Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Half Term: The Sentence You Didnt Know You Were Serving

For roughly twenty years of your life, half term and end of term are not merely dates. They are the skeletal framework around which your existence is assembled. You do not plan holidays according to weather, price, or inclination. You plan them according to permission. The school calendar becomes your Admiralty chart, and you sail where it allows, when it allows, and at whatever ruinous cost the season demands.


You begin each year with optimism, telling yourself you will book early and outwit the system. This confidence lasts until you open the first travel website and discover that every flight, hotel, and cottage in Britain has already increased in price by an amount normally associated with organised crime. The same hotel room that sits neglected in early June suddenly commands triple the price in August, simply because your children are temporarily not required to attend maths. You stare at the figure, experience a brief moment of moral resistance, and then click confirm, because the alternative is remaining at home with young people who regard boredom as a form of injustice.

You join the great migration. Airports fill with families moving in dense, purposeful clusters, all of them bound by the same invisible timetable. Service stations become holding pens. Aircraft cabins acquire the atmosphere of a mildly controlled riot. You endure it because there is no choice. Half term is not an opportunity. It is an obligation.

As the children grow older, something subtle shifts. You remain subject to the timetable, but your importance within it declines. You are still required to organise, fund, and transport, but your presence itself becomes negotiable. Conversations take place around you rather than with you. Your suggestions are received politely and then ignored. You begin to suspect that you are no longer essential to the holiday itself, only to its financing and execution. You are still serving the timetable, but your rank has been reduced.

Then, without announcement, your commission expires.

The children leave, and the school calendar releases its grip on your life. Retirement completes the process, and with it comes a freedom so unfamiliar it takes time to recognise. For the first time in decades, there is no external authority dictating when you must travel, when you must stay home, or when you must pay extortionate sums for the privilege of existing elsewhere. The entire structure that governed your movements simply dissolves.

What replaces it is not dramatic, but it is profound. You discover that the world functions differently when schools are in session. Flights are cheaper. Hotels are calmer. Roads are quieter. Cafes contain adults speaking at normal volume. Campsites, in particular, acquire an unexpected serenity. When you arrive in the motorhome now, you find yourself surrounded not by frantic young families wrestling with collapsible furniture, but by people unmistakably of your own vintage. Chairs are unfolded with quiet competence. There is no shouting, no frantic negotiation, no plastic catastrophes unfolding in real time.

As evening settles, small campfires appear, and with them comes the gentle leakage of music into the dusk. It is never random. Within seconds you recognise it. A guitar phrase, a bassline, a voice that takes you straight back to a long-forgotten deck, a cheap record player, or a car with more optimism than horsepower. The late 60s or early 70s return without effort. Nobody announces it. Nobody needs to. You are among your own cohort now, and the soundtrack confirms it more clearly than any birth certificate.

Half term itself undergoes a complete transformation. Once the fixed point around which your life revolved, it now becomes something you deliberately avoid. You see it approaching on the calendar and instinctively schedule everything around it, ensuring you travel before it arrives or after it has passed. You are no longer compelled to participate, and the absence of compulsion is quietly exhilarating.

There is an additional, unexpected dimension to this liberation. Your children, now adults, no longer require your logistical support, and your presence in their plans becomes optional rather than assumed. They are fond of you, certainly, but they have their own lives, their own timetables, and their own reasons for not wanting their retired parent hovering nearby. You have moved, gently and irreversibly, from necessity to embarrassment. It is not hostile. It is simply the natural order completing its work.

This, in the end, is retirements true reward. Not merely freedom from work, but freedom from half term itself. The timetable that once governed your finances, movements, and sanity has lost all authority. You are free to travel when it makes sense, when it is affordable, and when it is peaceful.

And so, when you next pull onto a quiet campsite in the middle of term, kettle on and chairs out, and hear the unmistakable opening bars of something released before your children were even born, you realise with quiet satisfaction that you are exactly where you belong, at exactly the right time, and entirely by choice.


The DOGE DODGE

It turns out the great American experiment in slashing the deficit with a machete borrowed from Silicon Valley has achieved something rather more modest. It has managed to annoy a lot of academics, trigger a flurry of lawsuits, and leave the $2 trillion deficit sitting there, entirely untroubled.


There is something almost endearing about the scale mismatch. You take a problem driven by pensions, healthcare, defence and debt interest, and you go after humanities grants with a keyword search and a sense of moral purpose. It is a bit like tackling a knocking engine by removing the radio because it looks fiddly and vaguely unnecessary. Very decisive. Entirely irrelevant.

The best part is the candour. Under oath, no less. Yes, the aim was to get the deficit down to zero. No, we did not achieve that. No, I do not regret people losing their incomes. One almost admires the honesty. It saves everyone the trouble of pretending this was ever about fiscal arithmetic rather than ideology in a high-vis vest.

And the arithmetic really is the awkward bit. About $100 million in grants here, a few hundred million there if you are feeling generous. Against a $2 trillion deficit. You start with a number like that, you go hunting for arts grants, and at no point does anyone stop and ask whether those two things are even in the same postcode.

What they actually seem to have done, if you read the depositions, is sit there running keyword searches, leaning on ChatGPT, and trying to work out what counts as DEI after the fact. Which is one way of allocating public money, I suppose. Not one that would normally fill you with confidence.

Still, it has a certain theatre to it. Young operatives, light on subject knowledge, sweeping through institutions with the confidence of people who have never had to run one. It is all very modern. Data driven, in the sense that there is a search box involved.

And now we have our own version being trailed over here. A British DOGE, no less. Teams of bright outsiders parachuted into councils to uncover the hidden treasure apparently buried in municipal budgets. One waits with interest to see which dusty vault they imagine exists between adult social care swallowing most of the money and the weekly argument about whether the bins will still be collected.

The early returns are not promising, and in some cases they are quietly rather awkward. In Kent, one of the flagship Reform councils, senior figures have already admitted they went looking for “craziness” in the books and did not find it. Not hidden reserves, not vast waste, just the same tight budgets everyone else has been dealing with. Warwickshire has told a similar story, albeit with slightly more polite language.

What you do get instead is a bit of rearranging. Projects paused or cancelled, some of which were going to save money later. Existing efficiencies rebadged as new ones. The odd consultant brought in to help identify savings, which is a nice touch given the campaign rhetoric. And, in at least one case, a council tax rise to keep the whole thing on the road.

Which is roughly the point at which reality tends to intrude. Councils are not sitting on piles of discretionary spending. Most of the money is tied up in adult social care, SEND transport, and other statutory obligations that do not disappear because someone has arrived with a spreadsheet and a sense of purpose.

But that does not quite kill the idea, because it was never really about the numbers. It is about the feeling that somewhere there must be waste, and that someone suitably brisk can go in and sort it out. If the savings do not appear, well, that can be put down to obstruction, or the wrong people still being in place, or not having gone far enough.

Meanwhile the deficit carries on, serenely indifferent to the removal of arts grants and council consultants, like an engine that continues to knock while someone triumphantly waves a detached radio aerial.

And if you are wondering what it all cost to run, the answer is suitably vague. Tens of millions here or there, lost in departmental budgets, plus the lawyers now circling. One suspects the final bill will be one of those small ironies where the exercise designed to save money ends up costing roughly the same as it saved.

The ashtray has gone. The radio might be next. The engine is still knocking, but at least everyone can say something decisive has been done.


Tuesday, 17 March 2026

Civil Service Reform

I see Reform is planning, if it wins the next election, to sack most of Whitehall’s senior civil servants and replace them with political appointees and outside experts. The theory seems to be that the civil service is bloated and obstructive, so the obvious solution is to remove the people who actually know how the departments function.


It has a certain pub logic to it. If the engine is not running well, clearly the mechanics must be the problem, so remove them and the machine will presumably spring into life.

The American comparison gets mentioned quite a lot in this discussion. In the United States thousands of senior officials change when a new president arrives because cabinet secretaries, agency heads and their deputies are political appointments that come and go with the administration.

What tends to get skipped over is that underneath those political appointments sits a large permanent civil service that actually keeps the machinery running. Britain simply built the system the other way round, with ministers changing while the senior civil service stays in place and keeps the administrative system functioning.

Permanent secretaries are not just bureaucrats pushing paper around. They are the people who know how departments actually work, how the legislation fits together, where the budget pressures are and which procurement contract is about to explode at an inconvenient moment.

Some of them are running organisations with tens of thousands of staff and budgets that would make most private companies blink. Remove them all at once and you have not merely cleared out a few obstructive mandarins, you have removed the institutional memory of the state, which tends to become noticeable fairly quickly when the new arrivals start asking how things actually work.

There is also the slightly awkward matter of money. Permanent secretaries earn roughly £160k to £200k, which sounds generous until you remember they are effectively running organisations the size of large corporations.

Anyone capable of doing that in the private sector would normally command several times that. So if you replace them with “industry experts”, you either pay market rates or recruit people willing to take a substantial pay cut for ideological reasons, neither of which usually results in smaller government.

The Trump comparison that keeps being made is also a little selective. Even in the United States the controversial part of Trump’s agenda has been the attempt to remove career civil servants by reclassifying them as political staff so they can be dismissed more easily.

That proposal has caused quite a row in America because it undermines the long standing idea of a politically neutral administrative state. So when people here talk about copying the American model, they are not copying the routine part of it, they are copying the bit Americans themselves are arguing about.

There is also the small matter of unintended consequences. Once one government decides it can purge the senior civil service and replace it with loyalists, the next government inherits exactly the same power, which means the precedent applies in both directions whether anyone likes it or not.

Before long the senior layers of the state get rebuilt after every election. The Americans actually tried something rather like that in the nineteenth century, when public jobs were handed out as political rewards under what became known as the spoils system.

It produced chaos, corruption and some fairly spectacular incompetence. The Americans then spent the next century dismantling it and building a professional civil service instead, which is a lesson Britain quietly absorbed along the way.

None of this means the civil service is perfect. Anyone who has dealt with Whitehall will know it can be slow, cautious and occasionally baffling, although dismantling the entire senior layer because you suspect they might disagree with you is not really reform.

It is more like smashing the dashboard because the car will not start, which might feel satisfying for a moment but rarely fixes the underlying problem.

Still, if a future government does decide to sack half of Whitehall on day one, the consultancy firms will be quietly delighted. Someone will need to explain to the new arrivals how the departments actually work, and judging by the size of some of them that could keep a few consultants busy for quite a while.


The Racist Gardener

You discover interesting things about people once you have lived with them long enough. In my case it turns out that the woman I married is, in gardening terms, a fairly uncompromising nationalist. I had always thought of gardening as a fairly relaxing hobby involving lawns, the occasional flowerbed, and the quiet satisfaction of a job reasonably well done. It turns out there are people who approach it more like border control.


My own tastes are simple. I like a neat lawn, properly cut and preferably striped. Something that suggests civilisation has at least briefly passed through the area and imposed a bit of order on proceedings. A lawn you can stand and admire with a cup of tea while feeling faintly competent. It does not need to win prizes. It merely needs to look as though someone cares.

Hayley, however, has other ideas. Hayley is a passionate believer in what she calls “native wildflowers”. Which sounds charming until you realise that in practice it means the garden operates a stricter immigration policy than most countries. Only plants that can prove their ancestral right to be here are truly welcome. British lineage, deep roots, and preferably something that has been quietly minding its own business in a hedgerow since about the time of Agincourt.

Anything with continental ambitions is treated with deep suspicion. I once suggested planting a few cheerful Mediterranean flowers, nothing too dramatic, just something with a bit of colour that actually seems pleased to see the sun. The look I received suggested I had proposed opening the borders and abolishing passport control at the same time. Clearly this was not a policy that would gain approval from the domestic authorities.

So the garden has slowly evolved into a sort of botanical citizenship test. A daisy from Dorset passes immediately without questions. A tulip from Turkey is clearly some kind of infiltrator that needs careful watching. Plants, it turns out, can be surprisingly controversial once you start asking where they originally came from.

I have therefore taken to referring to Hayley as The Racist Gardener. It seems only fair under the circumstances. I am not aware of any other domestic environment where a plant’s passport is examined quite so closely. If there were a small desk by the gate I suspect paperwork would be involved.

Meanwhile my lawn exists under constant pressure from these native insurgents. Hayley carefully cultivates wild patches which spend the summer quietly expanding their territory while claiming to be extremely good for the bees. They advance politely but relentlessly. The bees, I notice, rarely help with the mowing.

By September the place looks less like a garden and more like a rehearsal for the Somme. The mower advances slowly across terrain that has been allowed to become strategically inconvenient. Stems appear that are thick enough to require a moment of reflection before engaging the blade. It is less gardening at that point and more a slow mechanical campaign.

The great irony of wild gardening is that it sounds delightful in April. Bees, butterflies and nature flourishing are all mentioned in reassuring tones. By October it has become a waist high jungle full of fibrous stems that laugh openly at lawnmowers. At that stage the word “wild” begins to sound slightly less romantic.

I did manage one small act of horticultural smuggling about ten years ago. A stone pine slipped quietly into the garden before the border authorities noticed. It now stands there looking faintly Mediterranean and rather pleased with itself. Hayley tolerates it in the way one tolerates a slightly embarrassing foreign relative at a family gathering.

It is there and everyone can see it, but drawing attention to it seems unnecessary. Best just let it stand quietly in middle of the tump and hope nobody asks too many questions about its origins. Still, harmony in a relationship requires compromise. Hayley gets her native wildflower sanctuary and I get one small, fiercely defended patch of lawn where the stripes are straight and immigration control is conducted with a very large mower.


Monday, 16 March 2026

Churchill on a Fiver and Other Culture Wars

I have been watching the latest banknote row with mild amusement. Apparently Britain is now facing a constitutional crisis because Winston Churchill might one day disappear from the back of a fiver.


A few details tend to get lost in the shouting. For a start, there is no “pound note”. That vanished in 1988 when the £1 coin arrived. Churchill sits on the £5 note, and he has only been there since 2016. If the Bank of England had simply carried on rotating historical figures, he would probably have been replaced by someone else in the next redesign anyway. That is what normally happens. Dickens disappeared. Darwin disappeared. Adam Smith disappeared. No one marched in the streets.

The new wrinkle is that the Bank is considering wildlife instead of historical figures. Cue outrage. Suddenly this is presented as some sort of national amnesia. Churchill, we are told, is being erased from British history by bureaucrats armed with puffins.

The thing that makes me smile is the spectacle of politicians rushing forward to defend the presence of a politician on a banknote. One almost expects a whip to be issued. “All members must attend the division to ensure the continued polymer representation of Members of Parliament.”

Of course the real reason the story has taken off is identity signalling. It is a neat little stage on which people can perform their views about Britain. The banknotes themselves are merely the stage props. On one side are those who see defending Churchill as proof of patriotic virtue. On the other are those who think wildlife might be a pleasant and politically neutral alternative.

But the loudest outrage is really nothing more than tribal signalling by those who worship at the altar of populism. It is a simple story that can be shouted from the ramparts. “They are taking Churchill off our money.” No nuance required. No history needed. Just a reliable way of telling your followers which tribe you belong to.

There is also a certain historical irony here. The tradition of putting historical figures on Bank of England notes only began in 1970. Before that it was Britannia and the monarch. So the furious defence of this supposedly ancient custom is in fact a defence of something barely half a century old.

And if the principle were really about defending national heroes on banknotes, we would have seen this drama before. The Duke of Wellington appeared on the £5 note from 1971 until 1991. This was the man who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo and ended one of the great wars of European history. Yet when Wellington disappeared from the note and was replaced by George Stephenson, the father of the railways, there was no national meltdown. No headlines about erasing British history. The country quietly carried on.

Churchill himself is an interesting case. His reputation rests almost entirely on one extraordinary moment in 1940 when Britain faced defeat in the Second World War and he gave the country the language and determination to keep going. He was brilliant at that. But the idea that only Churchill could have done it is doubtful. Britain still had a functioning state, armed forces, and a coalition of politicians committed to continuing the war. Someone else would almost certainly have fought on.

He was also, like many politicians of his era, a bundle of contradictions. The same man who later became the embodiment of national defiance had earlier voted against extending the vote to women. That tends to get skipped over when people treat him as a kind of secular saint carved in granite.

Which brings me to another Churchill entirely. The first Duke of Marlborough, John Churchill. Now there was a leader whose achievements really did depend on his own ability. His campaigns in the War of the Spanish Succession, particularly Blenheim, required strategic imagination and operational skill of the highest order. Remove Marlborough and those campaigns might have turned out very differently.

So it is slightly amusing that the modern Churchill has become a kind of national mascot on a piece of polymer while the earlier Churchill, arguably the more exceptional leader in pure military terms, barely features in these discussions at all.

Meanwhile the Bank of England is simply trying to design the next series of anti-counterfeiting banknotes, while somewhere in Britain a badger, an otter or possibly a puffin is wondering how on earth it ended up in the middle of the culture wars.

Which does make one wonder how all this will end. Perhaps after the Great Culture War is finally won, Nigel Farage will appear on a future fiver, gazing heroically into the middle distance, having saved the nation from the terrible menace of decorative wildlife. Until then, the badger and the puffin will have to remain on standby.


Slaughter

I was standing in the kitchen the other morning, slicing bacon with the sort of quiet reverence normally reserved for religious artefacts, when it occurred to me that the pig in question had not died voluntarily. There had been no retirement plan. No farewell speech. No quiet move to the countryside to write its memoirs. It had been killed. Efficiently, professionally, and with the clear intention of ending up in my frying pan.


This, I accept.

Which is why I find the sudden outbreaks of moral outrage about specific slaughter methods faintly theatrical. The animal is not attending a wellness retreat. It is being killed. Whether by stunning bolt or by cut, the outcome is identical. The distinction lies not in whether death occurs, but in how competently and humanely the process is carried out.

I am not an absolutist. I am a realist. If one accepts the premise that animals may be killed for food, then the logical focus must be on minimising suffering, not engaging in ritualistic handwringing over labels. Death itself is not avoidable in this equation. Only distress is.

And distress, inconveniently for those who prefer simple slogans, does not begin at the moment of slaughter. It begins hours earlier. In transport. In noise. In confusion. In unfamiliar surroundings. An animal handled calmly, transported a short distance, and dispatched competently experiences less suffering overall than one subjected to prolonged stress, regardless of which approved method is used at the end.

The uncomfortable truth is that most of the outrage is not about animal welfare at all. It is about symbolism. Cultural discomfort dressed up as ethical principle. People who happily consume sausages without hesitation suddenly discover deep philosophical objections to the manner in which the sausage’s previous owner met its end.

The pig, one suspects, would not recognise the distinction.

There are only two intellectually coherent positions. One may refuse to eat meat entirely, in which case the objection is absolute and logically consistent. Or one may accept that animals are killed for food, and therefore support practices that reduce suffering as much as possible. Everything else occupies the foggy middle ground of selective sensitivity.

I inhabit that middle ground quite comfortably, armed with a frying pan and an absence of self-deception.

The bacon, I am pleased to report, was excellent.


Sunday, 15 March 2026

The Patriotic Curriculum

Reform say they want to introduce a “patriotic curriculum” in schools, designed to restore pride in Britain. One assumes this means the syllabus will be streamlined slightly, mainly by removing awkward bits of reality that spoil the mood.


History, for example, will become much clearer. Instead of the current confusing narrative involving expansion, empire, decline, decolonisation and the rest of the world rather pointedly going its own way, pupils will study the more uplifting version. Drake, Nelson, Churchill and the Blitz will feature heavily. The empire will be explained as a sort of large overseas friendship project that everyone thoroughly enjoyed until it mysteriously vanished.

Any references to independence movements will be handled delicately. Ideally with a quick cough and a brisk turn of the page.

Geography will follow a similar principle. Maps will once again be coloured reassuringly pink in places that matter. Lessons will focus on trade routes, tea, spices and cricket. The later chapter about how most of those territories became independent countries will be shortened to a paragraph titled “Administrative Adjustments”.

Mathematics will be modernised as well. Old-fashioned arithmetic is terribly negative, always insisting that spending must match income. Patriotic maths is more forward looking. It teaches that you can borrow several hundred billion pounds during a pandemic, permanently cut taxes afterwards, and still end up richer than before. The key is confidence. Numbers respond very well to confidence.

Economics, naturally, will reinforce this. Pupils will learn that trade barriers make a country wealthier, labour shortages increase productivity, and if growth fails to appear it is almost certainly the fault of Brussels.

English will also require careful editing. Dickens will be shortened slightly, removing all those tedious passages about poverty and workhouses. In the revised edition Oliver Twist simply pulls himself together and launches a successful start up.

Shakespeare will remain, but with minor adjustments. The tragedies are rather discouraging, so the syllabus will concentrate on the patriotic speeches. Henry V will be compulsory. Macbeth will end earlier than it currently does, ideally just after the successful career development.

Essay questions will prepare pupils for adult debate. Typical examples might include explaining why everything was going perfectly well until someone mentioned Europe, or demonstrating how borrowing vast sums proves the strength of the British economy.

Chemistry will also need a patriotic refresh. The periodic table currently credits a Russian, which is inconvenient, so the key elements will be simplified to Coal, Steel and British Grit.

Chemical reactions will be explained in practical terms. When optimism is mixed with deregulation the result is prosperity. Add sovereignty and tariffs and the economy becomes self sufficient. If the experiment fails, the correct scientific conclusion is that Brussels interfered with the apparatus.

The law of conservation of mass will be slightly revised. Traditional chemistry claims matter cannot be created from nothing. Patriotic chemistry recognises that wealth can in fact be created by announcing it loudly enough.

There will also be a new advanced module called Strategic Alchemy, in which pupils learn how slogans are converted directly into economic growth. Results may vary, but the theory remains extremely popular.

Exams will be straightforward. The correct answer to most questions will simply be that Britain did rather well.

And if any pupil points out that the real world appears a little more complicated than this, they will be gently reminded that such thinking belongs to the old curriculum. The one with all those troublesome facts in it.


Saturday, 14 March 2026

The Perfection of Retirement

Retirement was supposed to be the phase where things got finished. That was the promise. Years of work behind you, years ahead in which all the deferred jobs could finally be brought to completion. The GT6 was meant to be one of those jobs. A straightforward restoration. Return it to its 1973 condition, correct the rust, rebuild the mechanicals, and enjoy it as Triumph intended. It was intended to take a year at most. The MGB I restored took only six months, which at the time felt leisurely.

But retirement does not simplify projects. It removes the only force that ever kept them under control.


And before anyone tells me the above computer-generated image is not a true Triumph GT6, you have to read on.

With time to think, the original engine began to look less like a feature and more like a historical compromise. Perfectly serviceable, but tied to the assumptions of another era. A Mazda MX 5 engine made obvious sense. More efficient. More reliable. Better mannered. That decision was rational. Sensible. But once the modern engine was there in principle, the possibility of a turbocharger became difficult to ignore. Not as an indulgence, but as an acknowledgement of what the engine was quietly capable of all along. It would produce its performance effortlessly, without strain, which felt like a form of mechanical kindness.

Of course, once you introduce effortlessness, the rest of the car begins to look like it is working too hard. The original rear suspension, which had given faithful service for half a century, was now being asked questions it had never been designed to answer. The MX 5 independent rear suspension and Torsen differential were not extravagances. They were corrections. Necessary, once the previous decisions had been made.

Each improvement created consequences. Each consequence required further improvement. Increased power required increased structural integrity, which is how a simple tub removal became an extended exercise in reinforcing the scuttle with a 20 mm box section. Fitting it properly has taken weeks. Not because it strictly had to, but because retirement removes the incentive to accept approximation. Full contact. Correct load transfer. No hidden stress. Steel, once you understand it, becomes something you negotiate with rather than simply attach.

A straightforward rebuild is, at its core, an act of assembly. Panels are bought, adjusted, and joined. The work is honest, but the outcome is largely predetermined by the catalogue. Redesigning the powertrain, however, quietly changes the nature of the undertaking. Bought components no longer align with inherited geometry. Mounting points exist in theory but not in reality. Clearances must be created rather than accommodated. Fabrication becomes unavoidable. Steel is no longer something you merely attach. It becomes something you create with intent, each bracket and reinforcement an admission that the car now exists partly because you decided it should.

The turbocharger, having asserted its presence, also introduced obligations further upstream. Fuel delivery, perfectly adequate for carburettors and modest expectations, suddenly required proper engineering. Either a swirl pot or a pressurised fuel tank became necessary to prevent fuel starvation under boost. A simple engine swap had quietly expanded into fuel system architecture. I will not even mention the exhaust manifold and exhaust system, which represent at least another £1,800 in the ongoing dialogue between engineering logic and financial denial.

There are also aesthetic temptations, which retirement encourages with quiet persistence. The GT6 was, after all, known in period as the poor man’s E Type, a nickname that carries both affection and accusation. Once that comparison lodges itself in the mind, it becomes difficult to ignore the particular elegance of the E Type’s oval mouth. The desire to reshape the GT6 nosecone into a facsimile of that form is powerful and entirely irrational. It would require metal shaping skills far beyond my present capabilities and introduce costs of a magnitude best described as marital endangerment. Yet the idea persists, hovering at the edge of reason, waiting patiently for judgement to weaken.

The same logic quietly infiltrated the interior. A burr walnut dashboard seemed entirely reasonable. If one is already deviating from strict originality, one might as well introduce a material that acknowledges the GT6’s faint aspiration to be a gentleman’s express rather than merely an enthusiastic accomplice. The dashboard exists. The MX 5 gearbox exists. The redesigned transmission tunnel exists. The boost gauge, whose presence became inevitable the moment the turbocharger was admitted into the plan, also exists. The car, in its component form, is already fully imagined and largely present. In the process, I have acquired veneering skills which, while once merely adequate for automotive purposes, have now reached a level where refurbishing an eighteenth century Chippendale chair feels like a plausible next step, should one become available and sufficiently bored.

What prevents assembly is not indecision, but consequence.

Each part, once selected, exposes secondary requirements. The gearbox alters clearances. The tunnel alters mounting geometry. The dashboard alters proportions. The boost gauge, innocent in isolation, imposes obligations on everything around it. Nothing can be assembled permanently until the knock on effects of everything else have been resolved. The car is not waiting to be built. It is waiting for there to be no further reasons not to build it.

Comfort, it turns out, has opinions too. The original seats, designed in an era when ergonomics was largely theoretical, seemed less appealing the older and wiser my spine became. Resting one’s back and posterior on badly conceived vinyl supported by fatigued foam did not feel like a fitting reward for decades of employment. A full leather interior, properly contoured and built for comfort, became not an indulgence but a form of preventative medicine. That decision alone introduced an additional £1,400 into the philosophical cost of retirement.

The bumpers, meanwhile, presented their own moral dilemma. Restore the badly corroded originals, preserving their authenticity along with their structural pessimism, or replace them with stainless steel and eliminate the problem permanently. Stainless steel, once considered, became inevitable. It is difficult to justify reintroducing corrosion into a system one is otherwise trying to perfect.

The same disease has spread to the pond filtration system. What was once restarted each spring with casual optimism now undergoes quiet optimisation. Flow paths corrected. Seals aligned. Inefficiencies eliminated. The fish remain entirely indifferent, but the system is now correct, which is the only audience that matters.

What nobody warns you about is that these improvements demand tools you did not previously need, and skills you did not previously possess. The welder that was once perfectly adequate becomes a limitation. Measuring tools appear that can detect flaws you would once have lived with happily. New techniques must be learned, not out of ambition, but out of necessity. Progress slows, not because enthusiasm fades, but because competence expands.

Completion remains the stated goal. It is mentioned often. It feels close.

But retirement replaces urgency with competence, and competence is the natural enemy of completion. The more you learn, the more clearly you see the remaining imperfections. Each one small. Each one correctable. Each one quietly moving the finish line further away.

I remain optimistic. With a fair wind, continued structural integrity of my own components, and assuming no unexpected replacement parts are required, I should have at least another fifteen years left to finish the GT6. By which time, of course, I will probably be content to sit in the garage on a mobility scooter, admiring the precision of the scuttle reinforcement, the figured depth of the walnut dashboard, the reassuring permanence of stainless steel bumpers, and perhaps still quietly resisting the oval mouth, reflecting on the fact that the scooter, unlike the Triumph, arrived fully assembled and entirely free of design dilemmas.

And there is a quiet, absurd tragedy in this. Just as you finally acquire the full complement of tools, the judgement to use them properly, and the experience to see what others miss, biology intervenes with impeccable timing. The workshop falls silent at the precise moment its occupant becomes genuinely dangerous to imperfection. The accumulated competence, the improvised techniques, the hard won understanding of how reluctant materials can be persuaded into obedience, all vanish overnight, leaving behind only the tools themselves, now stripped of the knowledge that gave them meaning.

At which point the Mem Sahib, who has watched this saga unfold with the patient expression of someone observing a slow motion weather system, is left with a beautifully organised garage, an unfinished GT6, and an implausible number of labelled boxes. She will sell it all on with the classic phrase that begins the next man’s journey: “It’s all there.”

Completion remains the stated goal - at least, that remains the official position.


Friday, 13 March 2026

The Iran War - A Short Guide to Strategic Confusion

The starting point for this war was not a missile strike or a tanker in flames. It was the quiet collapse of a diplomatic arrangement that had been containing Iran’s nuclear programme for years. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action had placed strict limits on enrichment and allowed constant inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency. It was not elegant and it was not permanent, but it kept the problem contained.


Wars often begin with the sort of clarity one normally associates with a pub argument at closing time. Then along came Donald Trump, who decided that if an agreement carried even the faint scent of multilateral diplomacy it clearly had to go. Out he walked and the sanctions went back on.

What is often forgotten is that the deal did not collapse overnight. Iran actually stayed within the limits for roughly a year while the Europeans tried to keep the arrangement alive and inspectors continued confirming compliance.

Eventually the logic of the thing asserted itself. If one side abandons the bargain and restores sanctions, the other side has little incentive to keep observing the restrictions. Iran gradually stepped away from the limits, enrichment crept upward again, and the carefully constructed framework began to unravel.

A few years later we find ourselves in the rather surreal position where the proposed solution to the nuclear problem is bombing the nuclear problem. The stated objectives of the war are, shall we say, a little untidy. Destroy Iran’s nuclear capability, weaken its regional influence, perhaps nudge the regime off the stage altogether.

It all sounds wonderfully decisive until one remembers a rather awkward historical detail. Bombs destroy buildings. They do not destroy physics. Once a country has the engineers, centrifuges and knowledge, smashing facilities merely resets the clock.

There is also the small matter that the same president now insisting Iran’s nuclear capability must be destroyed was proudly announcing only months ago that it had already been obliterated. One assumes the centrifuges must have been very sporting about the whole affair and rebuilt themselves out of sheer enthusiasm.

Israel’s position is more straightforward. From its perspective a nuclear Iran represents an existential threat. That view is understandable given the country’s size and history, though it does glide politely past the fact that Israel itself is widely believed to possess nuclear weapons while sitting outside the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

The counter-argument is that nuclear weapons tend to produce deterrence rather than instant apocalypse. Iran’s leadership, unpleasant though it may be, has shown little appetite for national suicide, and nuclear weapons are not fired by one man pressing a red button but by chains of command who also have a strong interest in remaining alive.

Which means the war begins to look less like a decisive campaign and more like a contest of endurance. Iran has spent decades living under sanctions and pressure. Pain is something it has learned to absorb.

Western democracies, by contrast, have electorates who notice petrol prices and inflation with remarkable speed. With American midterms approaching, the political clock is already ticking.

Iran seems to understand this perfectly well and is pushing where it hurts. Energy routes, Gulf infrastructure, the plumbing of the global economy. Airports, ports, desalination plants. All technically infrastructure, all inconveniently connected to civilian life.

Markets twitch, oil prices climb, and politicians begin to sweat. In other words, Tehran is not trying to win the war on the battlefield. It is trying to win it in the petrol price displayed on American forecourts.

There is another layer to all this which commentators have not been shy about mentioning. War has a habit of arriving at politically convenient moments. For Benjamin Netanyahu, a prolonged national emergency inevitably pushes domestic legal and political troubles into the background.

For Trump, the calculation may have been rather different. Rally the country, demonstrate strength, and change the subject. The difficulty is that wars do not always cooperate with political scripts. Markets move, oil prices rise, and voters start asking awkward questions. What was intended as a show of strength can quickly turn into a rather public test of competence.

Europe has seen this story play out before. The Iraq war removed Saddam Hussein quickly enough. The difficulty came afterwards, when it turned out there was no real plan for what followed the invasion. The result was years of instability that nobody had particularly intended but everybody ended up living with. Iraq showed what happens when you start a war without a credible end state.

Then there is Gaza. That conflict did not collapse for lack of planning but for the opposite reason: a relentless military campaign whose civilian cost became politically and morally toxic across much of the world. Gaza shows what happens when the human cost overwhelms the political narrative. And now there are reports of a missile strike killing scores of schoolgirls. Lawyers will argue for years about targeting intelligence and proportionality. The public will remember only the image.

European governments remember both episodes rather clearly. Iraq was a coalition war in which several European states participated and then spent years dealing with the consequences of a conflict that had removed a regime without a credible plan for what came next. Gaza was different. Most European countries were not fighting there, but they still had to absorb the political and humanitarian fallout of a campaign whose civilian cost dominated international opinion.

Europe therefore looks at the situation and sees two wars. One in Ukraine, which directly concerns European security and the ambitions of Vladimir Putin. The other in the Middle East, which does not directly threaten Europe but does threaten energy prices, trade routes and political stability. Faced with that choice, European governments are quite sensibly focusing on the war that actually involves their continent.

There is also the awkward question of refugees, which tends to disappear from the discussion whenever people start talking about bombing Iran into the Stone Age. Iran has a population of more than ninety million. If the state fractures or infrastructure collapses, millions of civilians will not sit politely in the rubble waiting for geopolitics. They will move.

Most will move first to neighbouring countries, but history suggests that sooner or later some will move towards Europe. The same political movements that currently cheer for the bombing campaign will then rediscover, with great theatrical outrage, that wars in the Middle East have a habit of producing refugees. It is one of those irritating side effects that rarely appears in the speeches advocating the war in the first place.

At times the whole thing begins to resemble a piece of Dada. The Dada artists who emerged during the First World War believed the world had become so irrational that only absurdity could describe it. They responded with collages, nonsense manifestos and performances that deliberately rejected logic.

One begins to see their point. A war launched to destroy a nuclear programme that was previously declared destroyed. Strategic goals that cannot be achieved without escalation nobody wants. Politicians calling for Iran to be bombed into rubble while ignoring the refugees such rubble will inevitably produce. The whole enterprise starts to look less like strategy and more like geopolitical collage.

And Vladimir Putin must be watching with quiet satisfaction. Oil prices rise, Western attention drifts south, and the strategic spotlight moves away from Ukraine. One almost feels obliged to send Washington a thank-you note. From Moscow.

So here we are. A war justified by arguments that contradict each other, pursued with tools that cannot achieve the grander objectives being hinted at, greeted by reluctant allies, shaped by markets and elections, and quietly advantageous to Moscow. One suspects that somewhere in Tehran they have already worked this out. The real question is how long it takes Washington to do the same.


Thursday, 12 March 2026

The Majority of Britain at Three in the Morning

I have spent a mildly depressing amount of time lately reading the comment sections under various GB News stories. Not because I particularly enjoy it, you understand. It is a bit like examining pond water under a microscope. Fascinating in a scientific sense, but you would not want to drink it.


After a while certain patterns emerge.

The typical commenter appears convinced that he represents “the majority of the British people”. This is interesting, because the same majority seems to appear simultaneously under every article on every website, all absolutely certain they speak for the nation. It is rather like discovering that Britain consists entirely of people typing angrily under news stories at three in the morning.

Evidence is not a major feature of these exchanges. Assertions, however, are extremely popular. The Prime Minister is a traitor. Net Zero is destroying civilisation. Britain must stand shoulder to shoulder with America in whatever conflict happens to be trending that week. None of this is accompanied by numbers, data or even the faintest whiff of curiosity about how any of it actually works. But the confidence is magnificent.

There is also a touching faith in the idea that international alliances function like friendships at school. Britain must be a “faithful ally”. Apparently this means doing whatever Washington wants without asking awkward questions such as what the plan is, what the objective might be, or whether it will end the same way the last several Middle Eastern adventures ended. The strategic analysis here is roughly on a par with a Labrador deciding which tennis ball to chase.

The energy debate is equally revealing. Britain, we are told, produces only about 1 per cent of global emissions and therefore should do absolutely nothing about them. This argument has a certain internal logic if one imagines the world composed entirely of countries each producing 1 per cent and each deciding it is someone else’s problem.

The more interesting contradiction appears when war enters the conversation. Many of the same voices who object loudly to immigration also advocate enthusiastically for military interventions in precisely the regions that historically produce large numbers of refugees. One might gently point out that wars have a habit of moving people around. But this link does not seem to register. Apparently refugees are simply generated by moral weakness rather than artillery.

What ties all this together is not really policy. It is identity.

The comments read less like a debate about strategy or economics and more like declarations of belonging. Who are the good people. Who are the traitors. Who is “on our side”. Once politics is framed that way, consistency becomes optional. Loyalty is what matters.

And this, of course, is where the populists come in.

Figures such as Nigel Farage have an almost perfect instinct for this environment. He does not need to resolve contradictions or produce detailed policy frameworks. All he needs to do is echo the emotional narrative already circulating in the comment sections. The people versus the elites. The nation betrayed. Common sense against experts. It is politically very effective because it feels like recognition. The audience hears its own frustrations reflected back at it.

The clever part is that it converts grievance into a permanent political engine. The movement does not need to solve problems. In some ways it is better if the problems remain unsolved, because the outrage is the fuel.

Meanwhile, somewhere quietly in the background, the rest of the world is building enormous power grids, electrifying industry, manufacturing batteries and solar panels, and generally getting on with the business of shaping the next phase of the global economy.

But none of that shows up much in the comment section.

They are still busy announcing that they represent the majority of Britain. At three in the morning. On a Tuesday. While eating crisps.