Monday, 8 June 2026

The Ball is Still Cheap

The World Cup is about to land on us, which means bunting, pundits, wall charts, and the usual national shortage of perspective. It did get me thinking though. Football still matters for reasons beyond the scoreline, and not just because it gives grown men permission to shout tactical advice at televisions while wearing shirts designed for people 35 years younger.

At least in theory, football is one of the few grand professions left where a boy from a housing estate can become richer than the barrister, the banker, the columnist and the think-tank boy who went to Oxford to learn how ordinary people feel.


This, naturally, annoys people.

There is something deeply revealing in the way Britain talks about footballers. We like the working class when it is nostalgic, safely dead, or singing in a black-and-white documentary about pits and brass bands. We are less keen when it is 24 years old, driving a Lamborghini, speaking in its own accent and earning more in a week than a minor royal gets for opening a leisure centre.

And yes, footballers have often come from working-class backgrounds. Not all of them, obviously. Jurgen Klopp had a degree in sports science, which rather spoils the cartoon. Plenty of modern players now come through structured academies with parents who can manage the travel, the costs, the emotional strain and the miniature HR department that seems to surround every promising 13-year-old with a left foot.

The route differs by country too. In parts of Latin America and West Africa, football can still look much more like a raw escape route. The economic stakes are sharper and informal football remains a huge part of everyday life. Germany and the Netherlands feel different. Football is still accessible, but it sits inside a more organised sporting and educational culture, with clubs, schools, coaching structures and vocational routes all mattering more. Klopp’s degree is not some bizarre exception from another planet. It fits a culture where football intelligence and formal education are not seen as mutually exclusive, which must come as a terrible shock to the British pundit class.

But the working-class route still matters. Football remains one of the few places where talent can elbow its way past polish. You can’t blag your way into a Premier League midfield with a summer internship, a reassuring surname and a father who knows someone at Coutts. At some point you have to control the ball while someone is trying to remove your ankle.

That is why football unsettles the class system. It is not pure meritocracy, because nothing is. Scouts miss people. Academies chew boys up. Parents need petrol money, time, patience and the ability to watch their child’s hopes being assessed by men in branded coats. But compared with politics, journalism, law, finance and large parts of the arts, football is still brutally honest. Either you can play, or you can’t.

There is also the old Roy of the Rovers thing sitting in the background. The local lad, the impossible comeback, the mud on the knees, the last-minute winner, the sense that talent and courage could burst through ordinary life and make the crowd go mad. It was never documentary realism, obviously. Even Melchester Rovers would probably need a compliance department now. But the myth mattered because it was democratic. The hero came from somewhere recognisable.

Then look at Formula 1.

F1 is not short of talent. The drivers are not just rich boys having a very noisy gap year. The skill, nerve, fitness and technical feel needed to drive one of those cars properly is absurd. Put an ordinary person in an F1 car and they would not discover their inner Senna. They would discover a barrier, shortly before the medical car arrived.

But F1 has a different problem. It is meritocracy after the cover charge.

Football’s basic entry point is cheap. You need a ball, space, other children and enough talent to stand out. F1 starts with karting, transport, race fees, licences, mechanics, tyres, engines, coaching, teams, and parents who are willing to spend weekends standing beside a track pretending this is all perfectly normal. Before you reach the glamour of Monaco, you have to survive the glamour of a damp kart circuit and an invoice.

That matters, because raw football ability can be visible in ordinary life. A child can reveal ability in the street, the park, the school playground, the cage, the estate pitch. Someone can see it.

Motorsport has no equivalent legitimate informal route. Driving a souped-up Fiesta through town at 100 mph does not mark you out as a future Grand Prix driver. It marks you out as a future defendant. The next stop is not Monza. It is magistrates’ court, possibly after a short conversation with a police officer who is unimpressed by your racing line past Greggs.

So a poor kid can reveal football talent by playing football in a park. A poor kid cannot reveal racing talent by driving like a lunatic outside Halfords.

And that, I think, is the class bit. Football talent can appear in public. Racing talent has to be purchased into visibility.

To be fair to Formula 1, it was not always quite as sealed off as it is now. Earlier F1 had examples of a more porous world. Graham Hill did not emerge from a modern driver academy with a sponsor deck and a junior brand strategy. He went to technical school, became an apprentice, served in the Navy, found his way into racing through Brands Hatch, joined Lotus as a mechanic and then somehow talked himself into becoming a racing driver. That route now sounds less like career planning and more like breaking into a cathedral through the boiler room.

Nigel Mansell belongs in the same argument. He was not a billionaire’s son being eased gently down a pre-funded staircase. He came from the Midlands, drove in fields, took risks, spent money he did not really have, and clawed his way through a sport that was already expensive but still had some gaps in the fence. Chapman and Clark add colour too: the clever engineer with aluminium in his blood, and the farmer’s son from the Borders whose talent came through local motorsport before it had been turned into a managed product.

None of that made early F1 democratic in the football sense. It was never the equivalent of a poor kid revealing talent by playing football in a park. But it was more porous. It had privateers, mechanics, farmers’ sons, garagistes and alarming men who looked at a racing car and thought, “That’s good, but what if half of it wasn’t there?”

Modern F1 has less of that. Money was always there, but the texture of the money has changed. It has moved from messy money to institutional money, from workshops and favours and second chances to karting budgets, driver academies, simulator programmes, sponsor decks and children being professionally managed before they’re old enough to look bored in a GCSE maths lesson.

In modern F1, Lewis Hamilton is the exception everyone reaches for, and rightly so in one sense. He came from a far less privileged background than most F1 drivers and his father worked ferociously hard to support him. But that does not prove the system is open. It proves how exceptional you have to be to break through it. Britain loves finding one ladder against a castle wall and declaring the moat fully accessible.

Rugby is even more revealing, because rugby actually split over this.

For years, rugby union presented itself as the noble amateur code, which sounds splendid until you ask who could afford to be noble. It was the game of public schools, universities, officers, doctors, solicitors and men who could afford to lose a Saturday without the household budget making an unpleasant noise.

Rugby league broke that spell. The split in 1895 was not just about rules, tackles and what happened after the sixth collision with a man built like a wardrobe. It was about class. Working men in the North were losing wages to play rugby on Saturdays. They wanted broken-time payments - not yachts, villas or a Swiss bank account, just compensation for wages lost while playing the game. The Rugby Football Union said no. The northern clubs eventually broke away.

That is the revealing bit. Amateurism is very easy to admire when someone else is paying for it. If you are a solicitor, a doctor, an officer or a university man, you can play for honour. If you are a miner, a dock worker or a mill worker, honour does not pay the rent, buy boots for the children or put anything useful on the table apart from a warm glow and a slight limp.

So rugby league became the blunt northern reply to rugby union’s polished moral language. Working-class players were not morally inferior because they needed wages. They were just poorer, which is apparently still a distinction some sporting authorities struggle with unless it is explained very slowly and possibly with a diagram.

And that matters because money does not only narrow the field by being expensive. Sometimes it narrows the field by dressing exclusion up as virtue. Amateurism sounded pure, but it worked rather conveniently for the people who could afford to be amateurs.

Football, worryingly, is drifting in that direction. Not all the way. Not yet. But money is narrowing the field. Academies, travel, elite coaching, private development sessions, sports science, parental availability and sheer organisational stamina all matter more than they used to. The old Roy of the Rovers idea of a boy being spotted on a muddy pitch has not vanished, but it now competes with spreadsheets, GPS vests and parents who know how to navigate the system.

The gap between talent and opportunity is being filled with costs. Not always obvious costs. Not always fees. Sometimes it is petrol, time off work, getting to training three nights a week, absorbing rejection without the household collapsing, and knowing which trial matters and which one is just an afternoon in the rain with branded cones.

Money rarely announces itself honestly. It does not say, “poor children stop here.” It says “pathway”, “development”, “commitment”, “elite environment” and “parental engagement”. All very reasonable words, each one quietly carrying a card machine.

Football still irritates the British class system because it lets working-class boys become rich without asking permission. But even football is not immune from the slow creep of money turning opportunity into a managed product. Formula 1 is the extreme version. It shows what happens when talent has to arrive with a receipt. Rugby union showed what happens when a sport builds a moral philosophy around excluding people who cannot afford to play for free.

Football has not gone that far, and perhaps never will, because the game is too big, too cheap and too culturally embedded to be fully captured. There will always be some ridiculous child on a concrete pitch doing things with a ball that make adults stop talking.

But the danger is obvious. The more organised the route becomes, the more it favours families who are already organised, solvent and confident. The more professional the childhood becomes, the less room there is for the chaotic genius who turns up late, forgot his boots, borrowed someone else’s shin pads and is still the best player on the pitch.

And that would be a loss. Not because working-class boys have some magical moral purity. They don’t. But because a country that closes off its rougher routes to excellence becomes duller, narrower and more pleased with itself.

Education should not be treated as the enemy of sporting talent either. Some countries seem to understand that better than others. Britain too often behaves as if a gifted young footballer is either going to become a star or a write-off, with not much planning for the large number who become neither.

Football is still a door left slightly ajar. Formula 1 is a door with a keypad, a sponsor deck and a father who knows someone. Rugby union spent years telling people that money would ruin the spirit of the game, from the safe side of the door where money had already done its work.

The sad part is that the kid may still have the talent. The ball is still cheap. It’s the fuel money, the spare evenings and the working knowledge of the pathway that now cost extra.


Money Talks. Democracy Clears Its Throat

Everybody talks about democracy as though it consists entirely of walking into a village hall every few years and putting a cross in a box next to somebody called Steve from Swindon wearing a rosette and an expression of mild panic.

But the real question is who shapes the conversation before anyone even gets near the ballot box.


Because modern politics is no longer just parties. It’s money, platforms, algorithms, newspapers, “independent” think tanks funded by mysterious benefactors, billionaire vanity projects, anonymous Facebook pages with names like Britain Demands Common Sense, and social media campaigns that technically aren’t party political while somehow attacking only one side every day for six straight months.

The old rules were designed for an age of leaflets and loudhailers. You could limit campaign spending because campaigns actually had a beginning and an end. Now the campaign never stops. It just changes hashtags and profile pictures.

And before anyone says “well ordinary people can post online too”, yes, technically they can. In the same way that technically I can compete with Tesco by putting a table outside my house with six potatoes on it and a handwritten sign saying FRESH LOCAL PRODUCE.

A bloke with a Facebook account is not remotely equivalent to a billionaire funding endless adverts, influencers, pressure groups, data operations and friendly media coverage. Nor is he equivalent to a newspaper owner deciding what millions of people read over breakfast while insisting this is merely balanced journalism and not ideological landscaping with headlines.

The strange thing is that some of the people most terrified of “state control” seem perfectly relaxed about private control. If the government openly manipulated public opinion the way some media organisations or social media owners do, there’d be cries of dictatorship before the lunchtime meal deal had been reduced.

Yet when a billionaire does it, it suddenly becomes “the free market of ideas”.

Funny sort of market, really. One where a handful of people own the stalls, the loudspeakers and half the town square, while everyone else stands in the rain trying to hand out photocopies nobody reads.

China solved this problem one way. The Communist Party simply makes sure that no matter how rich you become, you never outrank the state. If a billionaire gets politically ambitious, there’s usually a quiet reminder involving regulators, investigations and a temporary disappearance from magazine covers.

Mind you, that doesn’t make China some corruption-free workers’ paradise either. Power still clusters around insiders, factions and people with the right connections. Human beings remain human beings. It’s just that in China the billionaires tend not to forget who actually holds the whip hand.

The West went the other way. We allowed vast concentrations of wealth while somehow convincing ourselves democracy would remain untouched by it. Which increasingly feels like believing you can install a swimming pool in your lounge and somehow keep the carpet dry.

And you can see the effect. Governments often appear more nervous of upsetting wealthy media owners or platform operators than they do about annoying ordinary voters, who mostly get patted on the head once every few years and then told difficult decisions have had to be made.

The awkward bit is that there is no perfect answer.

Ban direct political donations and the money simply moves sideways into “campaign groups”. Restrict newspapers and influence migrates online. Regulate social media and people scream censorship. Public funding of parties sounds sensible until you remember the public has actually encountered politicians in person.

So perhaps the real defence is not laws alone but a population capable of recognising manipulation when it sees it. Which is unfortunate, because modern politics increasingly relies on keeping people angry, frightened, tribal and permanently distracted.

Still, I’m sure it’s all perfectly healthy.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to read another article written by an “ordinary concerned citizen” who just happens to own three media companies and a strategic interest in telling me immigrants, cyclists and environmental regulations are personally responsible for the collapse of civilisation while his tax arrangements appear to involve fourteen subsidiaries and an address in the Cayman Islands.


Sunday, 7 June 2026

Free Speech With a Cover Charge

JD Vance has been at it again, poking his nose into Britain with the delicate touch of a man trying to tune a violin with a claw hammer.


This time it is Henry Nowak’s murder, which Vance has tried to fold into the usual grand theory of European collapse, mass migration and weak liberal elites. There is something quite squalid about it. A young man is dead, his family are grieving, the police response deserves serious examination, and along comes the American vice-president to turn the whole thing into another exhibit in his travelling culture-war museum.

And this is the same Vance who likes to lecture Britain about free speech.

Now, irritatingly, he is not entirely wrong about Britain. We do have a free speech problem. We have too many vaguely worded speech offences, too much policing of the ugly and obnoxious, and a grim little national habit of treating adults as if words might make them burst into flames. We have somehow arrived at the point where a rude tweet, a daft placard or a tasteless joke can acquire the solemnity of a major incident, provided someone official can file it under harm.

So yes, Britain deserves criticism. We have become far too comfortable with the idea that the state should step in when people are offended, distressed or theatrically endangered by words. There is a censorious streak in modern Britain and it is not healthy. It is also not particularly liberal, however often it dresses itself up in the language of safety, dignity and inclusion.

But then along come Musk and Vance, wagging their fingers at Britain as if Trump’s America is some gleaming citadel of liberty. And this is where the whole thing starts to smell strongly of imported snake oil.

America does have stronger legal protection for speech. The First Amendment is a serious constitutional barrier, far stronger than anything we have here. But Trump’s instinct is not free speech as a principle. It is power wearing a free-speech rosette. He likes speech when it praises him, excuses him, funds him or attacks his enemies. When speech annoys him, the machinery starts whirring.

Under Trump, the threat is not always a policeman at the door. It is a visa problem. A grant review. A federal investigation. A regulator suddenly taking an interest. A funding stream put at risk. A university told to behave itself. A broadcaster discovering that free expression becomes much more complicated when the people overseeing licences and mergers have received the political weather report.

That is not liberty. That is lawfare.

The Trump administration has used funding pressure and investigations against universities over campus protest, DEI, transgender policy and antisemitism rules. It has moved from grumbling about individual campuses to trying to reshape the rules of higher education itself. That is not a neutral defence of free expression. It is state power leaning on institutions until they learn which opinions are administratively expensive.

The same pattern has appeared with pro-Palestinian students and academics. The message is not simply that some speech is wrong, or offensive, or poorly judged. It is that if you are foreign, junior, precarious or institutionally exposed, political speech can become an immigration problem. A right you can only vindicate after lawyers, hearings, risk, fear, delay and expense is not enjoyed equally.

That is how chilling effects work. The state does not have to win every case. It only has to make the process frightening enough.

Musk’s position is especially rich. He complains, sometimes with reason, about British speech policing, but his own free speech absolutism has always looked rather more absolute when the speech suits him. This is the man whose platform suspended journalists who had reported on him and the ElonJet row, then sued the Center for Countering Digital Hate after it criticised hate speech on X, only for a judge to throw the case out and say the suit was plainly aimed at punishing criticism.

He has also gone after advertiser groups for choosing not to spend money on his platform. So when Musk talks about free speech, one is entitled to check whether he means free expression as a principle, or free applause as a business model.

Vance is more polished, but the trick is the same. He is right that Britain and Europe have been too casual about restricting speech. There is enough truth in that to make it uncomfortable. But he then tries to use that truth as camouflage for a much uglier politics: one where the state should apparently stop censoring speech, except when the speech is pro-Palestinian, anti-Trump, too academic, too liberal, too foreign, or just inconvenient to the people currently holding the levers.

So yes, let us criticise Britain. We should. The Online Safety mindset, the public order creep, the policing of offensive expression and the bureaucratic urge to manage dissent all deserve a kicking. Britain has too much censorious speech law and too many officials who seem to think liberty is a risk-assessment category.

But Trump’s America is not the cure. It is a different disease.

The British problem is that speech too easily becomes a police matter. The Trump problem is that speech becomes a federal punishment matter. You may still have your constitutional rights, but first you may need to survive the process. And if you are rich enough, connected enough or institutionally protected enough, perhaps you can. If not, good luck. Liberty is available at the counter. Solicitors not included.

So when Musk and Vance lecture Britain about free speech, the answer should not be defensive. It should be brutally simple.

Britain has too much censorious speech law.

But Trump’s America has the First Amendment for those who can afford it, and the federal punishment process for those who can’t.

To be fair, Biden used lawfare too.


Knives, Pearls and Panic

There is, inevitably, a great deal of pearl-clutching about knives at the moment, because Britain does like to discover the existence of sharp objects every few months and then look faintly surprised, as if the bread knife arrived here by dinghy.


The trouble is that all pointed objects are potential weapons. Not just kirpans. Not just hunting knives. Not just zombie knives with names apparently chosen by 14-year-olds with poor lighting in their bedrooms. A chef’s knife is a weapon if you threaten someone with it. A screwdriver is a weapon if you carry it for stabbing. A Stanley knife is a weapon if it comes out during a fight. A sharpened pencil is not exactly ideal for hand-to-hand combat, but I still wouldn’t want one inserted into me by a man having a difficult Tuesday.

This is why the phrase “ban knives” is mostly legislative theatre. You can ban certain designs. You can ban flick knives, zombie knives, disguised blades and other objects whose main purpose appears to be making inadequate men feel briefly cinematic. You can restrict carrying in public. You can prosecute people who threaten others. You can ask whether exemptions, religious or otherwise, are being stretched beyond their proper purpose.

What you cannot do is ban the human capacity to pick up something sharp and behave like a lunatic.

The 3 inch rule is often waved about as if it creates a category of harmless little blades. It doesn’t. It is a bit like allowing guns on the basis that they only work at short range. That may reduce the danger in some circumstances, but it does not make the thing safe if it is pressed against the wrong part of someone’s anatomy. A 3 inch blade is about 7.6 cm of sharp metal, which is quite enough to puncture a lung, sever an artery, or potentially reach the heart. The law is not saying “this knife is safe”. It is drawing a rough administrative line around what people may carry without needing a special reason. That is not medicine. It is compromise with a cutting edge.

Most of us have a small arsenal in the kitchen. Bread knives, steak knives, carving knives, chef’s knives, paring knives. Add the garden shed and you have secateurs, saws, chisels, screwdrivers, pruning knives and probably something rusty whose original purpose has been lost to archaeology. None of this is sinister. It is just life. Unless we plan to carve Sunday lunch with a teaspoon, prune the roses with moral disapproval, and trust that Alan Rickman’s Sheriff of Nottingham won’t discover the spoon drawer, sharp objects are going to remain among us.

The law knows this, which is why it does not simply say “knife bad”. It asks where it is, why it is being carried, what kind of blade it is, whether there is good reason, and what the person does with it. A bread knife in the kitchen is a bread knife. A bread knife tucked inside a coat outside a pub is a rather different proposition, and one requiring an explanation more persuasive than “I’m very committed to ciabatta”.

The Nowak case has dragged the kirpan into the centre of the row, but that also needs care. The issue is not that religion somehow made murder legal. It plainly didn’t. Vickrum Digwa was convicted of murder and of having a bladed article in a public place, so whatever religious argument may have existed around carrying the blade, it offered no protection once it was drawn and used. This case does not prove that a religious exemption is a licence to kill. It proves, rather more grimly, that knife law is often only tested after someone has already been stabbed.

Even if the kirpan exemption did apply before the attack, that does not mean the exemption created the danger. He could just as easily have left the house with a bread knife in his coat and no-one would have known until it appeared. That is the uncomfortable reality the pearl-clutching avoids: the law can regulate reasons for carrying, but it cannot see through fabric. A person carrying a blade is usually only discovered if they are searched, pass through security, behave suspiciously, or use it.

So by all means tighten exemptions where they are being abused, remove the performative murder cutlery from sale, and treat public carrying seriously. But don’t pretend that shouting “ban knives” is a policy. It is a noise made near a microphone. And don’t treat me like a child by pretending the problem is simply the existence of sharp things.

The problem is what people carry, why they carry it, and what they do with it. People can turn almost anything into a weapon, and the law usually only arrives once stupidity, malice or panic has already done the important bit. Unfortunately, stupidity remains stubbornly legal until it picks something up.


Saturday, 6 June 2026

Pull Down To Go Forward, Push Up To Reverse

I’ve been driving Mercedes automatics for years and, until recently, never really thought about the gear selector logic at all. You get in, foot on brake, flick the little stalk, off you go. Your hand does it automatically now. Which is probably just as well, because if you stop and think about it for too long, the whole thing starts to unravel slightly.

To go forwards, you pull the selector down.

To go backwards, you push it up.


And the other day it suddenly occurred to me this makes absolutely no intuitive sense whatsoever.

In a manual car, the gear you engage to move off forwards generally involves an upward (or forward) movement somewhere in the process. Reverse, meanwhile, is usually shoved somewhere awkward and unnatural, often involving pushing down (or rearward), lifting a collar, or fumbling about like you’re trying to open an old wall safe.

Then I started thinking about old-school automatics with the selector in the middle. In those, you physically move down through Reverse on the way to Drive. So when you’re already in Drive and want Reverse, you move the selector upwards. Which at least vaguely fits with decades of ingrained instinct.

But Mercedes decided that wasn’t quite complicated enough.

Now, to be fair, I understand the deliberate push-pull action itself. You don’t want people accidentally selecting reverse while reaching for a boiled sweet. Fine. Completely sensible. But why invert the direction as well? Somewhere along the line somebody decided that down should mean forwards and up should mean backwards, and everyone else apparently just accepted this without further discussion.

The strange thing is how quickly people adapt. I’ve driven these cars for years without consciously questioning it. The brain simply rewires itself and gets on with the job, rather like accepting that modern televisions now need software updates before they’ll show you the weather.

But I do slightly worry that if I ever get into a car where the logic is reversed again, I’m going to instinctively select the wrong gear while trying to reverse out of a parking space and instead lurch bonnet-first through the window of Hobbs House Bakery in Chipping Sodbury.

For those unfamiliar with Chipping Sodbury, the parking there sits at ninety degrees to the pavement because the High Street dates from the days when sheep and cattle markets were held there. It’s absurdly wide by modern standards because several hundred years ago people needed room to move livestock around while arguing about the price of a pig.

So there I’ll be, confidently believing I’ve selected reverse, gently lifting off the brake, then suddenly accelerating straight towards a display of artisanal sourdough while everybody outside the coffee shop pauses mid-conversation to watch an elderly Mercedes dismantle a bakery in real time.

And this is increasingly the problem with modern engineering. It takes systems people already understood perfectly well, redesigns them for reasons that probably made sense in a PowerPoint presentation somewhere, then leaves the rest of us operating expensive machinery largely through muscle memory and optimism.

The first fully automatic gearbox, introduced by Oldsmobile back in 1939, managed perfectly adequately without turning the controls into a behavioural science experiment. Fluid couplings, planetary gears, entirely mechanical. No software. No menus. No “driver interface philosophy”. Yet ordinary people somehow coped without demolishing local businesses.

Modern cars, meanwhile, increasingly feel as though they’re designed by people who regard actual drivers as an unfortunate design complication. Every function is hidden behind touchscreens, submenus, haptic buttons, or steering wheel controls so sensitive you accidentally reset the trip computer while sneezing.

And Mercedes are particularly susceptible to this sort of thing because German engineering occasionally disappears into its own intellectual fog. Most of the time this produces magnificent engines and doors that shut with the sound of a bank vault. Every now and then, however, it produces a gear selector system that quietly overwrites forty years of learned instinct in the background like a firmware update.

The worrying thing is I now barely notice it.

Which probably means the system has won.


Unsupervised in Lidl

Ideas for blogs rarely arrive when I’m sitting nobly at a desk, pen in hand, waiting for the Muse to alight on my shoulder like a culturally literate pigeon.

They usually descend during moments of mild ennui, when the brain has wandered off because the body is doing something dull. Trying to find the right washer in a tin of apparently identical washers. Standing in a queue. Waiting for paint to dry. Wondering why the thing that fitted perfectly five minutes ago now appears to have been designed for a different car.

Or, in this case, after inspecting the Middle of Lidl and finding it wanting. Hay was off buying vittles in another aisle, so I was left unattended, which is usually when the trouble starts.

I was browsing the serried ranks of quaintly named ciders when the thunderbolt landed.

Not a political insight. Not a profound reflection on modern Britain. Not even a useful thought about what we’d gone in to buy.

A cider brand.

Stoma Cider.

There it is. You can see it already, can’t you?


A brown glass bottle. Slightly distressed label. A woodcut apple. Possibly a badger. Some sepia nonsense about traditional methods, small batch pressing, and an old Somerset family who’ve been making cider since before the invention of trousers.

I mentioned it to Hay when she returned, which is where all the great brands are born. Not in a converted barn full of people in gilets muttering about market positioning, but under fluorescent lighting, next to bottles with names like Old Root Bastard and a suspiciously cheap pear cider.

At which point Hay didn’t merely laugh. She went off like a fire alarm. The sort of laugh that makes people two aisles away stop comparing washing powder and quietly wonder whether security should be informed.

That is the entire business plan, really. If a name can make your wife become a public disturbance in the cider aisle of Lidl, it has market traction. Forget focus groups. Forget brand analysis. The Lidl Laugh Test is far more reliable.

At this point, of course, the thing should have been left alone. A sensible man would have enjoyed the laugh, bought the cider, and moved on. But no. I then improved it, in the way that a man improves a small chip in a windscreen by hitting it with a hammer.

Stoma Cider.

By Colostomy Breweries.

Now it wasn’t merely a bad cider name. It had a parent company. A backstory. A visitor centre. A tasting room. A gift shop. Possibly a loyalty card. Perhaps even a laminated sign near the handwash. The whole enterprise had gone from regrettable pun to fully incorporated rural nightmare.

And then, because no bad idea is complete until it has a commercial strategy, I realised I had solved the supply chain problem as well.

This is where so many small brands go wrong. They make something people like, demand rises, and they immediately start thinking about new premises, bigger vats, distribution contracts, forklifts, payroll, compliance, and a factory estate somewhere just outside Swindon. Before long the whole thing has gone from charming cottage enterprise to a meeting about palletisation.

Then, inevitably, the novelty wears off. The people who were desperate to buy it when they couldn’t get it have now got a cupboard full of the stuff, the early adopters have moved on to fermented nettle cordial, and the manufacturer is sitting in a unit full of lease payments, stainless steel tanks and unsold stock. Demand collapses, cash flow goes through the floor, and the whole brave enterprise ends with an administrator wondering what to do with 14,000 branded coasters and a pallet of tasting glasses nobody has the heart to open.

No. That is amateur thinking.

The proper answer is much simpler. You don’t keep expanding production every time demand rises. You keep supply tight, let demand exceed it, and then allow the price to do what prices do when people want more of something than you’re prepared to make.

That way supply remains comfortably within the limits of one shed, two pressings, and a man called Brian who comes in on Tuesdays. Meanwhile, the price rises, the margin improves, and the inability to buy the stuff becomes part of the appeal. Scarcity is not a problem. Scarcity is branding with a waiting list.

Several brands have learned this, usually after discovering that the public will pay extra for inconvenience if you describe it as exclusivity.

And this is where my friend Simon comes in, because Simon actually presses apples and makes small batches. This is dangerous, because it means the whole thing is not entirely theoretical. There is a man within shouting distance of reality who owns the sort of equipment that could turn a joke in Lidl into a liquid regrettable decision.

Better still, Simon is a pathologist, so he would probably get the idea immediately. There are not many cider ventures where prior familiarity with human plumbing counts as relevant market insight, but here we are.

I could offer him the idea.

Simon, are you listening?

This is how empires begin. One man has apples. Another man has a stupid name and experience in sales and marketing. Between them lies opportunity, disgrace, and possibly a label best not examined too closely before lunch.

So Stoma Cider would never be available everywhere. Absolutely not. That would be vulgar. You’d have to know someone. Or have once met someone who knew someone. Perhaps a waiting list at the village shop in Black Pockrington. Three bottles per household, unless Simon has had a heavy pressing week, in which case two.

People would complain, obviously, but only in the way people complain about things they secretly want more.

“I tried to get some Stoma, but it’s sold out again.”

Exactly. That’s not failure. That’s premium positioning.

For those not blessed with a working knowledge of medical plumbing, a stoma is not normally associated with a refreshing drink on a summer afternoon. It has surgical implications. It suggests not so much an orchard as a discharge plan. It doesn’t make you think of hay bales, wassailing, and a cheerful man in a flat cap. It makes you think of leaflets in a hospital corridor and someone saying, “The nurse will be along in a minute.”

But that is probably why it works.

Modern drinks branding is so painfully over-managed that every bottle sounds as if it has been named in a room with beanbags and a man saying “journey” too often. Every cider is something like Orchard Mist, Twisted Root, or Thirsty Badger. They all claim to be bold, authentic and handcrafted, usually by apples that have enjoyed a richer emotional life than most people.

Stoma cuts through all that.

It doesn’t flirt. It doesn’t whisper. It doesn’t arrive wearing tweed and pretending to know the farmer. It walks into the bar, sits down heavily, and says, “You’ll remember me.”

And you would.

Nobody forgets ordering a pint of Stoma.

“Two lagers, a Guinness and a Stoma, please.”

The pub would fall silent. The barman would look up slowly. Somewhere in the snug, an old boy would put down his Racing Post. Even the dog would sense that a line had been crossed.

Then there is the corporate slogan, because once you’ve created Colostomy Breweries you might as well go down with the ship.

Colostomy Breweries - putting the output back into hospitality.

That one would probably need testing with a less hysterical focus group than Hay in Lidl.

And in fairness, some words have luggage. You can’t just slap them on a bottle and pretend people won’t notice. A cider called Aneurysm would struggle, however crisp the finish. Thrombosis Pale Ale probably has limited festival appeal. Colonoscopy Gin might be beautifully botanical, but it’s still going to face resistance at Waitrose.

But Stoma has that strange, ugly strength that proper old names sometimes have. It’s short. It’s memorable. It sounds almost agricultural if you don’t know what it means. You could imagine it being a village near Taunton.

“Lovely place, Stoma. Good pub. Bit damp in winter. Terrible waiting list.”

That’s the problem with language. One person hears a crisp, modern cider brand. Another hears a consultant explaining life after surgery. Which is probably what marketing is, once you strip away the lanyards and the expensive biscuits.

So I think Stoma Cider deserves a chance.

Not a large chance. That would defeat the entire pricing strategy. Not a supermarket listing and a celebrity endorsement. Just a cautious trial run at a village fete, preferably one with limited internet access and a first-aid tent. Put it on a trestle table next to the chutney, price it at three quid a bottle, sell out in twenty minutes, then bring it back next year at seven quid with a numbered label and a small card saying allocation only.

In practice, which is usually where British life ends up, three men in waxed jackets would buy a bottle each for a joke, drink it behind the tombola stall, and spend the rest of the afternoon saying, “Actually, it’s not bad.”

And that, frankly, is how most successful British products should begin. Not with a launch strategy, not with influencers, and certainly not with a brand consultant called Ollie.

Just a bad idea, a good apple, Simon possibly checking whether his press is free next weekend, and Hay still somewhere near the perry trying to breathe.

Friday, 5 June 2026

Multiculturalism: A Word Looking for a Meaning

Kemi Badenoch has now warned that identity politics could, in the long term, put Britain on a path towards civil war.

Which is quite a way to tell everyone else to calm down.


To be fair, buried under the theatrical sandbags there is a serious point. A country does need a shared civic identity. It does need one law, common institutions, equal citizenship, free speech, and some basic emotional commitment to the place. If the left treats Englishness as something faintly embarrassing, and the right turns it into a bloodline, then we are not improving the national conversation. We are merely handing everyone a slightly sharper stick.

But “civil war” is doing an awful lot of work there. It is the sort of phrase that arrives wearing a tin helmet and then insists it only meant it hypothetically. Badenoch says she doesn’t mean now, which is nice, but once you’ve lobbed “civil war” into the debate, the careful qualification follows behind with a mop and bucket.

And that lands in the same swamp as the regular complaint that “multiculturalism has failed”, usually said in that wonderfully grave tone people use when they think they’ve said something profound rather than merely opened a drawer full of slogans.

It is said as if multiculturalism were some strange experiment introduced sometime around 1997 by Tony Blair, a focus group and a man from Islington with a bicycle helmet. As if, before then, Britain had been a single, seamless, monocultural blancmange, lightly flavoured with Sunday roast and deference to the vicar.

Which is odd, because the first question to ask anyone who says multiculturalism has failed is very simple: what do you mean by multiculturalism? And that’s where the wheels tend to come off the pram.

There is, of course, a serious political philosophy version of multiculturalism, concerned with how a liberal state treats minorities fairly when supposedly neutral rules often reflect the majority culture. Fine. That’s a real argument, and not one to be settled between adverts on a phone-in.

But that is almost never what people mean when they announce that multiculturalism has failed. They usually mean they’ve noticed unfamiliar people doing unfamiliar things, and would like it upgraded into a theory.

Even as policy, I’m wary of the way multiculturalism can slide from equal citizenship into state-sponsored pigeonholes. It can end up taking something that already exists - a country full of different cultures, classes, religions, regions, habits and histories - and laying a policy document over the top of it, as if the act of naming it has somehow achieved something.

A bit like putting a brass plaque on a puddle and calling it a water feature.

The state doesn’t create cultural variety. People do that. So do ports, wars, trade, empire, migration, class, geography and people marrying someone their grandmother would have disapproved of. The useful job of the state is much plainer: protect equal rights, enforce one law, defend individual liberty and make sure nobody gets bullied by either the majority or their own community.

That isn’t multiculturalism. That’s just liberal citizenship, which has the advantage of being older, clearer and less likely to require a steering committee.

But if multiculturalism means a country containing different cultures, customs, classes, accents, religions, foods, manners, social codes and ways of life, then multiculturalism hasn’t failed. It’s just Britain. It has been Britain for about a thousand years, and probably longer if we include all the inconvenient people who arrived before the invention of Facebook outrage.

Start with class, because that punctures the whole balloon.

A white working-class man in Barnsley, a white barrister in Cheltenham, and a white duke pretending not to understand money are not living in the same culture just because they can all be placed under the same census heading. They dress differently, speak differently, eat differently, laugh at different things, read different papers, have different assumptions about authority, education, work, money, manners and whether it’s acceptable to say serviette.

The working class has a culture. The middle class has a culture. The aristocracy has a culture. The pit village had a culture. The Methodist chapel had a culture. The public school had a culture. The merchant navy certainly had a culture, and not one easily mistaken for a Surrey golf club. The City has a culture. The Scots have their own legal system. The Welsh have their own language. The Irish were never just a decorative footnote. Yorkshire continues to regard itself as a sovereign moral authority accidentally attached to England.

So Britain was never monocultural. Not even when it was overwhelmingly white.

And the older influences weren’t all stirred together into one smooth national soup either. They settled unevenly, as cultures usually do. The Norman influence didn’t vanish. It put on a better coat, acquired land, built castles, shaped the law and became the sort of thing people later called tradition. The Viking inheritance is still easier to hear in the north and east, especially in place names and dialect. The Dutch didn’t transform the whole country, but they certainly left their muddy fingerprints on the Fens. The Saxon inheritance sits differently again, more deeply embedded in language, settlement, monarchy and the old southern English story. Britain wasn’t harmonised into one culture. It was layered, patched, argued over and lived in.

Even the language tells on us. We still use Latin every day. Ad hoc. Per capita. Status quo. Habeas corpus. Prima facie. Pro rata. Curriculum vitae. Half the people complaining about foreign influence do so in a language assembled from Germanic roots, Norman French, Latin and whatever else washed ashore with a useful verb.

So when people say multiculturalism has failed, they usually don’t mean cultural difference has failed. Britain is made of cultural difference. What they are usually objecting to is not multiculturalism, but unfamiliar multiculturalism. Different skin colours. Different religions. Different clothes. Different food smells, as if an indigenous southerner confronted with tripe and onions wouldn’t assume civilisation had already collapsed somewhere north of Watford. People speaking another language within earshot of someone still emotionally recovering from decimalisation, although I suspect quite a few of the professionally alarmed would struggle to identify either Welsh or Urdu if they heard them on the London Tube.

And this is where the “they don’t integrate” argument begins to look a little tired around the cuffs.

Because if integration means taking part in the civic life of the country, ethnic minority Britons have done it rather inconveniently well. They vote. They stand for councils. They sit in Parliament. They serve in Cabinet. They become judges, doctors, teachers, soldiers, business owners, police officers, journalists, broadcasters, mayors and ministers. One became Prime Minister. Another became Mayor of London. Kemi Badenoch leads the Conservative Party. Sadiq Khan runs the capital. Lisa Nandy sits in Cabinet. At the time of writing, that is not a picture of people sulking outside the national tent refusing to join in. They’re in the tent, on the platform, arguing into the microphone while everyone else complains about the catering.

And Reform even has its own brown-skinned culture warrior in Zia Yusuf, which is almost too tidy for satire. A British Muslim businessman becomes one of the senior figures in a party whose ecosystem so often feeds on complaints about failed integration, and then the same political current still complains that minorities don’t join the national life. How much more integrated would they like him to be? He has not merely joined British civic life. He has joined the bit of British civic life that goes on television to complain about other people not joining British civic life. That is not failed integration. That is integration with a megaphone and a booking on GB News.

So when people still say “they don’t integrate”, one has to ask what “integrate” now means. Because it clearly doesn’t mean obeying the law. It doesn’t mean learning English. It doesn’t mean getting a job. It doesn’t mean paying taxes. It doesn’t mean voting. It doesn’t mean joining political parties. It doesn’t mean standing for office. It doesn’t mean becoming Mayor of the capital. It doesn’t even mean becoming Prime Minister, which seems a reasonably strenuous test unless one is being unusually fussy.

What it often seems to mean is this: they have integrated, but have inconsiderately remained brown while doing it.

That is the bit nobody wants to say plainly, because it sounds ugly once removed from its respectable packaging. So instead we get misty phrases about values, belonging, culture and cohesion. Some of that matters, obviously. A country does need shared civic norms. But if a brown-skinned person can enter the heart of British public life and still be treated as not quite belonging, then the test was never civic integration. It was ancestry with better table manners.

The Rishi Sunak argument exposed this rather neatly. Born in Southampton, educated here, elected here, Chancellor here, Prime Minister here, and still some people wanted to say he was British but not really English. At that point behaviour, loyalty, law, language and contribution have all been quietly moved aside. The real test has become bloodline. And once politics starts sniffing around bloodlines, it rarely improves the furniture.

That doesn’t mean every cultural practice should be accepted. Obviously not. This is where the grown-up distinction matters, which is probably why it so rarely survives contact with a phone-in.

A liberal country can contain many cultures. It cannot contain rival legal orders. It can tolerate different customs. It cannot tolerate unequal citizenship. Mosques, temples, synagogues, churches, Polish shops, Caribbean churches, curry houses, Diwali lights and Chinese New Year are not a threat to the state, unless the state is being held together with Blu Tack and resentment.

What it can’t tolerate is rights varying by tribe. It can’t tolerate women and children being subordinated to family honour, or criticism of ideas being treated as bigotry. And it certainly can’t tolerate self-appointed community leaders pretending they outrank individual conscience.

The line isn’t colour, religion or surname. It’s much duller than that, which is probably why nobody wants to shout about it on a phone-in. One law, equal citizenship, free speech, secular courts, and the right to leave your community without being treated as a traitor.

That is not an argument against cultural variety. It’s an argument for civic liberalism. You can have different cultures, different customs and different festivals, but the public square still needs one set of rules, otherwise it stops being a country and becomes a badly chaired residents’ association with flags.

So perhaps multiculturalism is a useless word, at least in ordinary political shouting. The serious version is about fairness, recognition and the limits of state neutrality. The phone-in version is usually about visible ethnic or religious difference. Class culture doesn’t count. Regional culture doesn’t count. Historical regional culture is allowed to call itself heritage, which is rather convenient.

Naval officers eating kedgeree and saying peculiar things at breakfast somehow count as British tradition, but a Sikh family keeping Punjabi customs becomes multiculturalism.

It’s not analysis. It’s selective noticing. It’s noticing the bits you’ve decided to be frightened of, and calling the rest heritage.

Which is a poor basis for national panic, but a surprisingly good one for a phone-in.


Mutually Assured Hesitation

There is something wonderfully human about the fact that after eighty years of nuclear strategy, megadeaths, mutually assured destruction, launch-on-warning systems, submarine patrols, hardened silos and men in underground bunkers staring at radar screens, the ultimate solution may simply be: "Fine. The moment you fire one, it blows up in your own face."

I was watching Mr Mercedes when the idea struck me. Somewhere between the psychopaths and the psychological tension, my brain wandered off into thermonuclear geopolitics, as brains occasionally do. What fascinated me was not merely the violence in the series, but the way Brady Hartsfield weaponises ordinary systems. Traffic lights. Consumer electronics. Remote interference. Tiny technological vulnerabilities sitting quietly inside modern life like loose wiring behind a plasterboard wall.

The brilliance of Brady Hartsfield's little traffic-light gadget was not that viewers fully believed it. It was that they believed it just enough. That is modern fear in a sentence.

During the Cold War, terror was theatrical. Giant missiles rolled through Red Square. Bomber fleets thundered overhead. Concrete bunkers disappeared into mountainsides while grim men smoked over radar screens. Modern fear is quieter. Software corruption. Satellite spoofing. Hacked infrastructure. Invisible electronic interference buried somewhere inside systems nobody fully understands anymore. Half the time, one suspects governments themselves do not fully understand them either, which is not perhaps as reassuring as it ought to be.

And somewhere in the middle of all that, my brain produced this idea.

What if there were a system that detected the launch of any nuclear missile and detonated it seconds after firing? Not over London. Not over Moscow. Not over Beijing. Over the launch country itself. The ultimate anti-nuclear weapon. Not a shield. A boomerang.


For decades, nuclear powers have played a bizarre game of logic in which peace is maintained by threatening planetary suicide. We call this "deterrence" because "permanently armed hostage situation" sounds less alarming than the truth during election campaigns. Entire generations of strategists built careers around the idea that civilisation survives because everyone remains equally terrified and sleep deprived.

And to be fair, it mostly worked. Which is faint praise in the same sense that saying a parachute "mostly opened" is faint praise.

The problem with nuclear weapons is that they are simultaneously unusable and indispensable. Every serious government knows using them would be catastrophic. Yet every serious government also believes not having them would be catastrophic. So humanity ended up in the absurd position of manufacturing thousands of devices whose only successful use is never using them.

Then along comes this idea. A system that makes launching one functionally identical to dropping it vertically onto your own forehead.

Suddenly the entire macho theatre collapses. No more triumphant music over missile parades. No more stern men standing beside giant rockets named things like Peacekeeper or Topol or Trident. No more internet commentators discussing "tactical exchanges" as though nuclear war were a difficult away fixture in the Europa League.

Because the moment the missile leaves the silo, your own country becomes the impact zone. It is the first truly honest nuclear doctrine.

But then the idea mutated slightly. The system does not even have to exist. That is where it becomes genuinely interesting.

Suppose a country simply claimed it possessed the ability to detect the intended impact zone of any incoming nuclear missile and remotely trigger or corrupt the warhead before arrival. Not during tests. Not during routine launches. Only if the target were themselves.

Now nobody can properly verify the claim.

You cannot realistically test it by lobbing a nuclear missile at Washington just to see what happens. Even dictators tend to struggle with the diplomatic paperwork afterwards. Which means the entire thing enters that strange grey zone where nuclear deterrence has always lived anyway: uncertainty.

The enemy cannot know whether it is nonsense, but they also cannot really afford to discover, the hard way and slightly too late, that it was not nonsense after all. And suddenly deterrence no longer depends on certainty of retaliation. It depends on uncertainty of interception.

Which feels oddly modern. The Cold War was all concrete silos, giant radar dishes and men smoking over maps. This would be pure twenty-first century strategy. Cyberwarfare, algorithms, satellites, classified programmes with names like Project Perseus and ministers vaguely hinting at capabilities they cannot discuss during interviews with the BBC.

You would probably know the programme existed because somebody from the Ministry of Defence would accidentally mention it while trying to explain why the procurement budget had doubled again.

But in truth, it is also ancient.

Medieval castles worked partly on exactly the same principle. A fortress did not merely need to be impregnable. It needed to look sufficiently difficult, expensive and uncertain to attack that many enemies simply decided not to bother. Naval warfare later evolved its own version in the form of the "fleet in being" - a fleet powerful enough that its mere existence forced the enemy to alter plans even if it never left harbour.

The Cold War itself ran heavily on bluff, ambiguity and educated guesswork. Neither side truly knew whether all its systems would function under real attack, whether commanders would obey orders, whether submarines would survive, or whether escalation models worked outside RAND Corporation flowcharts. Civilisation has basically spent eighty years conducting an engineering experiment it desperately hopes never to perform.

Even Reagan's famous Star Wars project carried this flavour. A great many experts doubted whether the technology could ever work properly. But the uncertainty mattered. If the Soviets believed America might eventually neutralise their deterrent, then the strategic balance shifted anyway.

Half the deterrent effect would come from ambiguity itself. A retired admiral muttering darkly at a think tank conference in Wiltshire would probably do half the work alone. There would also inevitably be somebody on GB News insisting Britain secretly had the capability in the 1980s until political correctness stopped us deploying it.

The beauty of it is that tests would still work normally. Nuclear powers could continue reassuring themselves with missiles splashing harmlessly into distant oceans while quietly wondering whether the real mechanism only activates when the warhead is genuinely inbound.

Which means every launch calculation acquires another small layer of doubt. And nuclear strategy already resembles a vast tower constructed almost entirely from doubt, caffeine and people pretending to sound calmer than they really are.

Of course, the flaw is obvious. Bluff-based deterrence works right up until somebody calls the bluff. Human beings are not especially good at managing existential poker games. We struggle to organise airport baggage systems. The idea that civilisation survives because no unstable leader ever miscalculates at three in the morning after reading his own propaganda is, frankly, slightly alarming.

There is also the unavoidable possibility that governments would spend twenty years and several billion pounds developing this entirely fictional capability, producing thousands of consultancy jobs, six strategy white papers and a dramatic presentation in Swindon explaining why phase three of the resilience architecture had been delayed due to stakeholder engagement issues.

Still, there is something strangely elegant about the concept.

Nuclear deterrence has always rested not on morality, law or wisdom, but consequences. The reason nuclear war has not happened since 1945 is not because humanity became enlightened. It is because even the maddest governments usually prefer continuing to exist.

My fictional system merely weaponises hesitation itself. Which, when you think about it, is probably fortunate, because the alternative is trusting civilisation to software updates and sleep-deprived men in bunkers.


Thursday, 4 June 2026

Two-Tier Slogans and One-Tier Law

There is a serious question hiding underneath all the shouting about two-tier policing, and it deserves better than being turned into another Farage-shaped foghorn.


That question is not whether Britain is secretly run by a vast anti-white conspiracy. That is the version for people who prefer their politics microwaved. The serious question is whether official anti-racism guidance has, in places, drifted from equal treatment into differential treatment, and whether that can confuse judgement in moments when the police most need clarity.

Equality before the law is not a decorative phrase. It means that when police arrive at a violent scene, they assess facts, risk and need. Who is injured? Who is armed? Who is lying? Who needs help? Who is the immediate danger?

It should not begin with a mental flowchart about group identity.

Anti-racism in policing is not a bad thing. Quite the opposite. There have been real failures in British policing, some of them shameful, and any serious police service should want to remove prejudice, improve trust and make sure every citizen is treated fairly. That is not woke nonsense. That is basic competence.

But good intentions do not make bad wording harmless.

If guidance tells officers that equality does not mean treating everyone the same, that may make sense in a policy seminar. Different communities may have different histories, different levels of trust, different experiences of policing. Fine. We can all nod thoughtfully and pass the biscuits.

And of course different circumstances sometimes require different handling. Translation, disability, vulnerability, safeguarding and medical need all matter. Nobody sensible is arguing that every person in every situation should be processed like identical tins of beans. But none of that should mean identity outranks evidence in an emergency.

Police will always make rapid provisional judgements. They have to. In a football hooligan situation, for example, officers may arrive with a pretty good working assumption about what sort of trouble they’re dealing with, and who may be involved. That is not automatically prejudice. It is often experience under pressure. But it must stay provisional. The moment the facts point the other way, the assumption has to move.

If the person you thought was the aggressor says he has been stabbed and cannot breathe, you check. You do not let the first story harden into the only story.

That is why the Henry Nowak case matters beyond the horror of the murder itself. Henry was killed by Vickrum Digwa, who then lied about him and falsely claimed racial abuse. Police arrived into that lie. They had to make quick decisions, and some of those decisions now look dreadful.

Whether those decisions were caused by bad judgement, bad training, fear of a racism allegation, flawed guidance, confusion, or simple operational failure is exactly what needs investigating.

But the question is legitimate.

And this is where the usual shouting becomes so useless. The phrase two-tier policing has become both a slogan and a smoke machine. It allows some people to jump straight from a real case to a fully assembled conspiracy. No investigation required. No evidence needed. Just insert rage and press share.

But dismissing the question because the wrong people are shouting about it is just as lazy. If official guidance is unclear, or if officers feel under pressure to treat accusations of racism as a trump card before they have checked the facts, then that is not equality. It is institutional nervousness pretending to be justice.

The law should not be colour-blind in the stupid sense of pretending history never happened. But operational policing cannot become colour-led either. There is a difference between understanding context and letting identity outrank evidence.

And there is another side to this, because operational decisions are also shaped by real behaviour in the real world. If minorities are being targeted, threatened or abused by the same people shouting about two-tier policing, police cannot simply pretend that context doesn’t exist. In a heated moment, that may quite properly affect risk assessment. The danger is not officers noticing context. The danger is officers letting context become a shortcut.

And there’s the irony. The likes of Tommy Robinson complain that police make assumptions around race and public order, while helping to create the very atmosphere in which those assumptions become more likely. If you spend years turning minority communities into targets, don’t be surprised when police arrive at tense scenes with that risk somewhere in their thinking. You may be complaining about a problem you helped manufacture.

If someone claims racism, take it seriously. But taking it seriously does not mean believing it automatically, especially when someone else is bleeding, collapsing or saying they cannot breathe.

The police do a hard job. They deal with lies, fear, violence, intoxication, panic and half a dozen people all shouting different versions of reality. That is precisely why their guidance has to be clear. Not clever. Not fashionable. Not written to satisfy a committee. Clear.

In an emergency, the rule should be simple: evidence first, risk first, life first.

If anti-racism helps police treat every citizen fairly, good. If it helps officers understand why some communities distrust the police, good. If it improves standards and removes prejudice, good. But if it creates hesitation, distorted priorities or a fear of being accused of racism that interferes with basic judgement, then it has failed. Not because anti-racism is wrong, but because equality has been lost in the paperwork.

The answer is not to abandon anti-racism. Nor is it to pretend every criticism of guidance is secretly racist. The answer is to rewrite bad guidance, retrain where necessary, and make the operational principle brutally clear: every person at a scene is to be assessed by conduct, evidence, injury and risk, not by the racial politics of the situation.

There is a real danger here, and it comes from both directions. One side wants to turn Henry Nowak’s death into proof of an anti-white state. That is reckless, ugly and unsupported. The other side may be tempted to wave away any concern about differential treatment because the far right has got its hands on the phrase. That is also wrong.

A serious country should be able to hold two thoughts at once, even if this now seems to be regarded as a dangerously advanced manoeuvre.

Racism exists. Police failures exist. False racism allegations exist. Bad guidance can exist. Institutional over-correction can exist. Minority targeting exists. None of those facts cancels the others.

The Henry Nowak investigation needs to establish what actually happened. Did officers fail because they were misled? Did they make poor assumptions? Did guidance or training affect how they interpreted the scene? Did fear of being accused of racism play any part? Did they simply miss the medical emergency in front of them?

Those are factual questions. They deserve factual answers. What they do not deserve is a mob chanting two-tier before the evidence is in, or a bureaucracy pretending that every line of guidance is beyond criticism because its intentions were good.

If guidance has blurred the principle, fix the guidance. If training has muddled it, fix the training. If officers failed Henry Nowak, say so plainly.

But do not replace one unfairness with another and call it progress. That is not justice. It is just a different route to the same ditch.


Supermarket Basil - Hope Over Reality

There is something faintly accusatory about a supermarket basil plant. You bring it home full of optimism, place it on the kitchen windowsill like an Italian herbaceous pet, water it carefully, maybe even say something absurd like, "This time I'll look after it properly." Then within four days it resembles a Victorian child recovering from consumption.


The problem is that supermarkets are not really selling you a basil plant. They are selling you something halfway between a garnish and a temporary display item. The pot contains about seventeen basil plants crammed together in conditions more suited to a refugee boat crossing the Channel. They look lush in the shop because they have been force-grown in perfect commercial greenhouse conditions with controlled light, warmth and watering. Then they arrive in a British kitchen in May where the temperature swings between Tuscany and Cape Horn every six hours.

People always say, very smugly, "You need to split them into separate pots." Yes. Because apparently when buying a £1.35 herb plant you are expected to embark upon a horticultural evacuation exercise involving compost, drainage and root separation surgery. The moment you tip the thing out of the pot you discover the roots form a solid white cube of despair.

And basil is a diva. Parsley will tolerate neglect. Mint would survive a nuclear exchange. Rosemary practically thrives on contempt. Basil, meanwhile, reacts to a cool breeze like a Downton Abbey lady hearing unpleasant trade news.

The truly maddening thing is that one surviving supermarket basil plant can become enormous if treated correctly. You occasionally encounter someone with a thriving basil bush the size of a Victorian fern, and they always explain the process with infuriating calm. "Oh, I just repotted it immediately, pinched out the tops, monitored soil moisture, rotated it for even light, and fed it weekly." At which point you realise they have accidentally turned basil into something requiring a maintenance schedule and written records.

Most supermarket basil plants do not die. They are simply completing the brief for which they were designed. Which is to look optimistic beside mozzarella for approximately 72 hours.