Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Just Grow Up - FFS

People keep asking why they are not yet “feeling the benefits” of voting Labour.

Well, Labour have been in office about five minutes. The electorate seems to think governments are like those novelty cash-grab machines where you step inside a booth and banknotes swirl around your head while you snatch at them. Press a button, pull a lever, instant prosperity.

But that only works if the machine was full of money to begin with.


The uncomfortable reality is that Britain’s problems are structural, long-term and, in large part, self-inflicted. We are not dealing with a temporarily blocked sink. We are dealing with decades of underinvestment, stagnant productivity, weak infrastructure, a chronic housing shortage, regional inequality, an ageing population, soaring health and social care costs, and an economy that became far too dependent on cheap money, cheap imports and financial services.

And then, in a moment of collective national genius, we voted to make trade with our largest nearby market more difficult.

That was not done to us by aliens. We voted for it. Not me personally though.

People now behave as if the country simply woke up one morning and found itself mysteriously poorer, more indebted and less economically flexible. No. We made choices. Democratic choices. Some of those choices were driven by anger, nostalgia, or the comforting fantasy that complicated problems always have simple solutions.

For years, large sections of the electorate wanted Scandinavian public services, American tax levels, Brexit sovereignty, low immigration, rising pensions, cheap energy, no borrowing and strong growth all at the same time. Preferably by Thursday afternoon.

Politics adapted to that fantasy market.

Nigel Farage understood this perfectly. Sheila Fogarty yesterday made a point on LBC that Farage tells stories while Starmer presents spreadsheets. And she is correct, up to a point. Human beings respond emotionally before they respond rationally. Farage knows how to walk into a room and make people feel that all complex problems have obvious villains and easy answers.

The problem is that many of those answers are nonsense.

Brexit itself was sold as a magic lever. Pull this one lever and Britain becomes richer, freer, stronger and sovereign all at once. No trade-offs. No costs. Just a sort of patriotic Narnia accessed through Dover.

Instead, we rediscovered that modern economies are complicated systems involving supply chains, labour shortages, investment flows, borrowing costs and regulatory interdependence. Extremely inconsiderate of reality, frankly.

And now, astonishingly, parts of the country appear ready to double down by drifting toward Reform, whose answer to the damage caused by simplistic populism appears to be even more simplistic populism. It is rather like responding to an engine fire by pouring in extra petrol because flames indicate enthusiasm.

The strange thing is that many of the same people demanding instant improvement are still attracted to precisely the politics that helped create the instability in the first place. They want somebody to tell them it is all somebody else’s fault. Brussels. Migrants. Net zero. Judges. Cyclists. The BBC. Take your pick.

Anything except the possibility that difficult national choices sometimes produce difficult national consequences.

People look at Starmer as though he is sitting in the cockpit of a giant Boeing 747 with hundreds of glowing switches labelled LOWER BILLS, HIGHER WAGES, CHEAPER HOUSING and NHS FIXED. They imagine he is simply refusing to press them because he lacks charisma.

But modern governments often have only a few small wheels left to turn, and some are barely connected anymore.

The old post-war economic model operated in a world of lower debt, younger populations, cheaper energy, stronger industrial capacity and fewer geopolitical shocks. Governments had more room to borrow, spend and stimulate without markets immediately punishing them.

Now look around.

Borrowing costs are far higher than they were during the cheap-money era. Interest payments swallow huge chunks of public spending. The Ukraine war destabilised European energy markets. Tensions involving Iran threaten shipping routes and oil prices. Productivity growth across much of the West has slowed for years. Britain also carries the additional self-imposed friction of Brexit on top of all that.

So when people ask, “Why can’t the government just invest massively?”, the answer is simple: because borrowing is no longer cheap, and markets eventually notice if you start behaving like Liz Truss with access to a Red Bull multipack.

Of course investment is still necessary. Britain desperately needs investment in infrastructure, housing, energy generation, transport, training and technology. Productivity does not rise because somebody gives an inspiring speech in Doncaster. It rises because people and businesses become more efficient over many years through investment, education and stability.

Which brings us to the current hysteria over Starmer.

A section of the Labour movement seems convinced that replacing him with Andy Burnham or some other more emotionally performative figure would suddenly transform the situation. But unless Burnham has secretly discovered North Sea-sized reserves of cheap money hidden beneath Rochdale, he inherits exactly the same structural constraints.

You can change the salesman without changing the balance sheet.

People also confuse communication with capability. In politics, as in life, charisma is often mistaken for competence. But if I am on an aircraft flying through a violent storm, I do not particularly care whether the captain is emotionally engaging. I care whether he understands the instruments.

I do not need him bursting into the cabin shouting, “Come on everyone, let’s believe in Britain!” while accidentally stalling the engines over the Bay of Biscay.

I need somebody calm enough to understand what is actually happening.

And yes, that person also has to communicate. They have to explain the route, the weather, the risks and the likely duration of the turbulence. But communication is not a substitute for competence. It is an addition to it.

The electorate, however, often behaves like toddlers demanding to know why the seeds they planted yesterday have not yet become a fully grown oak tree with a patio and integrated barbecue area.

“We voted Labour months ago. Why is everything not fixed?”

Because economies are not apps. You cannot reboot them.

Starmer is probably banking on exactly what rational governments usually bank on: that if stability returns, inflation falls, investment improves, energy prices settle and infrastructure projects begin moving, voters may eventually notice tangible improvements before the next election.

That is not glamorous politics. It is slow politics. Administrative politics. Competence politics.

Which is precisely why so many people find it boring.

But boring is underrated. Boring is what you want in air traffic control. Boring is what you want in nuclear engineering. Boring is what you want when your economy resembles a 20-year-old motorhome held together by cable ties, expanding foam and receipts from Screwfix.

Britain does not need another performer standing on a barrel telling us foreigners, judges, Brussels or net zero are the source of all suffering.

It needs patience, investment, realism and an electorate mature enough to admit that some of the current mess was voted for willingly, repeatedly and sometimes enthusiastically.

Because until voters themselves grow up and accept responsibility for the choices that helped put Britain here, they will remain vulnerable to the next grinning salesman offering another magic lever that turns out to be attached to absolutely bloody nothing.

It took the Tories 14 years to fuck up the country - pardon my French. It's unrealistic to think it can be fixed in 2 years.


The Forgotten Casualties of the Iran War

There was a wonderfully grave segment on Radio 4 yesterday morning about the economic fallout from the Iran war. Oil prices. Gas supplies. Fertiliser. Haulage. Manufacturing. Entire sectors apparently wobbling as energy prices spread through the economy like a leak nobody can quite find.

And fair enough. Those things matter.

But once again, the BBC managed to overlook one of the great endangered pillars of the modern British economy. The influencer sector.


Nobody ever talks about the human cost to influencers during geopolitical crises.

Nobody asks how Chantelle from Basingstoke is supposed to continue producing "Sunday Reset" content if sanctions disrupt the supply of imported Scandinavian oat milk and electrically heated eyelash curlers. Nobody considers the effect on a 24 year old lifestyle creator when global instability interferes with the availability of motivational water bottles, collagen sachets and those little iced coffees that appear to contain more branding than actual coffee.

There was much discussion about logistics and fuel dependency. Yet not a single mention of the terrible vulnerability of the Dubai brunch ecosystem.

You can picture the scene already. Flights delayed. Beach clubs under strain. Influencers forced to photograph themselves beside merely adequate infinity pools while wearing oversized sunglasses and staring thoughtfully into the middle distance as though contemplating the collapse of civilisation rather than whether to order truffle fries.

Some may even have to return briefly to Britain and produce content from their parents' conservatory in Swindon.

The programme spoke solemnly about job losses in steel, chemicals and transport. Important, obviously. But what about the thousands employed in secondary influencer support services? Teeth whiteners. Eyebrow laminators. Young men wandering around Shoreditch pretending not to notice the camera while carrying tiny cups of expensive coffee.

Entire supply chains.

And what of LinkedIn influencers? The forgotten casualties of modern conflict. Middle managers standing in front of office windows explaining that "uncertainty creates opportunity" while somehow relating the Strait of Hormuz to leadership culture and personal growth.

One can only imagine the suffering.

"Yesterday, amid escalating regional tensions, I learned a powerful lesson about resilience."

No you didn't, Darren. Your connecting flight in Doha was delayed and Pret had run out of the vegan wrap.

It is easy to mock, of course, but economies evolve. Britain once made ships, locomotives and precision machinery. We now increasingly produce podcasts hosted by people discussing "their journey".

And perhaps that is why the Today programme omitted them. The numbers may simply be too frightening to contemplate. Once you start calculating the economic contribution of people filming themselves unpacking skincare products, the whole economy starts looking faintly suspicious.

Somewhere tonight, while tankers edge nervously through the Strait of Hormuz and traders watch oil futures flicker across their screens, somebody will still be trying to photograph a flat white beside a scented candle in weak natural lighting while saying, "A lot of you have been asking about my morning routine."


The Melting Pot Lectures the Continent

There is a certain comic bravado in watching Donald Trump take lumps out of Europe as though it were a failed experiment in over-integration, rather than a continent that has, quite deliberately, stopped short of becoming what his own country already is.


Because the awkward truth is this. The United States is not just influenced by Europe. It is what happens when Europeans stop being European in any meaningful sense and become something else entirely.

Germans arrived, Irish arrived, Italians arrived, along with half the map in due course. They did not remain Germans, Irish and Italians for long. They married each other, moved states, lost the languages, kept the surnames for decorative purposes, and produced a population that is now thoroughly blended. The old national distinctions survive, but mostly as faint labels rather than anything that structures daily life.

Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the much-maligned European Union is attempting something far more modest and, in its own way, more difficult. It is trying to get French, Poles, Italians and the rest to cooperate while remaining recognisably French, Polish and Italian. Integration without assimilation. Coordination without merger.

If Brussels announced tomorrow that its objective was to turn the French into a regional variant of Germans with a shared language and interchangeable identities, there would be riots before lunch. Quite sensibly so. That is not the project.

And yet, when Trump rails against Europe, the complaint often sounds like this. Too integrated, too entangled, insufficiently sovereign. One is left wondering what he thinks the United States is. It is not a loose club of English, Germans and Irish politely minding their own business. It is the end result of those groups largely dissolving into a single, mixed population over time.

In other words, America resembles what a far more deeply integrated Europe might look like after a long period of blending, rather than anything the EU is currently trying to build. It has a single political system, a dominant language, and a population so intermixed that the original national labels carry limited weight.

There is also the small matter of timing. The United States did its blending in the 19th and early 20th centuries, under conditions that no longer exist in modern Europe. Large-scale migration into a relatively open society, a common language, and the absence of entrenched nation-states made that process possible in a way that cannot simply be replicated today.

The irony is not subtle. The same political instinct that frets about blurred identities and over-integration abroad presides quite happily over a society built on precisely that process. The average American of European descent is a small coalition government in their own right, assembled from bits of the continent and held together by habit rather than principle.

None of this makes the United States uniquely enlightened. It has its own divisions, some of them stubborn. But on this narrow question, the contrast is hard to ignore. Europe is trying to make cooperation work without dissolving its nations. America dealt with the problem by largely dissolving those distinctions within its own borders, and calling the result normal.

So when Trump takes aim at Europe, he is not just criticising a foreign arrangement. He is, in a roundabout way, objecting to a diluted version of the very process that produced the country he leads.


Monday, 11 May 2026

A Logic Chain

I have developed a logic chain that anyone can follow.


A billionaire living in Thailand does not pour millions into British politics because he is worried about waiting times at Scunthorpe Jobcentre or the condition of a road in Grimsby.

Extremely wealthy people generally fund political movements aligned with their economic interests.

Of course, some billionaires are genuine philanthropists. So the obvious question is:

- what is Christopher Harborne’s public track record?

The visible pattern is overwhelmingly:

- Reform and Brexit funding
- Conservative donations
- support for deregulation
- crypto and investment interests

What is far less visible publicly is:

- major anti-poverty philanthropy
- large charitable foundations
- public health campaigns
- educational philanthropy
- major community investment projects

That does not prove private philanthropy does not exist. But the public evidence points far more strongly toward political and economic influence than social philanthropy.

That usually means support for:

- lower taxes on wealth and capital
- weaker regulation
- smaller government
- reduced welfare spending
- privatisation
- weaker labour protections

Opposition to Green policies fits naturally into this because serious decarbonisation usually requires:

- state intervention
- public investment
- infrastructure change
- constraints on some industries

So anti-Green politics becomes politically useful:

- frame net zero as elite interference
- turn climate policy into a culture war
- weaken trust in institutions and expertise
- protect existing economic interests

So if such a movement gains power, the logical direction is:

- public services cut in the name of efficiency
- welfare reduced in the name of incentives
- deregulation in the name of growth
- more economic risk pushed onto ordinary individuals

The consequence is predictable:

- economic gains flow disproportionately upward
- inequality widens
- public services deteriorate
- pressure increases on local economies and infrastructure

And when economic frustration grows, attention must be diverted elsewhere:

- migrants
- small boats
- “wokeism”
- Europe
- net zero
- culture wars

Because if voters examine the actual mechanics for too long, they may notice something awkward:

- they are being persuaded to dismantle their own protections by people wealthy enough never to need them.

The fortunes made during the Brexit chaos should have been the warning sign. Reform increasingly looks like the continuation of the same project.


Press Button To Continue Being Ignored

I have developed a theory that many pedestrian crossing buttons are not actually connected to anything meaningful at all, beyond perhaps a small yellow light and the fading optimism of the British public.


Take the temporary roadworks crossings. You march up to them with purpose, jab the button and are rewarded instantly by a glowing WAIT sign, which I increasingly suspect is the electrical equivalent of a nurse saying, “The doctor will be with you shortly,” before disappearing for three hours.

The lights then continue exactly as they were going to anyway.

You stand there watching completely empty roads while nothing whatsoever happens. Then somebody else arrives and presses the button too, as though your earlier attempt perhaps lacked authority. Soon there are four of you taking turns to prod the thing like Victorian villagers attempting to contact the dead through a table in a village hall.

I joined in myself yesterday, despite already suspecting the whole apparatus was a fraud. That is how powerful the conditioning is. The button lights up, so you feel you have achieved something. British people are especially susceptible to this sort of thing because we were raised on queues, forms and implied authority. If a metal box on a pole tells us to WAIT, we obey automatically. Half the population would stand politely beside a sign saying “Press button to continue being ignored”.

What convinces me the whole thing is psychological is that nobody merely presses the button once. They hammer at it repeatedly with growing indignation, as though the crossing is a recalcitrant photocopier from 1987. You even see people arriving after the button has clearly already been pressed and immediately pressing it again, just to make certain the request has really gone through to Central Crossing Command.

In fairness, some crossings genuinely are demand-responsive, particularly late at night when pressing the button can produce an almost magical instant green man. Which only deepens the confusion because it keeps alive the national belief that all the others are also listening.

I suspect many temporary systems are simply running fixed timing sequences designed to optimise traffic flow while giving pedestrians the comforting illusion of participation. It is a bit like democracy, really. You are invited to press the button, your request is acknowledged with reassuring lights and noises, and then the system carries on doing exactly what it intended to do from the outset.

It is rather like those “close door” buttons in lifts which, according to persistent rumours, are often disconnected entirely. Millions of people solemnly pressing a button whose real function may simply be to occupy the human urge to interfere.

You see the same philosophy elsewhere. Self-service checkouts requiring staff authorisation to buy a cucumber. QR code menus in pubs that managed perfectly well with laminated paper for half a century. “Smart” motorways apparently making decisions by consulting damp tea leaves.

The pedestrian crossing button has clearly joined this great British tradition. A ceremonial interface. Something to keep the public occupied while the machinery gets on with its own priorities.

Still, we all keep pressing them.

Partly out of hope, partly superstition, and partly because if you do not press it, someone arriving thirty seconds later will immediately march up, stab the button theatrically with one finger, and look at you as though you are the sort of idiot who had been standing there all day without thinking of it.


Sunday, 10 May 2026

Reality Waits Patiently With a Clipboard

The votes are in, the tally has been made and the media frenzy has started.

Radio schedules abandoned. Giant touchscreen graphics wheeled into studios like NATO command systems. Earnest correspondents standing outside leisure centres in Doncaster at 2am speaking in hushed tones because a district council in Lincolnshire has changed political control by four seats.


Britain increasingly covers local elections as though civilisation itself is hanging by a thread attached to a returning officer’s clipboard. And yet, when the excitement subsides and the caffeine wears off, what these elections actually reveal is something both simpler and more complicated than the headlines suggest.

Brexit never really ended. It merely changed clothes.

You can see it immediately when you place the map of Reform gains beside the old Brexit map. The overlap is almost comically obvious. It is practically tracing paper.

The strongest Reform areas are, broadly speaking, the old Leave strongholds. Lincolnshire. Essex. Hartlepool. The old industrial north-east. Bits of the Midlands. Coastal towns where the high street consists mainly of vape shops, empty banks and a charity shop specialising in mobility aids. The same places that were told Brexit would bring renewal, investment and sovereignty now appear to have concluded that, since none of that happened, the answer must be an even more concentrated form of Brexit.

It is a bit like somebody whose home-made wine exploded in the airing cupboard deciding the solution is to buy a larger demijohn.

And the strange thing is that everybody involved seems desperate not to mention this obvious continuity. Reform presents itself as something thrillingly insurgent and fresh. Labour talks as though this is all merely about immigration messaging. The Conservatives pretend voters have simply misunderstood how brilliantly Brexit went. The BBC solemnly analyses every council by-election as though decoding Bronze Age pottery fragments.

But the political geography has barely changed. The Brexit coalition was always unstable. Some wanted lower immigration, some deregulation, some simply wanted to kick Westminster in the shins after decades of feeling ignored and economically stranded. Europe became the bucket into which every national frustration was emptied.

That is why Brexit survived its own disappointments. It was never just about Europe in the first place. Europe was simply the visible target onto which wider frustrations were attached. Now much of that emotional infrastructure has transferred directly to Reform.

The irony is that many of these areas are still suffering from precisely the structural problems Brexit was supposed to solve. Weak local economies. Poor transport. Hollowed-out town centres. Lack of skilled employment. None of which were caused by Brussels bureaucrats hiding in Belgian basements regulating bananas.

And yet the emotional logic remains intact because Brexit was psychologically satisfying even where it was economically damaging. It offered clarity, villains and rebellion after decades of managerial politics in which every answer involved a consultation document and a PDF nobody read.

What makes local elections particularly volatile is that, deep down, most people suspect the actual practical differences between councils are fairly marginal anyway. Labour councils, Conservative councils, Liberal Democrat councils - they are all trapped inside much the same financial straitjacket.

So turnout collapses because people conclude, often reasonably, that changing the colour of the rosette does not magically refill the potholes or reduce the council tax. Local government increasingly resembles the management of decline with different logos.

That is why protest parties thrive there. A local election is one of the few opportunities voters have to kick the political system in the shins without accidentally ending up with Liz Truss moving into Number 10 again.

A general election feels different because it carries consequences. People may happily vote Reform for district council dog-waste policy, then become rather more cautious when choosing who controls interest rates, defence policy and whether the bond markets start sweating visibly.

And this is where the media frenzy becomes actively distorting.

Only parts of England even voted, and disproportionately the sort of places where Reform was always likely to do well anyway. Yet within minutes of the results arriving, parts of the media began speaking as though Britain had collectively packed a suitcase for Clacton and was preparing Nigel Farage for coronation.

Modern political journalism increasingly survives on emotional escalation. A nuanced explanation of fragmented local voting patterns under low-turnout conditions does not produce excitement. “Political earthquake” does. Politics is now covered less like governance and more like a mixture of sport, weather forecasting and psychological crisis.

The irony is that this style of coverage may itself help fuel protest politics. If voters are constantly told the system is collapsing, corrupt, broken and illegitimate, eventually some of them will decide they may as well vote for whoever promises to kick the furniture over.

Meanwhile, actual local government remains stubbornly mundane underneath all the hysteria. Somewhere in a village hall, a newly elected Reform councillor whose previous political experience consists mainly of shouting at a parking meter is about to discover that local government chiefly involves sewage contracts, social care budgets and deciding whether the Christmas lights can be repaired for under eighty quid.

And perhaps that is no bad thing. Britain may be about to receive a second practical demonstration that slogans are considerably easier than governing. Brexit already collided with reality once the campaign buses had gone home and the customs paperwork arrived. If Reform councils now spend four years discovering that potholes do not fear patriotism and social care cannot be repaired with Facebook comments, the country might finally absorb a useful lesson before the next general election.

Reality, as ever, waits patiently in the background with a clipboard.


4-1 = 4

I have been engaged on quite a bit of motorhome maintenance over the last few weeks; however, there are moments in life when one is forced to confront the limits of human understanding. Black holes. Quantum mechanics. The enduring appeal of certain politicians. And now, I must add, the rubber seal on a 24 year old motorhome door.


The presenting problem was banal enough. The bottom section of the habitation door seal had gone soft, ragged and faintly disreputable, like an ageing civil servant who had stopped bothering with meetings. Sensible action followed. Remove seal. Cut out offending section. Refit remainder. Accept a small gap at the bottom as the price of progress. Move on with one’s life.

Except that is not what happened.

What happened was that, having removed a measurable length of rubber, there remained… enough rubber. Not approximately enough. Not nearly enough. Enough. The seal went back in, traced the entire perimeter of the door, and met itself at the end with the quiet, smug competence of a thing that has always known it would.

No gap. No compromise. No apology.

At this point, one must choose between two explanations. The first is that rubber, over time, develops elastic properties that are not merely physical but philosophical. It expands when unobserved, contracts when measured, and rearranges itself to undermine human confidence. The second is that the entire motorhome industry has, for decades, been engaged in a conspiracy to conceal the fact that seals are dimensionally optional.

Both are plausible.

What we can say with confidence is that the seal, when installed, had been under tension. Corners stretched. Edges compressed. Twenty four years of door closures had persuaded it into a shape that bore only a passing resemblance to its natural state. Freed from its duties, it relaxed, lengthened, and returned with a faint air of reproach, as if to say that it had always been this size and any suggestion to the contrary was user error.

This is, in its way, a quiet rebuke to modern engineering. We like tolerances. We like specifications. We like the comforting fiction that if one removes 50 millimetres of material, one will end up with 50 millimetres less material. The seal has demonstrated, with admirable clarity, that this is merely a suggestion.

Had a replacement been ordered, it would of course have been 30 millimetres too short. This is not conjecture but law. The universe does not permit the straightforward completion of small domestic repairs. It insists on irony.

So where does that leave us. With a door that seals perfectly. With no draughts, no visible gaps, and no obvious explanation. A successful outcome, which is deeply unsatisfactory.

Because success without understanding is unsettling. One prefers one’s victories to be earned, explained, and preferably invoiced. Instead, we are left with a functioning seal and the uneasy sense that reality has, briefly and without warning, taken a day off.

I shall not be investigating further. Some things are better left unexamined. The door is shut, the seal is sound, and the laws of physics can, for once, manage without supervision.


Saturday, 9 May 2026

Which Facts Get Floodlights?

There was a time when journalism at least pretended to follow facts wherever they led. Now it increasingly resembles a dog obedience class where inconvenient details are quietly dragged back onto the approved narrative leash before they wander off and confuse the public.

Take the Golders Green stabbings. The headlines rapidly settled on "antisemitic twin stabbing". Except the suspect was apparently charged with three attempted murders, not two. The earlier alleged victim was a Muslim acquaintance. The suspect also appears to have had a significant history of mental illness and violence. Those details existed, but somehow became background scenery once the cleaner, more emotionally satisfying version of events emerged.

Now, none of that proves antisemitism was invented. The later victims were visibly Jewish men in Golders Green, which rather increases the statistical likelihood of Jewish victims in any random attack there to begin with. But that is precisely why nuance matters. Was this ideological targeting? Chaotic violence by a mentally unstable man? A mixture of both? Those are serious questions. Yet before most people even knew there had allegedly been a third victim, the country had already reached the solemn phase of televised national anxiety.

The Prime Minister addressed the nation. Counter-terror language appeared almost immediately. Yet the earlier Muslim victim and the suspect's psychiatric history were quietly pushed into the margins because they complicated the cleaner morality play.

Even Rabbi Herschel Gluck appears uncomfortable with the increasingly selective way these issues are framed. Which matters, because Gluck is not some random activist with a megaphone and a Substack account. He is a senior Haredi Jewish figure, founder of interfaith initiatives, president of Shomrim in Stamford Hill, heavily involved in Jewish community security, and very much part of the communal establishment.

In his interview with Owen Jones, he essentially argued that criticism of Israeli policy is not automatically antisemitism, while also insisting antisemitism itself is very real and dangerous. More awkwardly still, he openly acknowledged there is pressure from strongly pro-Israel factions to suppress or delegitimise pro-Palestinian marches and activism in Britain.

Perhaps Zack Polanski touched a nerve when he questioned the atmosphere surrounding the incident. Not because everything he said was correct - some of it plainly was not - but because the looming council elections had already turned public fear, antisemitism and community tension into political currency for almost everybody involved. Once that happens, nuance tends to get trampled somewhere beneath the campaign literature and urgent television graphics.

What also made Polanski awkward was that, like Gluck, he could not simply be dismissed as hostile to Jews. Both are Jewish. Both were, in different ways, questioning whether every aspect of the public framing matched the underlying complexity of events. Modern political discourse struggles badly with dissenting insiders. It is much easier when everyone stays in their assigned tribal box.

Then there was the Whitehall stabbing outside Downing Street itself. Rival Iranian factions. A man allegedly stabbed. Independent journalists claimed the victim, a pro-regime demonstrator, was arrested despite knife wounds and later released outside a police station rather than taken directly to hospital. They also claimed to possess video evidence from the scene.

Double Down News ran with the story and openly questioned both the police handling and the lack of mainstream interest. According to the journalist involved, major outlets simply were not interested in either the footage or the wider political context. Which is curious, because one might imagine that a politically charged stabbing outside Downing Street involving rival Iranian factions would normally qualify as news.


According to the independent reporting, the Whitehall victim had allegedly been specifically targeted because of his political affiliation. Oddly enough, that somehow remained classified largely as a "clash" between rival groups rather than a terrifying assault on democracy itself.

Curiously, had the political identities been reversed, one suspects every current affairs programme in Britain would still be discussing it between lengthy panels featuring retired police officers, terrorism experts, and somebody from a think tank with "Institute" in the title.

And this is where the framing starts to smell political rather than merely journalistic. Because once institutions become sensitive to organised pressure, whether from governments, lobby groups, activists or communal organisations, the temptation is always to frame events in ways that reduce political friction. The Met may insist its classifications are purely operational and evidence-based, but people are increasingly noticing that some narratives receive immediate terrorism language, moral urgency and national attention, while others are quietly downgraded into "clashes", "disorder" or "community tensions".

The irony is that this sort of relentless apocalyptic framing may not even help ordinary British Jews in the long run. Quite the opposite. If every ugly or ambiguous incident is immediately elevated into evidence of an existential national antisemitic emergency before the full facts are established, people become simultaneously more frightened and more sceptical. Communities start living in heightened anxiety, while outsiders increasingly suspect they are being emotionally managed rather than informed.

The difficulty for institutions is that awkward people like Gluck refuse to cooperate with the script. He is deeply involved in Jewish community protection, interfaith work and security, yet simultaneously resists reducing every political disagreement into an ethnic loyalty test. That sort of nuance causes visible distress among people who earn a living from outrage.

This is the problem with modern institutional framing. It is not usually outright lying. It is something subtler and, in some ways, more corrosive. Certain facts receive floodlighting. Others are left sitting quietly in the dark like embarrassing relatives at a wedding.

The Met do it. The media do it. Politicians do it. Everyone insists they are merely "providing context", which increasingly appears to mean removing whichever parts make the story awkward.

And eventually the public notices.

That is the danger here. Not that every mainstream report is false, but that people can now practically predict in advance which details will be amplified, which will be softened, and which will quietly disappear altogether. Once that happens, trust drains away. People stop believing institutions are describing reality and start assuming they are managing perception.

Which, to be fair, they often are.

People are not stupid. Once they can predict in advance which facts will receive floodlights and which will be quietly left in the dark, trust does not collapse all at once. It leaks away a little bit each time.


Milk First and the Curious Case of the Self-Staining Mug

I've written abou tthis before, but from the aspect of adding sugar to tea.


It started, as these things often do, with a low level domestic irritation that gradually became absurd. For years I found myself bleaching perfectly good porcelain mugs, initially now and then, then weekly, and eventually with a frequency that suggested the mugs were ageing faster than I was.

The received wisdom, confidently recycled, is that “milk first” is a relic of inferior china and nervous Georgians. Owners of proper porcelain, we are assured, can pour tea first with the easy assurance of social and material superiority. A pleasing story, rarely troubled by evidence.

After yet another session at the sink, contemplating a mug that had stained itself with a single teabag, I decided to test it.

The experiment was hardly elaborate. Same porcelain mugs, same teabags, same kettle. The only variable was the order of operations. Tea first, as tradition insists, versus milk first, as tradition patronises.

The result was not delicate. Tea first produced the usual effect. A rapid, almost eager staining, as though the mug had developed a memory of every previous cup and was keen to add another layer. Worse, as the mugs aged, this happened faster and more aggressively.

Milk first, by contrast, left the porcelain looking entirely civilised. No brown ring, no creeping discolouration, no need to reach for the bleach like a man admitting defeat.

At this point, the Georgian crockery story begins to look less like explanation and more like folklore. Whatever our ancestors were protecting, it was not a modern mug facing down a teabag of industrial efficiency.

The explanation, inconveniently for the traditionalists, is chemical. Teabags extract hard and fast. Porcelain, after years of honest stirring, acquires microscopic wear. Introduce hot, tannin rich liquid directly to that surface and it stains with enthusiasm. Introduce milk first, and a good deal of that tannin is neutralised before it ever gets the chance.

Just to remove any lingering doubt, I accidentally ran a rather more brutal trial. One morning I made a cup with milk first, then disappeared for an hour to give a mate a lift, having left the teabag in the cup. This is precisely the sort of extended contact time in which a mug usually betrays you. On returning, there was not a single stain. I fished out the teabag and reheated the tea in the microwave, more out of curiosity than optimism, and still nothing. At that point the tannins have had their chance and failed.

So the much mocked habit turns out to have a practical advantage. Not a badge of class, but a small act of defensive housekeeping. It may just be that the milk reduced the temperature in the cup, lessening the tannin extraction, rather than the lipids having an effect on the tannins. I don't know.

None of this will end the argument. The “tea first” camp will continue to cite history, and history will continue not to wash their mugs. Those of us who have watched the problem worsen with age may quietly take the hint.

The porcelain, at least, has reached a conclusion.


Friday, 8 May 2026

Britain Decides the Opening Hours of the Recycling Centre

There was a time when local council elections occupied roughly the same space in the national consciousness as a damp parish newsletter announcing a new treasurer for the bowls club. You woke up the next morning to discover Labour had gained six seats in somewhere called North East Fenland Rural, the Conservatives had lost control of a district council nobody could locate on a map, and a man dressed as a traffic cone had won in Ashington on a platform of reopening the public toilets.


Then everyone moved on.

Now apparently we require full DEFCON 1 election coverage because Swindon has elected three Reform councillors and a Lib Dem with a beard made entirely from sourdough starter.

The BBC has been treating these local elections like the fall of Saigon. Radio 4 schedules vanish. Normal programming disappears. Suddenly there are sombre graphics, giant touchscreen maps and presenters speaking in hushed tones about “voter realignment in the outer commuter belt”. You half expect a retired brigadier to appear beside a digital map of Lincolnshire moving little coloured arrows around while explaining the collapse of the traditional vote in Kettering South East Drainage Ward.

The oddity is that many of the country are not even voting.

Large parts of Britain are carrying on entirely unaware that democracy is apparently hanging by a thread in Dudley. Most people are still mostly concerned with the cost of food, energy bills, whether the car passes its MOT, and why their WiFi drops out every time somebody uses the microwave. In our case the microwave also causes the kitchen lights to flicker slightly, which probably says more about British infrastructure than another six hours of election graphics.

Yet Westminster media has decided these elections represent the final battle for civilisation itself.

Part of this is structural. Continuous news requires continuous drama. “Council maintains broadly competent waste collection service” does not really justify a six-hour special. But “Starmer Faces Existential Crisis After Bin Collection Swing In Basildon” can fill an entire afternoon without anybody needing to leave the studio.

And poor old Keir Starmer has apparently been on the verge of political death continuously since about mid-2025.

Every week there is another article suggesting his authority has collapsed. Another “mounting pressure” piece. Another “Labour panic”. Another anonymous backbencher claiming “colleagues are concerned”. If Westminster journalists were medical staff, Starmer would have been declared clinically dead eighteen months ago, only to sit up every morning asking whether anyone had seen his briefing papers.

Yet here he still is.

That is because political journalism now operates like football punditry mixed with Love Island. Nobody reports politics as a slow institutional process anymore. It is all swings, momentum, humiliations, comebacks, body language, “optics”, and anonymous MPs “warning” things. Cabinet ministers are discussed like underperforming midfielders. Polling movements of about 2% are treated like the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.

Brexit did not help. For several years prime ministers genuinely did collapse at absurd speed. Theresa May staggered from crisis to crisis. Boris Johnson eventually exploded in a cloud of cake crumbs and ethics investigations. Liz Truss managed to crash the bond markets before some people had even located the downstairs lavatory at Number 10. After that, Westminster started behaving like a man who had one genuinely catastrophic gearbox failure and now interprets every faint rattling noise as imminent mechanical destruction.

The media became addicted to collapse.

Now every wobble is treated as the opening scene of another execution. The problem is that most governments are not actually that dramatic. Unpopular governments can survive for years provided MPs fear the alternative more. Labour MPs may grumble about Starmer, but they have also spent years watching the Conservatives cycle through leaders like a man desperately trying random fuses in a broken lawnmower while insisting he definitely understands electrics.

There is also the small matter that Westminster political discourse increasingly confuses social media with the country itself. Spend too long on political Twitter and you would think Britain was entering the closing days of the Weimar Republic. In reality, most of the population are making tea, arguing with their energy supplier and wondering why the dishwasher now requires software updates. Half the country probably could not name their local councillor even after accidentally voting for him.

The rise of Nigel Farage has amplified all this because he generates attention in the way a small kitchen fire generates attention. The media cannot resist him. Every Reform gain becomes either the death of Labour, the death of the Conservatives, the death of liberal democracy, or occasionally all three before lunchtime.

Some of these trends may indeed matter long term. British politics probably is fragmenting. Traditional loyalties probably are weakening. But modern political coverage no longer distinguishes between “important gradual shift” and “imminent collapse of the regime by Thursday teatime”.

So we end up with council elections being presented like D-Day, Starmer being politically pronounced dead every fortnight despite continuing to attend Cabinet meetings, and Radio 4 abandoning normal programming because somebody in Warwickshire has elected an independent candidate angry about cycle lanes.

Meanwhile the bins still need collecting, the roads still resemble the surface of the moon, and somewhere in Britain a newly elected councillor is discovering that his first actual responsibility is not saving the nation, but chairing a tense subcommittee meeting about the opening hours of the recycling centre.