The Spectator

The decline of the spirit

In celebration of the feast of Easter, we’ve dug out this profound leader from March 1975, which looks at the ever-evolving relationship of church and state.  The Church, the State and the decline of the spirit, The Spectator, 29 March 1975 Spring is a time of rebirth; yet it is also the time of the

Barometer | 7 April 2012

Sinking feelings Some conspiracy theories on the sinking of the Titanic: — The disaster was planned by a bunch of Jesuits, Captain Smith of the Titanic included, intent on bumping off Benjamin Guggenheim, Isa Strauss and Jacob Astor, who opposed the establishment of the US Federal Reserve and therefore impeded Jesuit efforts to control the global

Portrait of the week | 7 April 2012

Home Nick Clegg, the deputy Prime Minister, said he could not support as they stood government plans to hold in camera civil court cases involving secret intelligence. The government also proposed changing the law to allow it to monitor the telephone calls, emails, texts and visits to websites of everyone in the country. UK Biobank

Carbon captives | 7 April 2012

The government’s desire for a ‘green economy’ has become such an obsession that it has begun to override common sense. This week, the Department for Energy and Climate Change invited bidders to apply for £1 billion of public funding for a commercial-scale carbon capture and storage project. The money will be used, we are told,

From the archives: The C of E’s lack of purpose

As Easter Sunday approaches, we cast back to April 2009 when Rod Liddle presented an Easter question to leaders of the Church — what happened to muscular Christianity? Here is the article in full for CoffeeHousers:  The C of E has forgotten its purpose. Why, exactly, does it exist?, Rod Liddle, 11 April 2009What did

The week that was | 6 April 2012

Here is a selection of articles and discussions from this week on Spectator.co.uk… Most discussed: Ross Clark on Cameron’s tragic flaw  Most shared: Sebastian Payne on Ken vs. Boris in a lift.  Most read: James Forsyth on how the London Mayor campaigns could play out.  And the best of the rest… Fraser Nelson looks at