Archive: Month: <span>September 2025</span>

The Next Democratic Nominee for 2028?

Why the 45–55 Cohort from Electoral Powerhouses Matters Democrats face a genuine hinge point in 2028. The goal isn’t only to win—it’s to hand the party to a leader who can knit together the Biden-Harris coalition, cut into GOP gains with working-class and younger voters, and front a credible governing record. That’s why the sweet … Read more

The line we agree to cross

There is a point beyond which the sermon ends and the invoice begins. Every lofty declaration contains its own reservation clause, the little asterisk that saves the speaker from their better self. We are forever telling one another what we believe, and then adding, sotto voce, the conditions under which belief is suspended. There is … Read more

The Empress Hotel: “The Big E”

If you live in Sydney, you might be able to name a few famous pubs: The Hero, The Oaks, and Watson’s Bay. However, there is a pub that should be just as famous, and you wouldn’t know it even if you were standing in front of it. The erasure of The Empress Hotel from Sydney’s … Read more

The Third Fleet: Twenty-Eight Winter Days at Sydney Cove

In August 1791, four ships forced a fragile penal settlement to become a city, as witnessed from Governor Phillip’s verandah, Surgeon White’s ward, Commissary Palmer’s ledger, Bennelong’s point, and the calloused hands of a working man. 1 August: The Arithmetic Changes The lookout’s cry carried across the winter harbour like a struck bell. A square … Read more

Sancak-ı Şerif; Relic, Ritual, and Ottoman Statecraft

From the Battlefields of Medina to the Palaces of Istanbul This is the story of a relic: a banner revered across empires under sanctified titles Sancak-ı Şerif, Ukab, Âlem-i Şerif, and the Holy Banner of the Prophet Muhammad (Rasûlüllah (s.a.s) ‘a ait sancak). It is not merely cloth, but a physical embodiment of legitimacy and … Read more

3/4

7×7, Autumn, Twilight, Thursday. Other liminal things, not quite the end, but still enough time to run down. Something is unsettling about three-quarters. Not the fraction itself—that’s clean enough, a neat division that any schoolchild can visualise with a pie chart or a measuring cup. It’s the feeling of three-quarters that gets under your skin: … Read more

Too Effective for Their Own Good: NATO, Feminism, Vaccines and the Paradox of Success

We live in a world built on invisible scaffolding. It’s not the monuments we notice most, but the quiet, unremarkable stability—the absence of disaster, the daily freedoms that feel so ordinary we no longer remember they were once extraordinary. NATO, feminism, and vaccines belong to this category of “invisible institutions”: they have worked so well, … Read more