Sir Jim Ratcliffe has decided that Britain has been “colonised”. Strong word. Loaded word. The sort of word that normally appears in YouTube thumbnails next to arrows and red circles.
This from a man who lives in Monaco for tax efficiency while lecturing the rest of us about the burden on British public services. One might admire the financial prudence. One might even admire the candour. But it does rather undercut the moral thunder. It is difficult to warn about national strain while arranging one’s own fiscal lightness.
Then there is the small matter of the football club.
Manchester United is not a parish team from Saddleworth. It is a global corporation in red shirts. It scouts in Africa, South America and Europe. It files work permit paperwork as routinely as it files transfer bids. Its broadcast revenue comes from Jakarta as much as Salford. Its shirt sales depend on Lagos, Seoul and Sao Paulo. The modern Premier League is global labour mobility with floodlights.
And yet we are told that demographic change is somehow an existential trespass.
Let us be clear. No one is obliged to support high levels of immigration. One can argue about housing supply, GP capacity, wage compression, planning failures, or visa design. Those are policy questions. They require numbers, trade-offs and grown-up language.
“Colonised” is not grown-up language. It is cultural alarmism. It suggests displacement rather than management. It implies invasion rather than administration. It trades in emotion, not arithmetic.
Footballers, we are reminded, are temporary. They will not necessarily settle. Quite so. But that rather proves the point. The entire Premier League model rests on temporary immigration. Work visas. International contracts. Global recruitment pipelines. Short-term presence is still immigration. If mobility is good for balance sheets but bad for Britain, that is not an argument. It is a contradiction.
There is also a deeper irony. The Premier League is one of the most successful export products this country has. It projects British soft power across the world. It is diverse, multilingual and commercially ruthless. It thrives precisely because it is open. If that is colonisation, it is a curious form of self-harm that seems to pay remarkably well.
The uncomfortable truth is this: global integration is profitable when it fills stadiums, but politically toxic when it fills classrooms and surgeries. That tension is real. Infrastructure planning has been poor. Housing supply has lagged. Governments of both stripes have failed to align migration with capacity. That is an administrative failure, not a civilisational one.
If you wish to argue for lower net migration, make the case in those terms. Talk about numbers. Talk about absorption rates. Talk about fiscal contribution and local strain. Do not reach for the language of siege while cashing cheques from a globalised enterprise built on exactly the flows you condemn.
Because when the rhetoric turns apocalyptic but the business model remains international, people will notice. And they are entitled to ask whether this is policy seriousness or simply political theatre with a Monaco postcode attached.
As for Farage getting in on the act, it's only yo be expected.












