If you were forwarded this by a colleague please click here to subscribe | Ten must-read blogs Giving space to Andrew Wakefield on MMR isn't balance, it's lunacy The Independent should not have run the discredited doctor's claims on its front page today. By Martin Robbins Five reasons why the benefit cap is wrong The £26,000 cap, which is introduced in four London boroughs today, will raise child poverty, increase homelessness and cost more than it saves. By George Eaton Miliband and the Blairites have more in common than they suggest A leader who has explicitly "turned the page on New Labour" makes many of the same compromises and electoral calculations as the former prime minister and his allies. By Rafael Behr No blacks or Arabs" for Israeli PM's visit: the latest example of French state-sanctioned discrimination EHollande's silence on the alleged discrimination against black and Arab employees is indicative of the president's recent decision to chase popularity by playing to the centre-right. By Myriam Francois-Cerrah Sir Colin Davis: a conductor without compare He gave us all a good time. By Caroline Crampton Thatcher and North Sea oil - a failure to invest in Britain's future Had Thatcher been a truly visionary politician, she would have established a wealth fund for the oil windfall, not squandered it on tax cuts and current spending. By Guy Lodge Granta's Best Young British Novelists - who are they? Bios for the twenty listed writers. By Philip Maughan Kobo fights Amazon with the one thing it has: friends The Aura HD is a great bit of hardware, but that's not where the battle of ereaders is being fought. By Alex Hern Columnists now are like street performers - collecting coins in a hat and dodging angry racists By 70, will I be screeching about immigrants from an enormous throne made of my clippings? By Laurie Penny The benefit cap will only succeed in harming the weakest and most vulnerable Instead of the social vivisection currently taking place, lowering the benefits bill requires an agenda that creates jobs, arms people with skills and lowers rents. By David Lammy Subscribe to the London Review of Books from just £1 an issue Readers of the London Review of Books have come to expect inspired matches of writer and subject. Often provocative and always original, our writers do more than just review books - they analyse, inform and interrogate world culture. Subscribe to the LRB today from only £1 an issue and you will: - Receive unlimited access to the 30-year LRB digital archive- every piece we have ever published
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