Afleveringen
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There have been two knife attacks within just weeks of each other that are being linked to terrorism.
One was a church in Sydney and the other outside a Bunnings in Perth on the weekend.
Both involved teenage boys. So, what’s going on?
Today, investigative reporter Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop on the radicalisation of vulnerable young people and whether programs to stop it are working.
Featured:
Sean Rubinsztein-Dunlop, ABC investigative reporter
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You have to be aged at least 13 to access social media like TikTok, Twitter and Instagram in Australia.
But is that an appropriate age, given the disturbing content available and harm heavy social media use can cause?
Could we just ban smartphones and social media for Australian kids altogether?
Today, we meet a father who has limited his daughter’s phone use and a psychiatrist who’ll explain the problems that smartphones can cause.
Featured:
Danny Elachi, The Heads Up Alliance founder
Dr Yann Poncin, child psychiatrist at the Yale Child Studies Center
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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Two deadly crashes and a mid-air door blowout have rocked the reputation of Boeing, with questions intensifying about the quality of its planes.
Concerns about the 737 MAX aircraft peaked when a hole opened up on the side of an Alaska Airlines flight in January this year.
Today, Jerry Useem, who’s been investigating Boeing for more than two decades, charts the firm’s departure from in-house manufacturing.
He’s been writing for the Atlantic magazine about how Boeing switched its focus to its stock price and what that meant for the safety of its aircraft.
Featured:
Jerry Useem, contributing writer at The Atlantic
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At Columbia University in the heart of New York City late one evening this week riot police stormed a university hall.
They entered via a window to arrest students who’d for weeks been camping out at the campus to protest against the war in Gaza.
Now, the pro-Palestinian movement that’s seen more than a thousand students arrested across the US has landed here.
Today, we look at the encampments popping up on campuses across the country and ask how will university leaders allow freedom of speech while ensuring Jewish students and staff feel safe?
Featured:
Dr Tim Dean, senior philosopher at the Ethics Centre
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Most Australians had never flown it and now they may never get a chance.
Bonza has followed so many other airlines and gone into administration, meaning yet again less competition in our aviation market.
Today, the rise and rapid fall of the budget carrier and whether we will one day get a third major airline to drive down airfares across the country.
Featured:
Justin Wastnage, adjunct professor in aviation at Griffith University
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Inflation pressures were meant to be coming off a bit more by now, but a higher than expected reading has one prominent economist suggesting interest rates could go up three times this year.
So, why is inflation so sticky? And will the Reserve Bank feel compelled to lift rates to further dampen economic activity?
Today, chief business correspondent Ian Verrender explains what’s going wrong.
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Ian Verrender, ABC Chief Business Correspondent
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At big rallies on the weekend women and men came together to say enough is enough, that violence against women must end.
Today, the ABC’s Patricia Karvelas on what needs to happen to address one of the nation’s most entrenched problems.
Featured:
Patricia Karvelas, host of RN Breakfast, Q+A and the Party Room podcast
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In Australia, an increasing number of children are missing school and part of the problem is what has been called school avoidance or refusal.
But families who are struggling say it’s more accurately called ‘school can’t’ because some students experience a stress response that prevents them from getting to the classroom.
Today, Four Corners’ filmmaker Sascha Ettinger-Epstein shares her insights into the issue and what’s working to get children's education back on track.
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Sascha Ettinger-Epstein, Four Corners’ filmmaker
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After the Bondi attack, like so many other women, journalist Louise Milligan found the horror of it hard to comprehend.
Since then and with the death of yet another young woman allegedly at the hands of a former partner this week, discussion about violence against women in Australia has been reignited.
Today, observations from years of reporting on this issue, Louise Milligan’s own encounters with threats of violence and why men need to step up.
Featured:
Louise Milligan, author and ABC journalist
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It must feel like a never-ending battle for Rupert Murdoch.
His British newspaper group is continuing to face legal action more than a decade after the phone hacking scandal came to a head.
Now he’s settled with the actor Hugh Grant who was accusing the Sun newspaper of everything from bugging his car to robbing his home to get stories.
Today, ABC Media Watch host Paul Barry on how Murdoch has paid out many millions of dollars to avoid trial and what it all means for his empire.
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Paul Barry, Media Watch presenter
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Australian political leaders are united in their condemnation of Elon Musk.
He’s been described as an arrogant billionaire and a cowboy with no social conscience.
Now, Musk is ready for a legal fight over demands he remove videos of last week’s Sydney church stabbing from his social media platform X.
He says the concepts of free speech and censorship are at the heart of the matter.
Today, host of tech podcast Download this Show, Marc Fennell, on the fight between Australia’s eSafety Commissioner and Elon Musk.
Featured:
Marc Fennell, host of Download this Show
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Imagine opening your next electricity bill and it’s double what it usually is.
More Australians are finding themselves in a position where their power bills are rising, not because they’ve changed how much electricity they use, but because they’ve been unwittingly switched to a time of use tariff.
It means they pay more if they use power at peak times.
Today, energy reporter Dan Mercer explains the tariffs and how they’re leading to a greater energy divide.
Featured:
Dan Mercer, ABC energy reporter
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He’s on trial for falsifying business records to cover up a sex scandal, but Donald Trump’s woes haven’t harmed him in the polls yet.
Instead, it’s abortion that’s become one of his most problematic issues as the former president works to get back to the White House.
Some voters are turned off by his pro-life record and so he’s been trying to massage his message. But will it win him votes?
Featured:
Prudence Flowers, senior lecturer in US history at Flinders University
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As the events unfolded at Bondi Junction last Saturday afternoon, an unsuspecting university student was falsely accused on social media of being the killer.
It spread on the X platform and by the morning Channel 7 was also wrongly telling its large audience that Benjamin Cohen was to blame.
How did the lie take off, who was originally behind it and how can we hold social media giants to account for misinformed and dangerous content?
Featured:
Cam Wilson, Crikey associate editor
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It’s hard to understand how a man could walk into a shopping centre on a Saturday afternoon and start stabbing people.
It’s left so many people demanding answers.
Today, we look at the offender Joel Cauchi’s mental health history and ask whether anything could have been done to stop the attack and save lives.
Featured:
Professor Kimberlie Dean, Chair of Forensic Mental Health at UNSW
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It’s been an unsettling few days with two major knife crimes in Sydney.
The Bondi Junction attack left six dead and just days later there was an alleged act of terrorism at a church in the city’s west.
The circumstances are very different, but leaders are calling for calm and for the community to come together.
Today, extremism expert Josh Roose on what we know about the latest attack and the threat of terrorism.
Correction: This episode included a misleading quote of NSW Police Commissioner Karen Webb discussing the Bondi attacker, when we were discussing the alleged church offender. We have removed this audio.
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Josh Roose, associate professor of politics at Deakin University
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A defamation case brought by Bruce Lehrmann has ended with a dramatic finding against the former Liberal party staffer.
Justice Michael Lee is satisfied that on the balance of probabilities Mr Lehrmann did rape Brittany Higgins inside Parliament House in Canberra in March 2019.
Court reporter Patrick Bell steps through the judgement that was watched on a live stream by tens of thousands of people.
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Patrick Bell, ABC court reporter
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How did the attacker at a busy Westfield shopping centre select his victims?
Police are searching for answers after the Saturday afternoon rampage at Bondi Junction in Sydney’s east.
A 40-year-old Queensland man, armed with a knife, made his way through the centre stabbing innocent shoppers, killing six people.
Today, criminologist Xanthe Mallett reflects on the acts of heroism we saw and what may have driven the killer.
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Dr Xanthe Mallett, criminologist and associate professor at the University of Newcastle
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The appeal of music festivals seems to be dying away with a string of cancellations this year.
Is it all about rising costs and fears of bad weather? Or is there more to it?
Today, Double Js National Music Correspondent Zan Rowe on whether the big music festival can be saved.
Featured:
Zan Rowe, Double J National Music Correspondent and host of Take 5 and Bang On podcasts
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Australian Zomi Frankcom and six others died when their convoy of aid vehicles was struck by Israeli missiles in Gaza.
Israel says it was a mistake and a tragedy. But is its explanation good enough?
Today, host of ABC’s 7.30 program, Sarah Ferguson, on what we learnt from her interview with an Israeli military spokesman and whether what unfolded was a war crime.
Featured:
Sarah Ferguson, presenter of ABC 7.30
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