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Joined October 2008
15,645 Photos and videos
'Elon Musk is a real-life Bond villain' ran the headline in the Financial Times. But the idea that Musk’s financial wealth makes us poorer is a mistake ✍️ Druin Burch spectator.com/article/why-ca…
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I had a culinary revelation this week. I like to think I'm an egalitarian when it comes to food – I like beautiful, fancy restaurant stuff and home-cooked one-pot dishes, I like punchy, in-your-face flavour, and subtle, softer flavours. I love trying new-to-me dishes from around the world, and I love the comfort of eating suppers my grandma would make. You can put virtually anything in front of me and I'll be thrilled. But as I contemplated this week's recipe subject, I realised that I avoid foods that ooze. Doughnuts splurging out their jam, uncontainable ice-cream sandwiches, croissants or Danish pastries with custards or compotes that blob onto my clothes. Even really juicy stone fruit or a particularly ripe soft cheese makes me nervous. My name is Olivia Potts, and I have an aversion to squidge. ✍️ Olivia Potts Article | spectator.com/article/embrac…
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The question I find myself asking along with a lot of other football fans is: What are we doing? What are we doing to these players? ✍️ Scarlet Katz Roberts spectator.com/article/despit…
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Pessimism about the United Kingdom’s position in the world has a long pedigree. But the talk of our decline is overblown ✍️ Brendan Simms spectator.com/article/britai…
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We're only a few months – perhaps years at most ­– away from the first political assassination by a drone'. That was the chilling verdict delivered by Francis Dearnley on this week's episode of The Edition podcast from The Spectator. The host of the award-winning Ukraine: The Latest podcast was speaking as Russia's war in Ukraine reached a grim milestone: it has now gone on longer than the first world war. That Ukraine has been able to fiercely resist Russia for so long is due, in no small part, to advances in drone technology. ✍️ Patrick Gibbons Article | spectator.com/article/were-o…
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This is not the end, but it's well past the beginning of the end, or even the middle of the end. It feels, with six days until the Makerfield by-election is expected to return Andy Burnham to Parliament, that we are at the beginning of the end of the end. It is also well past the point of no return for Britain's credibility on the world stage. Like the clockwork toy which goes off just as you have drifted off to sleep, Keir Starmer weathered an interview with the BBC on the departure of two ministers from the Ministry of Defence (and two ministerial aides) only to get an Exocet in the guts from the Americans. ✍️ Tim Shipman Article | spectator.com/article/starme…
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If you've ever lived in Marseille – where the habit of exaggeration is imbibed with mothers' milk – you've heard about the sardine that blocked the port. But that's nothing compared to the pistachio that took over the world. In late 2023, Dubai chocolate, a new kind of chocolate bar filled with pistachio cream, tahini and crunchy, toasted phyllo pastry, went viral. Chocolate brands, bakeries and purveyors of fine foods were quick to jump on the trend. Coffee chains began offering pistachio chocolate drinks (iced Dubai-chocolate matcha, anyone?) and delectable pistachio bomboloni – soft donuts filled with pistachio cream – came back on the menu in Italian restaurants. Meanwhile, pâtissiers seized on the craze with spinoffs such as the pistachio and raspberry dessert by Montreal's Farine & Cacao: yogurt mousse, raspberry confit and whipped pistachio ganache nestled atop a pistachio biscuit, crowned with fresh raspberries and pistachio praline. ✍️ Jane Stannus Article | spectator.com/article/stands…
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Since Donald Trump retook office in January 2025, Washington has experienced significant upheaval in its institutions. The United States Institute of Peace underwent a DoGE takeover that involved federal police occupying the building, taking over its board of directors and seizing control of its assets and operations. The majority of people who had worked there prior was fired or nudged toward resignation – with their severance conditional on a promise not to sue their old employer. It was renamed the Donald J. Trump Institute of Peace. ✍️ Cockburn Article | spectator.com/article/the-fu…
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Donald Trump's 80th birthday is this weekend, and what better present for a struggling octogenarian Commander-in-Chief than a peace deal with Iran, signed if not quite yet sealed and delivered. There is, I'm told, some late scrambling over “semantics” in the so-called “memorandum of understanding” between America and Iran, and lingering issues over the language concerning the “nuclear dust” – i.e., Iran's enriched uranium. But the rest is all but agreed. J.D. Vance could fly to Europe to sign a deal tomorrow – or if not it will be Trump as he attends the G7 in Evian near the Swiss Alps on Monday. ✍️ Freddy Gray Article | spectator.com/article/will-p…
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Portrait of the week: Belfast burns, Sullivan resigns and the Iran ceasefire cracks ✍️ The Spectator Article | spectator.com/article/portra…
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On Ardoyne Road on Wednesday afternoon, the original conflict resumed. Two loyalists passed a couple of nationalists, and they exchanged hostilities. 'Go on then, come here and do something!' said one of the nationalist kids. The young loyalists – recognisable in black tracksuits and balaclavas – continued up the hill as a third nationalist wheelied past them on a motorbike. On Tuesday, the first night of the disorder in Belfast, Ardoyne seemed to be taken by a providential Christian comradeship. In one of the city's harshest 'interface areas', Catholics and Protestants came together in protest against the knife attack on Stephen Ogilvie. Less than 24 hours later, however, things had returned to normal. ✍️ Max Jeffery Article | spectator.com/article/the-le…
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Not even the resignation of a respected defence secretary will stop one Sir Keir Starmer from ploughing ahead with his tumultuous premiership. Despite John Healey's blistering warning that the Prime Minister is incapable of keeping the country safe, Sir Keir today vowed to take the fight to Andy Burnham should he triumph – as currently expected – in the Makerfield by-election. The Prime Minister insisted to the BBC that battling on without the confidence of more than half his party is ‘not about personal vanity’. He argued: ✍️ Steerpike Article | spectator.com/article/starme…
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David Hockney has died, aged 88. During lockdown in 2020, Martin Gayford, the author of 'Conversations With Hockney', spoke to him for the magazine. Spring has not been cancelled. Neither have the arts ceased to function. David Hockney's marvellous exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery may be sadly shut, but the artist himself is firing on all cylinders. ✍️ Martin Gayford Article | spectator.com/article/i-thin…
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"The same people who celebrate Pride call working class communities who hang out the Cross of Saint George 'flag shaggers' because they're so obsessed with flags, apparently" Brendan O’Neill discusses the corporate retreat from Pride and what it says about the changing culture of virtue-signalling. @Simmons__
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