismiss Robert Jenrick. He is, after all, the former immigration minister who ordered that a centre...

latest 6

The Guardian

Jonathan Freedland

So long, Elon: the cuts didn’t go to plan, but you completely shredded your reputation

I can’t believe that Elon Musk is leaving Doge, the government department he named after a tired and basic meme that most of the internet had moved...

yesterday 40

The Guardian

Marina Hyde

We’re minimizing the horror of Trump’s military birthday parade

In 2017, watching a two-hour Bastille Day procession, Donald Trump told the French president that we’d have one too, only better. That time, the...

yesterday 20

The Guardian

Judith Levine

What it’s like to be in the graduating class of 2025 in Gaza

Before the war, students in Gaza were surrounded by books, not bombs. They woke each morning to the voices of their mothers urging them to get...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Nadera Mushtha

What have I seen in Liverpool this week? Kindness in person and conspiracies online

“This doesn’t sound good at all.” The message flashed up on a group chat I am in with other journalists in Liverpool and Merseyside. My blood...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Liam Thorp

Prime Minister Farage? He’s serious about that – it’s time the country was too

If Nigel Farage has a secret weapon, it is his seeming refusal to take things seriously. His habit of repairing to the pub at any opportunity –...

yesterday 20

The Guardian

Gaby Hinsliff

If the horrors unfolding in Gaza are not a red line for Australia to take stronger action then I don’t know what is

Much has been made this week over Anthony Albanese’s strongest comments yet criticising the Netanyahu government’s ongoing blockade of humanitarian...

yesterday 90

The Guardian

David Pocock

How Labor’s North West Shelf approval further endangers Murujuga’s 50,000-year-old rock art

On Thursday, the new environment minister, Murray Watt, approved an extension for the North West Shelf liquefied natural gas project. The gas plant...

yesterday 30

The Guardian

Benjamin Smith And John Black

It’s time for Israel to halt its war of devastation in Gaza

The government of Israel is currently waging a war without purpose, without goals or clear planning, and with no chances of success. Never since...

yesterday 80

The Guardian

Ehud Olmert

Europe will never agree on Israel – but here’s a way it can act to help Gaza

European consciences have started waking up to the Israeli government’s crimes in the occupied Palestinian territories – and it is about time. What...

yesterday 50

The Guardian

Nathalie Tocci

As a Muslim girl in Bradford, I saw my story in Jane Austen’s novels. Now I’ve directed a TV series about her

I grew up as the daughter of an imam in a conservative British-Pakistani community in Bradford. Our early years were spent in a large Victorian...

yesterday 3

The Guardian

Ali Naushahi

It’s been a big, beautiful week of bad news for Trump. But don’t expect it to stick

Nothing is going according to plan for the Trump administration. The big, beautiful bill, originally vaunted to save the US taxpayer at least $2tn,...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

The noises you make every day fill me with disgust. Now I’m not afraid to tell you

In case you aren’t related to me and didn’t know, it was my dad’s birthday last week. Looking through photos and various paraphernalia to make the...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Rebecca Shaw

Is Trump’s ‘baby bond’ really pro-child? No – children need a fair society to thrive

Turning children into capitalists – that’s the purpose behind the new “Trump account”, which will give every new baby born in the US during the...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Polly Toynbee

I’ve seen the reality of the new Israel-backed ‘aid’ for Gaza. It’s nothing more than a deadly PR stunt

Two days ago, Israeli soldiers fired on a massive crowd of starving Palestinians who just wanted to eat. Some of them had walked more than 10km to...

yesterday 10

The Guardian

Eyad Amawi

Have you looked at images of Gaza on Google Maps? You should

A picture says a thousand words. And the imagery slowly seeping out of Gaza tells a story that many politicians and media figures are still doing...

previous day 200

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Why do so many Americans join the Israeli military?

In his 1971 novel The Day of the Jackal, Frederick Forsyth renders a rich plot to assassinate Charles de Gaulle, the French president. The...

previous day 60

The Guardian

Ahmed Moor

Segregated classrooms are not a thing of the past – look at what is happening to Roma children in Slovakia

It may come as a surprise to many, but racial segregation in schools exists today in several countries in the EU. In Slovakia, more than 60% of...

previous day 40

The Guardian

Michal Zálešák And Kamila Gunišová

Is the Australian government doing enough on Gaza?

previous day 10

The Guardian

Depends

As seen in Canada, Charles has pushed the boundaries of politics as king – and got away with it

It requires an effort to keep reminding yourself of the sheer historical oddity of monarchy’s healthy survival into the modern democratic age. Yet...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Martin Kettle

Trump’s new ‘gold standard’ rule will destroy American science as we know it

Science is under siege. On Friday evening, the White House released an executive order called Restoring Gold Standard Science. At face value, this...

previous day 50

The Guardian

Colette Delawalla

Trump’s lawlessness is emboldening El Salvador’s brutal regime

The Trump administration’s agreement with Nayib Bukele to detain US immigrants deported to El Salvador without due process seems to have emboldened...

previous day 6

The Guardian

Noah Bullock And Amrit Singh

Starmer and co are trashing Labour’s legacy. We must take back control of our party – before it’s too late

I joined the Labour party 50 years ago. Back then, as a young man, I was proud that I was becoming part of a movement motivated by the highest...

previous day 9

The Guardian

John Mcdonnell

Will Donald Trump defy the US supreme court?

With the most authoritarian and lawless president in history sitting in the White House, the US supreme court is no doubt worried about looking...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Steven Greenhouse

On my motorbike, I did a road journey in England avoiding motorways – and discovered a whole new country

I learned a lot driving to Hinckley in Leicestershire. I had some work there. That’s showbiz, folks. I didn’t do the journey as I’d normally do...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Adrian Chiles

Have you ever overhyped a hobby on social media to impress your crush? You might suffer from Downbaditis

It was mid-winter when I found myself shivering on a slippery rock, staring out to sea. The waves in front of me were growling and my gut responded...

previous day 1

The Guardian

Lucinda Price

The super tax debate is divorced from reality – and more proof that Australia’s tax system is built for the rich

The unhinged criticisms to changes in superannuation make more sense when you realise that Australia’s entire tax debate is geared to ensure rich,...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Greg Jericho

Think you know a lot about Dickens? Then who’s this Herbert character?

It’s unwise to drill too deeply into the exact questions that come up in a GCSE paper. You can’t get a proper sense of proportion when: you most...

previous day 7

The Guardian

Zoe Williams

A reality show sent 12 virgins to an island to learn how to have sex. The result was weirdly coy

Channel 4’s latest attempt to straddle the line between televised humiliation and light titillation came to an end this week. Virgin Island...

previous day 10

The Guardian

Jennifer Jasmine White

Australians remain deeply sceptical about the value of private healthcare – it’s time for radical reform

The viability of private healthcare in Australia has been thrown into doubt after Brookfield’s decision to place Healthscope, the operator of 37...

wednesday 9

The Guardian

Anthony Scott

The Woodside boss’s attacks on my generation are blatant scapegoating – and we see straight through them

You’re likely familiar with the term “carbon footprint”, which measures an individual’s environmental impact. The concept communicates to consumers...

wednesday 80

The Guardian

Hannah Ferguson

Trump’s unfounded attack on Cyril Ramaphosa was an insult to all Africans

The meeting at the White House between Donald Trump and the South African president, Cyril Ramaphosa, was, at its heart, about the preservation of...

wednesday 100

The Guardian

John Dramani Mahama

How long will it be before Melania steps aside for MelanAI?

I imagine students at the US Military Academy at West Point are trained to handle unexpected situations, but I’m not sure anyone could have...

wednesday 30

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

A great prize, but a great risk: why we all need the nationalised South Western Railway to work

A historic journey took place this week, when the first renationalised South Western Railway (SWR) service departed from Woking for Waterloo. Yet...

wednesday 10

The Guardian

Sarah Nankivell

Brigitte Macron’s push has reverberated around the world. Why was it met with a shrug in France?

The French president’s plane has just landed in Hanoi. Its door is open and Emmanuel Macron is standing looking at his wife, Brigitte, who is still...

wednesday 10

The Guardian

Pauline Bock

The anti-woke warriors used to defend free speech. Now they make McCarthyism look progressive

Thoughts and non-denominational prayers to all the anti-woke warriors out there. It may seem as though everything is going their way now Donald...

wednesday 30

The Guardian

Arwa Mahdawi

Butter wouldn’t melt: Why does TikTok suggest feeding your baby butter to help with sleep?

Due to a chaotic toddler, it has been many months since my partner and I have had more than two consecutive nights of solid sleep. Given research...

wednesday 1

The Guardian

Donna Lu

By delaying its child poverty plan, Labour has a chance to reverse 15 years of inequality

As Labour continues its inquest into the reasons for its local election losses, attention has focused on the pensioners’ winter fuel allowance and...

wednesday 20

The Guardian

Gordon Brown

Rebecca Hendin on Donald Trump, King Charles and Canada – cartoon

wednesday 20

The Guardian

Jen Gerson

Canadians are happy to cling to King Charles – as long as he keeps us safe from Trump

Rest assured that the residents of Canada are vulnerable to the same strand of lazy republicanism that tends to afflict most other constitutional...

wednesday 9

The Guardian

Jen Gerson

As the energy transition ramps up, Australia risks becoming a more unequal society. Here’s what needs to change

The great energy transition is happening before our eyes. You can see it on our roofs: more than one in three Australian homes now have solar. You...

27.05.2025 4

The Guardian

Dominic Jones

How we can smash Britain’s two-party system for good at the next election

This feels terminal. The breaches of trust have been so frequent, so vast and so decisive that the voters Labour has already lost are unlikely to...

27.05.2025 200

The Guardian

George Monbiot