This Must Be the Year of Accountability
At what point do the people in charge get to find out that no one is above the law?
At what point do the people in charge get to find out that no one is above the law?
They killed the journalist who connected it all. Now we live in the world he warned us about.
The state can either measure the relationship properly, or it can keep pretending that refusing to measure it is ‘responsible’. One of those choices builds trust. The other builds resentment. And resentment, unlike spreadsheets, does not stay missing for long.
Protecting kids is a weak pretext for total digital surveillance. What’s worse, the EU’s monitoring exempted its own politicians from scrutiny. Their privacy matters, but not yours.
The fraudulent narrative of ‘black deaths in custody’.
These outrages are the consequences of an unaccountable class running the system.
Despite the big outlays of money, it seems no group of officials kept tabs on the minors.
The ‘kill list’ that exposes a global crisis of escalating antisemitism. Governments must pursue the perpetrators with the same determination they would apply to any other violent extremist organisation.
Rewarding America’s generosity by plundering its treasury.
The war on drugs wasn’t a real war until President Trump made it one.
Muslim immigrants across the West are defrauding social services to the tune of billions.
Victoria’s crime wave has exposed a justice system that is failing both victims and the wider public.