Roundup’s advantages

Matt Ridley

Banning a comparatively safe pesticide would be counterproductive   My recent Times column on the herbicide glyphosate: I once tried the organic alternative to the herbicide roundup for clearing weeds from garden paths: a flame-thrower. It was brutal for the environment, incinerating innocent insects and filling the air with emissions. Next week I might have […]

An age of women leaders

Matt Ridley

Female heads of government probably do bring something different I published this column in the Times recently. Since then it has become clear that Britain will probably have a female prime minister soon (Theresa May and Andrea Leadsom are the bookies’ favourites), and a female leader of the opposition (Angela Eagle ditto), as well as […]

A bright global future for Britain

Matt Ridley

Leaving the EU means joining the world     Here are three articles on the Brexit referendum of June 2016.   First, My last Times column before the EU referendum, published on 20 June:  I was just too young to vote in the 1975 referendum. I would have voted “Yes” to the European Community and […]

Why Europe cannot grow digital giants

Matt Ridley

The EU is falling behind and it’s not bad luck, it’s bad policy My Times column on the European Union’s failure to grow digital giants: Last week I visited an island and stood among a crowd of puffins. If I turned my head I could see the lighthouse. If I looked up, the arctic terns […]

Genetic modification of plants is safe and good for the planet

Matt Ridley

A major academic review reinforces the benefits of biotechnology My Times comment on a new report on genetically modified crops:   The exhaustive and cautious new report from the American National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine leaves no room for doubt that genetically engineered crops are as safe or safer, and are certainly better […]

Why eugenics won’t come back

Matt Ridley

Gene editing is the very opposite of coerced selective breeding My Times column on why gene editing is not the slippery slope to eugenics:   This summer brings the 50th anniversary of the full deciphering of the genetic code — the four-billion-year-old cipher by which DNA’s information is translated and expressed — and the centenary […]

Broadband will drive a rural revival

Matt Ridley

Communications infrastructure can bridge the town-country gap My Times column on rural broadband: Compared with most countries, Britain has a fairly healthy rural economy. Barns have been converted into homes or offices rather than left to tumble down, as in parts of France. Remote areas have job vacancies in picturesque villages, rather than drug problems […]

Britain’s long history of semi-detachment from Europe

Matt Ridley

Keeping the balance of power means resisting European power monopolies My Times column on Britain’s history with Europe: [The prime minister argues that “when we turn out back on Europe, sooner or later we come to regret it” and cited 1704, 1805, 1914 and 1940 as examples. This is historical nonsense: in each case it […]

The many attempts to stifle free speech on climate change

Matt Ridley

There’s room for disagreement within the “consensus” My Times column on free speech and climate change:   The editor of this newspaper received a private letter last week from Lord Krebs and 12 other members of the House of Lords expressing unhappiness with two articles by its environment correspondent. Conceding that The Times’s reporting of […]

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