The Morning Edition SMH & The Age
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- News
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The Morning Edition (formerly Please Explain) brings you the story behind the story with the best journalists in Australia. Join host Samantha Selinger-Morris from the newsrooms of The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, weekdays from 5am.
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The book banned in Sydney - and why it's a warning for Labor
About two weeks ago, a council in Sydney’s west voted to ban books about same-sex families.
A former mayor and current councillor led the charge, brandishing a book he said his constituents complained about. Though he hadn’t read the book himself, he claimed residents wanted their kids kept safe from “sexualisation."
The motion prompted immediate outrage, including from the NSW Arts Minister, who said when civilisations turn to burning books, or banning books, it was a very bad sign.
Today, state political editor Alexandra Smith on what wider implications this local decision could have for all Australians.
To read Smith's full opinion piece click here.
Other audio used in this episode include from:
The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
MSNBC
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Inside Politics: Treasurer Jim Chalmers promises relief and reform in upcoming budget
The Federal government will hand down its third budget on Tuesday, May 14. Treasurer Jim Chalmers has promised the budget will be about cost of living relief and also reform. The Treasurer says people should also expect ambitious investment from the government on housing supply.
Today, in a special episode, chief political correspondent David Crowe and senior economics correspondent Shane Wright speak to the Treasurer in Canberra, covering migration, housing pressures, the future made in Australia and the Treasurer’s focus ahead of next week’s budget.
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Riot police, violence on campus and a new political battleground
For months now, anger over Israel’s military operation in Gaza has spilled over into mass unrest at universities across the United States.
This culminated in disturbing scenes last week, when police in riot gear stormed the campus at Columbia University, setting off flashbang grenades and eventually arresting nearly 120 people, many of them hauled away, their hands handcuffed with zip ties.
This won’t be the last of it, says North American correspondent Farrah Tomazin, who has spoken to protesters from both sides at campuses across the US.
Today, Tomazin discusses whether these protests ever lead to cultural change, in a country that has a long history of them, some of them deadly. And whether they might help determine the outcome of the American presidential election in November.
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Donald Trump has enemies everywhere. More than anything, he wants revenge
For years now, Donald Trump has been shooting off inflammatory messages on social media, and shouting invective about his foes, from lecterns. But as for his actual plans for how he would lead the United States, should he be elected president on November 5?
They’ve long been thin on the ground. Or they were, until the other week, when Trump offered a surprising interview in which he revealed, perhaps for the first time, a detailed vision of what he wants to achieve in a second presidency. And just how far he would be planning to go, to attain his goals.
Today, international and political editor Peter Hartcher on what Donald Trump’s desire for revenge might look like for Americans on the ground. And why he's more threatened by his own people, than America's traditional enemies.
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Australian brothers killed in Mexico: What we know now
They were two brothers from Perth on a trip of a lifetime in Mexico.
Callum Robinson, who was playing college lacrosse in the U.S and his brother Jake, a young doctor at the start of his career in Australia, were avid surfers chasing waves on a trip in the north-west coast of Mexico.
Last week they went missing, before Mexican police found four bodies down a well on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean.
Authorities have now confirmed that two of those bodies are those of Jake and Callum.
How did this happen in a popular Mexican holiday destination?
Today, Channel Nine’s U.S correspondent Alison Piotrowski speaks to us from Baja California about what it’s like on the ground, and the possible motive behind the suspected murders.
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A new spy ring unearthed and it's not Russia or China
When you think about spies infiltrating Australia and which countries they’re coming from, you’re probably going to think of China, or Russia.
But we’ve just learned, for the first time, that India’s intelligence agency - known as the RAW - deployed secret agents to try and steal sensitive information from one its most important global partners, Australia.
It comes as reports emerged from the United States that a hired hit team with links to the RAW was in the final phase of carrying out an assasination plot against an Indian activist.
Today, foreign affairs and national security correspondent Matthew Knott on what’s behind this global “nest of spies” and why this spy operation in Australia was kept secret until now.
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Customer Reviews
Poor research
Your episode on cannabis over prescribing hinged on a patient ‘Gary’ who claimed they were able to fill repeat prescriptions. As a schedule 8 drug, scripts are required to have an interval period between script refills. The period of time varies from Dr to Dr but is typically two weeks or monthly. Gary would not be able to fill that excessive amount all at once. That would most likely be six months worth. Stop with this sensationalism and do better.
What happened?
I used to love these ~10min updates. They’re becoming too long to listen
Bias reporting
Absolutely appalling reporting skim on facts and a lot of rhetoric - poor choice if you want to get actual news and not just poorly veiled propaganda