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17 MIN READ TIME

Wine

Tasting greatness at 8.30am

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Mar-18
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Other Articles in this Issue


Prospect
The argument argument
Britain is in the midst of an almighty argument about
Letters & opinions
Letters & opinions
Hannah Jane Parkinson (“Life in the slow lane, February)
Treasure island
Britain has long given haven to ill-gotten gains. That may now change—thanks to David Cameron
Incapacitated
Disability benefits have been broken
Lay off the boomers: it’s all our fault
In political terms, my generation really did have a naughty nineties
Liberty, equality, patriarchy
In France, cultural opposition to the #MeToo movement is entrenched
A spook gets the shivers on Brexit
The former head of MI6 opens up to Prospect’s Jay Elwes
Korean games
For citizens in the South, maybe it’s time to pack that escape bag
Fancy another referendum?
What’s the appetite? And how would it go?
Can the private sector make services run better?
Look at the world around us, in all its amazing creativity
1918 Spanish flu epidemic
Extracts from memoirs and diaries, chosen by Ian Irvine
Main Features
Writers blocked
I write to be mischievous, subversive and perverse. There’s no room for any of that in a culture obsessed with offence
Battle for the mike
Free speech is never as free as we’d like to think—who gets to be heard depends on who’s got power
The truth about snowflakes and censors
Two student journalists on whether free speech is really threatened on campus
Words that kill
In 780BC, the poet Semonides of Amorgos deployed an
Britain needs free speech
And here’s how we can get it
The new culture wars
New polling reveals a split country: EU Leavers hanker for blunt politicians, while Remainers worry about causing offence. But overall Britain is in no mood for “political correctness”
The last great liberal
A shameless opportunist who ripped up the rule book, Roosevelt never allowed principle to stand in the way of good politics. Why can’t today’s left-wing leaders live up to his example?
The good Muslim delusion
Western powers have been trying—and failing—to dictate what Islam should be for centuries
Confessions of a number cruncher
The head of the Institute for Fiscal Studies on how damned lies get served up with statistics
How do we look?
Our ideal of the body beautiful was defined by the Ancient Greeks—but other cultures had very different ideas
Prospect Portrait
The invisible man
Daniel Day-Lewis’s shock decision to retire means the movie industry has lost one of its most mercurial talents. But who is he, really? Wendy Ide tries to separate the man from the mythology
Arts & books
Best of all possible worlds
According to a compelling new manifesto for optimism, the planet is becoming a better place, says Philip Ball—despite all appearances to the contrary
The enemy within
Immigrants are not a threat to European democracy—but the extreme right-wing reaction to them could well be, warns Daniel Trilling
Access all areas
From Ibiza Proms to Tiny Tots concerts, classical music is trying to broaden its appeal. But does it risk losing what makes it special, asks Suna Erdem
The female gaze
It wasn’t Ingmar Bergman who made stars of his women, but they who made him, says Francine Stock
Books in brief
Now it’s not just the mavericks, but mainstream economists
Recommends
In January 1932, Pablo Picasso, then 50, painted The
Life
Leith on language
It may not have been “the Sun wot won it”, when it
Life of the mind
The traditional way of writing about patients is to
Matters of taste
Catania’s seafront is bordered by a railway. Iron railings
DIY investor
There are very few markets where DIY investors enjoy
Policy report: Energy
No more talk of “green crap”
Technological advances are increasing the efficiency of renewable energy around the world, but with the distractions of Brexit, can Britain keep up? Here, Labour’s Rachel Reeves is worried the government might skimp on its commitment to green tech, while the Conservative Peter Aldous is more optimistic. Prospect’s Jay Elwes, by contrast, sees little hope of the state pushing things forward, and is instead looking to private enterprise for the answers
It’s all about storage
The UK’s energy storage sector is on the brink of historic
The new power generation
Both Rachel Reeves and Peter Aldous are right—the way
Things to do this month
Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the month (excluding bank holidays) at 6.30pm at 2 Queen Anne’s Gate, London, SW1H 9AA. To book tickets please visit prospectmagazine.co.uk/events
Brief encounter
Evan Davis
Newsnight presenter
Swimming upstream
The term “conventional wisdom” is often attributed
Beating the inflation blues
The time may have come to get comfortable with risk
Banking on bits
Cryptocurrency: tempting —but do your homework
Bitten by the bug
It’s still the ultimate asset
Do something innovative with your ISA
The Individual Savings Account (ISA) has come a long
Spending new money
Where does value lie?
Giving money to computers
Sounds like sci-fi—but it’s surprisingly boring