The Red Queen race against computer viruses

Matt Ridley

The battle against both digital and biological diseases is endless My Times column on malware, ransomware and the battle against viruses: The WannaCry ransomware cyberattack of last week, which briefly crippled much of the National Health Service, may be the biggest, but it will not be the last outbreak of cybercrime. Remember your Through the […]

Wind is an irrelevance to the energy and climate debate

Matt Ridley

Even after 30 years of huge subsidies, it provides about zero energy My Spectator article on the futile numbers behind wind power:   The Global Wind Energy Council recently released its latest report, excitedly boasting that ‘the proliferation of wind energy into the global power market continues at a furious pace, after it was revealed […]

The argument for controlling badgers

Matt Ridley

It’s environmentally, commercially and humanely the right thing to do My Times article on badger culling:   If Theresa May is happy to see a return of foxhunting, she must be consistent and face down the misguided animal welfare lobby with a pledge to cull more badgers. There are three reasons that a continuing, wider […]

Britain should adopt the Innovation Principle

Matt Ridley

We must test legislation against whether it impedes innovation Here’s my recent Times column: An open letter to George Freeman MP, chairman of the government’s policy board. Dear George, as a former biotech venture capitalist, you are a passionate champion of innovation. It has pulled an average of 137,000 people out of extreme poverty each […]

How tastes evolve

Matt Ridley

Will we find a way to replace meat eating before it becomes unpopular? My Times column on meat eating: A few years ago I had a conversation at Harvard with Steven Pinker, the bestselling evolutionary psychologist. We were both writing optimistic books at the time, his being The Better Angels of Our Nature, about the […]

European Commission buries science on bees

Matt Ridley

Study suggests ban on neonicotinoids has done more harm than good My Times column on a shocking case of European policy cover-up over bees and insecticides:   Is the European Commission determined to dim the Enlightenment? I ask this because its behaviour in one specific instance goes so utterly with dogma and against evidence as […]

Faddy fashions in foods conceal a real nutritional problem

Matt Ridley

Food allergies are increasing – because we’ve got rid of our worms My Times column on dietary intolerance:   I suggest you finish your breakfast before reading this column. When the National Health Service announced last month that it would no longer prescribe gluten-free food, it surprised me that it had been doing so in […]

When populism falters and the elite strikes back

Matt Ridley

Lessons from the history of failed rebellions against oligarchs My Times column on Douglas Carswell’s book Rebel:   I am writing this from the Netherlands, where one of the most gruesome paintings in the Rijksmuseum, by Jan de Baen, depicts the eviscerated bodies of the de Witt brothers, hanging upside down after the mob had […]

Stand up for the right to criticise Islam

Matt Ridley

We risk gradually having an offence of blasphemy imposed on the west “It is wrong to describe this as Islamic terrorism. It is Islamist terrorism. It is a perversion of a great faith.” This is what the prime minister said in parliament after the attack on Westminster Bridge that killed three tourists and a policeman. […]

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