The Erdoğanization of Hungary The United States should learn from the Turkey experience. Shay Khatiri 2 Apr 2020 · 9 min read Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (L) poses with Hungarian Prime minister Viktor Orbán after they met for discussions on Syria and migration on November 7, 2019 in Budapest, Hungary. (Photo by Laszlo Balogh/Getty Images)
The Lonely Death of an Ojibway Boy Charlie Wenjack has come to symbolise the deadly horrors of Canada’s Residential Schools. Unfortunately, many details of his tragic story have been misrepresented in the process. Robert Macbain 23 Apr 2024 · 18 min read
Stifling Free Speech Online: Australia’s Misinformation Bill Every censorship regime in history has claimed to be protecting the public. But no regime can have prior knowledge of what is true or good. It can only know what the approved narratives are. Toadworrier 23 Apr 2024 · 11 min read
Erdogan’s Hypocrisy While routinely declaring that Israel’s behaviour toward Hamas is genocidal, Erdogan has consistently denied the real genocides carried out by Turkey. Benny Morris 22 Apr 2024 · 8 min read
An Absurd Umbrella: Neurodiversity and the Autism Spectrum Autism has become a catchall term to explain and dismiss the problem child. But it can also be viewed as a superpower. Jason Garshfield 21 Apr 2024 · 9 min read
Investigating the Academy In a recent speech to University of Toronto scholars, a Quillette editor explained why many of his fellow journalists are reluctant to report on administrative scandals at Canadian universities. Jonathan Kay 19 Apr 2024 · 14 min read
Nostalgia for Confinement Why are some in Russia and Eastern Europe pining for the communist system that once oppressed them? John Lloyd 18 Apr 2024 · 7 min read