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Thursday 30 October 2014
The best comment, analysis and blogs from The Telegraph including Charles Moore, Peter Oborne, Boris Johnson, Dan Hodges, Fraser Nelson and Janet Daley
Comment Top Stories
A report that the Establishment wants buried must not be ignored, says Peter Oborne
The consequences of GM are more about politics than science, says Tom Chivers
One in five of those attending Britain’s top 10 universities comes from independent schools, says Christopher Ray
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh hosted a reception for the Victoria Cross and George Cross Association at Buckingham Palace yesterday. Here we list the living holders of the VC, awarded for valour 'in the face of the enemy'.
Most new arrivals aren't after benefits, says Robert Colvile - they're after jobs
For something we supposedly can't talk about, we talk about immigration with astonishing regularity, says James Kirkup
The SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon's ham-fisted intervention over Europe suggests she has the same problems with bluster and grandstanding that her predecessor Alex Salmond did
X-Wing is the Casablanca of video games; if you haven't played it, you're a philistine, writes Willard Foxton
Just as film buffs don't write off Casablanca because it's old, video gamers should embrace the greats from their archive too. Here are five of the best selected by Willard Foxton
If liberals want to make ordinary people believe that the only forces prepared to address their concerns are fascist bigots, then they are going the right way about it, says Janet Daley
One in 10 borrowers has no plan to pay off their expiring mortgage. Would you agree to die in debt?
A Swedish study suggests that people who drink three glasses of milk a day are more likely to die early than the rest of us. But is it true? Tom Chivers looks into it
Tom Parker Bowles says he will never send a child away to school. Here, Harry Wallop and Anna Pasternak debate the issue
As Britain moves closer to leaving the EU, Ed Miliband must lead the fight to remain , says Mary Riddell.
A traditional academic curriculum is the best way to prepare pupils for the new technology-driven economy, says Adam D'Souza
Hannah Lippitt argues that a major rethink of what and how we teach children is needed – with a focus on technological skills
Today's Editorials
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Editor's Choice
Middle-aged bodies, and brains, have strange ways of telling you when it’s last orders, says Harry Mount
As America's midterm elections approach, Tim Stanley gives us his seven favourite nut ball candidates. And, no, they're not all Republicans.
The frustrations of deafness are not solely in the ear of the beholder, says Jessica Fellowes
The record industry can’t rely on the young to buy music, so it is repackaging old favourites to be bought a second time by baby-boomers. Is this clever reinvention or cynical recycling, asks Neil McCormick
The greasepaint smile has become a modern mask for all that is manic and malevolent, says Mick Brown
The long-term plan for the health service will involve helping people stay out of hospital, says Jeremy Hunt
A BBC documentary about Haringey children's services was shockingly biased, says Allison Pearson
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Telegraph Blogs»
James Kirkup
Dan Hodges
Norman Tebbit
Peter Oborne»
The anti-smoking lobby has been offering advice to the House of Lords on how to regulate drinking. Draconian moves could follow, warns Peter Oborne
Mary Riddell»
Boris Johnson»
Russell Brand has become a prophet of the Left only because of Labour’s abject failure, writes Boris Johnson
Fiona Woolf was the victim of a kangaroo court – but she was wrong to take the poisoned chalice, says Charles Moore
Fraser Nelson»
The head of the NHS has launched a series of reforms too radical for politicians to promote, says Fraser Nelson
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