07:00

Schools don’t teach about the British Empire — and that’s a good thing Secondary-level history is too limited to teach complex subject matters

Ed West

Monday
17.02

17.02

Churches are closing down — I won’t let mine be one of them The bricks of a church are a statement of Christian defiance

Giles Fraser

17.02

LISTEN: Tom Chivers on Andrew Sabisky and eugenics Our columnist features on The Today Programme to discuss Andrew Sabisky

UnHerd

17.02

Without God, it’s harder to defend against eugenics With no religious authority, we lack the language to reject moral atrocities like human selection

Mary Harrington

Saturday
15.02

15.02

America’s conservatives are turning radical Two prominent writers are calling for a quiet revolution

Mary Harrington

Friday
14.02

14.02

Even George Soros is now a China hawk The billionaire's recent comments reveal a wider crack up among the liberal elite

Tobias Phibbs

14.02

Mr Jones is a lesson in the dangers of groupthink The journalist exposed the horrors of the Stalinist regime — much to the disdain of educated westerners

Ed West

Thursday
13.02

13.02

WATCH: Justin Welby apologises for his ‘white advantage’ The Archbishop of Canterbury also said the Church is 'still deeply institutionally racist'

UnHerd

13.02

Please Boris, let HS2 be your last white elephant The PM should check his attraction to 'grands projets'

Peter Franklin

13.02

Here’s to Chaucer Lane and Attlee Avenue! The PM wants to name a train station after Margaret Thatcher — we should commemorate national icons like this more often

Ed West

Wednesday
12.02

12.02

WATCH: New Tory MP Kieran Mullan maiden speech The Crewe MP on the importance of family, place and belonging in today's world

UnHerd

12.02

Got to hand it to him, Boris is good on cycling The PM's cycle plans are the sort of thing that small-c conservatives should welcome

Tom Chivers

12.02

Get ready for a brokered convention There was no clear winner in New Hampshire

UnHerd

Tuesday
11.02

11.02

Why shouldn’t modern buildings be beautiful? Beauty doesn't always need to serve a structural purpose

Peter Franklin

11.02

Is it time to give up on the ‘nuclear family’? David Brooks asks some difficult questions in his latest column

Freddie Sayers

11.02

Dominic Cummings must win the battle of the SpAds A reformed cadre of advisors is an important first step

Peter Franklin

Monday
10.02

10.02

Advice for the BBC’s next director-general Why the BBC and the Church of England have a great deal in common

Giles Fraser

10.02

Corinthian columns won’t fix Milton Keynes Neoclassical architecture isn't a solution in of itself

Mary Harrington

Sunday
09.02

09.02

Middle-class patriotism goes underground An Evensong service left me with an emotion I realised I hadn’t felt for some time

Ed West

Saturday
08.02

08.02

The voice of manual work in the world of letters Bud Smith's account of working in an oil refinery shows how both worlds view the other as more authentic

Mary Harrington

Friday
07.02

07.02

As long as universities are businesses, forget about free speech The government's opening salvo in the culture wars ignores the bigger problem

Mary Harrington

07.02

On campus free speech, the government will have a fight on its hands Encouraging signs from the Education Secretary, but it's only a start

Eric Kaufmann

07.02

St Hilda’s demolishes its chapel, and the humanists crow A 'multi-faith space' is about as spiritual as a dentist's waiting room

Giles Fraser

Thursday
06.02

06.02

Being wrong isn’t being hateful The shifting definition of hate speech is flawed and dangerous

Kathleen Stock

06.02

Geek tip: if it doesn’t say “Registered Report,” don’t trust it A new study shows how effective the academic system to avoid bias really is

Tom Chivers

06.02

What Walter Bagehot would say about the State of the Union The essayist understood the difference between the political and ceremonial

Peter Franklin

Wednesday
05.02

05.02

It’s time for the church to go green Lent is the perfect opportunity for Christians to reclaim environmentalism

Mary Harrington

05.02

Boris is right — mercantilists are everywhere Unilaterally adhering to free-market ideology doesn't seem to be working so well for us either

Peter Franklin

05.02

RIP George Steiner, prophet of attention The deceased cultural critic understood that our attention is our highest gift

Elizabeth Oldfield

Tuesday
04.02

04.02

My three-year-old should not know about ‘stress’ We have been subject to increasingly shrill claims about a crisis of childhood

Ashley Frawley

04.02

Take that, Leavers: some British things might be slightly foreign The Brexit-themed Horrible Histories has re-ignited a stupid debate

Ed West

04.02

And the winner from Iowa is… Donald Trump Only the Republicans benefit from the chaos in Iowa

UnHerd

04.02

In (partial) defence of Grace Blakeley The commentator is right to say that alternatives to neoliberalism are being heard

Peter Franklin

Monday
03.02

03.02

WATCH: Boris on the end of the ‘B word’ More classical rhetoric from the prime minister...

UnHerd

03.02

The Google Maps hack underlines our powerlessness It is a metaphor for the defeatism of postmodernism

Mary Harrington

03.02

Andrew Yang, the ‘think outside the box’ candidate The geeky former tech executive has a unique bipartisan appeal

James Billot

Saturday
01.02

01.02

This piece about the 1990s rave scene takes me back Today's rave revisionism points to a culture in decline

Mary Harrington

Friday
31.01

17:3531.01

After Brexit night, what next? Five of the most thought-provoking, from the archives...

UnHerd

31.01

For a different image of freedom, read Stalingrad Douglas Murray missed out Vasily Grossman's all important prequel

Jacob Reynolds

31.01

These days, Peter the Hermit would have a blue tick Medieval-style cults headed by dysfunctional people are rising to power online

Ed West

Thursday
30.01

30.01

Blair Jr campaigns against the university model of Blair Snr Euan Blair has some different ideas from his father

James Billot

30.01

WATCH: Danny Kruger maiden speech The Devizes MP touches on community, culture and Christianity

UnHerd

30.01

Coronavirus leaves no room for cultural sensitivity In a globalised world we need to hold our neighbours to higher standards

Peter Franklin

Wednesday
29.01

29.01

Social media broadens our opinions? Sorry, don’t believe it A new report aims to debunk the idea of social media 'filter bubbles'

Tom Chivers

29.01

The House of Lords should become the Future Chamber It's time to turn the 'revising chamber' into the 'long term chamber'

Peter Franklin

29.01

Memo to the heterosexual heterophobe: why not try chastity? The biggest taboo in contemporary sexual politics is simply going without

Mary Harrington

Tuesday
28.01

28.01

Evidence: The Trump impeachment is backfiring on the Democrats Two datapoints will be bringing a smile to Trumpland

UnHerd

28.01

Labour must decentralise or die The party has always fallen prey to the top-down, micromanaging Left

Peter Franklin

Monday
27.01

27.01

Ed Balls has been on a journey… in more ways than one A trip to Europe gives the former MP a new political perspective

Freddie Sayers

27.01

Office sports chat doesn’t ‘exclude’ anyone It is not, as a BBC interviewee puts it, a gateway drug to more offensive behaviour

Giles Fraser

27.01

The real story from Italy’s election The 'Brothers of Italy' surged, and look like a potential new Salvini partner

UnHerd

27.01

Hungary is ahead of the curve on population policy Large parts of the world are facing a demographic crisis

Ed West

Saturday
25.01

25.01

Going vegan will not save the planet The system of resource extraction remains environmentally destructive

Mary Harrington

Friday
24.01

24.01

I disagree with the Church about sex, but I’m not leaving Ambivalence about the church you are a member of is not disloyalty, it is maturity

Giles Fraser

24.01

The Joe Rogan endorsement is a big win for Bernie Critics of the YouTube star overlook his anti-establishment appeal

James Billot

24.01

OK Lisa Nandy, I’ll give you my vote The Wigan MP is the least uninspiring of the Labour leadership candidates

Paul Embery

24.01

Time to introduce virtue into AI ethics Could courage, or love, or patience, be part of ‘ethical data’?

Elizabeth Oldfield

Thursday
23.01

23.01

Audio: Giles Fraser meets geneticist Adam Rutherford The author and scientist tackles the difficult topic of race and science

UnHerd

23.01

France still sees itself as the Protector of Catholicism The Macron row shows that France takes religion more seriously than Britain

Ed West

23.01

Tyler Cowen is pulling on a dangerous thread The economist's new ideological framework is missing a moral dimension

Peter Franklin

Wednesday
22.01

22.01

Two cheers for the Welsh smacking ban The ruling raises questions about where parental authority should give way to the state

Mary Harrington

22.01

China’s coronavirus will not be the next Black Death The swift response shows the world has learned from its past failures

Tom Chivers

22.01

When sensitive language stops helping There comes a point at which arguments over words become a substitute for deeds

Peter Franklin

Tuesday
21.01

21.01

Casting ethnic minority actors in period roles is political It wasn't the best example, but Laurence Fox has a point

Ed West

21.01

Should we send the Lords up north? Moving the House of Lords, while leaving the House of Commons in London, doesn't make much sense

Peter Franklin

21.01

Tony Hall leaves the BBC with an uncertain future The Director-General achieved many things, but his record is not all positive

Robin Aitken

Monday
20.01

20.01

The new ‘Orthodox Conservatives’ are missing a trick A new youth pressure group has set out its core values, but there are some glaring omissions

Mary Harrington

20.01

Audio: how bad is Viktor Orban? Phillip Blond and Peter Franklin take opposing views on the virtues of the Hungarian regime

UnHerd

20.01

The sixteenth century roots of Gwyneth Paltrow’s candle A new book reveals how our attitude to smell was set relatively recently

Giles Fraser

Saturday
18.01

18.01

How Jesuit missionaries invented spin The cultural legacy of 16th and 17th century missionaries in Brazil and India is still with us today

Mary Harrington

Friday
17.01

17.01

In praise of hereditary politicians What if meritocracy is a bad idea and we're better off with hereditary politicians?

Ed West

17.01

Anne Brontë, the forgotten sister who was ahead of her time Anne Brontë, who died 200 years ago today, was more radical than either of her sisters

Freya Sanders

17.01

No, Guy Verhofstadt, citizenship is not a Netflix subscription The latest idea from the EU is part of a wider loss of the importance place

Giles Fraser

Thursday
16.01

16.01

Leavers, not Remainers, deserted Labour in 2019 A spurious claim is being made by some in the party to deflect criticism over the second referendum pledge

Paul Embery

16.01

The dark side of digital money The end of cash poses a potential threat to personal autonomy

Peter Franklin

16.01

There’s not going to be a Tsar Putin The Russian president's constitutional proposals have been widely misinterpreted

Mary Dejevsky

Wednesday
15.01

15.01

WATCH: Tributes to the Beast of Bolsover led by Conservatives Tory MP Mark Fletcher paid homage to Dennis Skinner in his maiden speech

UnHerd

15.01

Elites don’t preach what they practise Marriage has, paradoxically, become a status-signal and a luxury of the wealthy

Ed West

15.01

WATCH: The most significant moment from last night’s Democrat Debate Billionaire Tom Steyer overtly chose to prioritise the climate over working people

UnHerd

15.01

Nudge off: Is the end in sight for behavioural economics? One of the most influential ideas of the 2010s is facing a backlash

Peter Franklin

Tuesday
14.01

14.01

Amazon’s predatory tactics spread to India The company's expansion threatens the livelihood of ordinary people

Mary Harrington

14.01

Maybe Lisa Nandy has a chance after all The Wigan MP has a plan to win, and it's not a bad one

Freddie Sayers