Britain increasingly feels like a country demanding adult outcomes while behaving like a child who wants pudding before finishing the vegetables.
We need houses, apparently. Young people cannot afford homes. Rent is absurd. Adult children are living with parents into their thirties.
Then somebody proposes building twelve houses near a market town and the church hall fills with retired couples explaining why it would destroy “the character of the village”, despite the village now largely consisting of Range Rovers, hanging baskets and “Save Our Community” signs attached to hedges outside houses worth £850,000 because Britain stopped building enough homes sometime around the peak years of Dire Straits.
The contradictions appear everywhere.
“We need cheaper electricity.”
Not if there are pylons.
“We need energy security.”
Not if there are wind farms.
“We need growth.”
Not if there is construction.
“We need stronger defence.”
Not if taxes rise.
The country increasingly behaves as though all the benefits of modern civilisation should somehow be provided invisibly by magic.
Part of the problem is generational memory. A great many boomers grew up during an unusually favourable economic period and gradually came to see it as normal rather than historically exceptional. Cheap housing, expanding industries, strong growth, reliable pensions, abundant energy and steadily rising prosperity became the assumed background condition of life.
But those conditions were not normal. They were the product of a very particular historical moment. Britain was still living partly off the accumulated advantages of empire, post-war industrial strength, North Sea oil, expanding global trade and a younger population supporting a smaller retired population.
Over time, however, Britain gradually shifted away from building and making things towards an economy increasingly dependent upon finance, property inflation and consumer spending. Rising house prices quietly became a substitute for long-term economic strategy.
Council houses were sold off without equivalent replacement. Infrastructure investment was repeatedly delayed. Productivity stalled. Cheap credit and rising asset values papered over deeper weaknesses for years.
Britain is now drifting quietly from a society where prosperity mainly came from earnings towards one where inheritance increasingly determines who gets ahead. Some people will eventually inherit a house in Surrey and think they are Warren Buffett. Others will inherit a sofa, a box of tangled cables and possibly a commemorative mug from the Isle of Wight.
And much of this supposed wealth transfer will arrive when recipients are already middle-aged, long after the years they actually needed help buying a home or raising children.
Yet politically, much of the country still behaves as though the boom years should somehow continue through sheer inertia, provided nobody builds too much, changes too much, taxes too much or puts a pylon anywhere near the Cotswold stone.
The same newspapers demanding Britain “rearm urgently” are usually also demanding tax cuts, lower borrowing, protected pensions and more spending on everything else. The arithmetic evaporates in a cloud of patriotic headlines and archive footage of Spitfires.
Whenever a politician points out that maintaining a serious military might involve paying for it, people react as though he has proposed selling Stonehenge on eBay.
Which brings us neatly to politics itself.
People constantly say they want honesty from politicians. But what many actually mean is that they want comforting lies delivered more convincingly.
Because genuinely honest politics sounds awful.
A truly honest politician would stand up and say:
“No, you cannot have permanently rising house prices and affordable homes simultaneously.”
“No, you cannot have Scandinavian public services with American tax levels.”
“No, Britain cannot dramatically rearm while cutting taxes and increasing spending elsewhere.”
“No, major infrastructure cannot appear magically without upsetting somebody’s view or increasing somebody’s bill.”
Voters would punish that honesty almost immediately.
That is why simplistic populism works so well. It removes arithmetic from politics.
You can have lower taxes and higher spending.
Affordable homes and permanently rising house prices.
Cheap energy and no infrastructure.
Economic growth without development.
Military strength without paying for it.
Brexit itself was perhaps the purest example. Britain was told it could reduce immigration, cut bureaucracy, increase spending, maintain frictionless trade and negotiate from overwhelming strength simultaneously. Much of the rhetoric was emotionally satisfying but economically divorced nonsense, because it deliberately removed trade-offs from the discussion.
Had Nigel Farage actually been Prime Minister immediately afterwards, his rhetoric would very quickly have collided with the same stubborn realities that later consumed successive Conservative governments. Populism is often most politically effective just before implementation.
The bill simply gets shoved forward until it lands on younger people, future taxpayers or the next government.
This is where many of Keir Starmer’s problems come from. Britain’s problems are structural and decades in the making, but modern politics expects instant visible transformation. Governments are treated like takeaway deliveries. If the country does not feel palpably better within six months, people start demanding refunds.
Labour backbenchers are often just as guilty of this childishness as the electorate itself. Some already behave as though if housebuilding, NHS reform and economic growth have not visibly transformed Britain within a year then the answer must be panic and replacing the leader.
Which rather misses the point that Britain’s addiction to short-termism is part of what created the mess in the first place.
In many ways this may simply be democracy’s Achilles heel. Even Athenian democracy struggled with it. Athens wanted prosperity, military strength and imperial influence while rewarding persuasive rhetoric and emotionally satisfying promises. Cautious voices warning about limits and consequences were often ignored in favour of optimism and flattery, right up until catastrophes like the Sicilian Expedition.
Even Themistocles, the architect of Athenian naval power and victory at Salamis, eventually ended up ostracised and exiled by the democracy he helped save. Electorates have never been especially reliable at rewarding long-term strategic thinking.
The technology has changed slightly since then, admittedly. Athens did not have GB News, Facebook groups or furious parish council WhatsApp chats about bypasses.
But the underlying problem looks remarkably familiar.
Democracy functions best when electorates are willing to hear things they do not like. The trouble is that electorates often demand honesty in theory while voting against it in practice.
Britain increasingly resembles a country demanding hard truths while repeatedly voting for whoever promises there are not any.










