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.


Whatever Happened to the Electric People's Car?

There was something rather admirable about the original Nissan Leaf. It knew what it was. It did not pretend to be a sports car, a luxury lounge, or an extension of your digital identity. It was essentially a large domestic appliance with headlights. You plugged it in overnight, it wafted you about quietly the next day, and that was that.


I drove one years ago and quite liked it. It was basic, honest and faintly odd, like a Japanese fridge that somebody had accidentally registered with the DVLA. At the time it genuinely felt as though we might be entering a new era of simple, practical electric motoring for ordinary people.

I have just driven the latest version and the first thing that strikes you is that somewhere along the way the industry lost confidence in the entire idea of the electric car. Instead of refining the concept, simplifying it and making it cheaper, they appear to have concluded that what pensioners really want is an expensive rolling electronics package with a battery attached.

Everything now beeps. Everything flashes. Everything has a submenu. The dashboard resembles a failed attempt to recreate the flight deck of a 787 using two televisions and a gaming laptop. There are sensors monitoring your lane position, your speed, your eyelids, your parking, your reversing angle and, for all I know, your cholesterol. You climb in and the thing greets you by name. The seat glides backwards electrically like Captain Kirk preparing for departure. A touchscreen larger than my first television asks whether I would like to synchronise my wellness settings. Somewhere deep in the software a small animated leaf is probably congratulating me for regenerative braking while the car updates itself over WiFi.

Yet despite all this technological theatre, the actual useful range seems barely different from years ago. Worse still, the thing greets you with a wildly optimistic range estimate apparently calculated under laboratory conditions involving no heater, no air conditioning, no headlights and perhaps no passengers. The moment you turn on the climate control because you would quite like to survive winter with functioning toes, the projected range begins collapsing in front of your eyes like a badly managed pension fund.

Which is psychologically the wrong way round entirely. Why not calculate the range assuming normal use from the start? Heater on. Lights on. Actual human comfort permitted. Then, if you drive gently on a mild day without the climate control running, the range quietly increases instead. People like pleasant surprises. They do not like watching numbers fall while trapped in traffic on the A417.

It is rather like somebody taking a perfectly good kettle and deciding the problem with it was insufficient software integration. So now it glows blue, connects to WiFi, issues firmware updates, monitors your hydration levels and costs four times as much, while continuing to boil exactly the same amount of water.

And this is where the car industry is quietly missing an enormous market. Retired people are almost ideal electric car owners. Most have driveways. Most do fairly predictable journeys. Most are not attempting a high-speed assault on the Autobahn while towing a jet ski to Croatia. They want something comfortable, simple, cheap to run and easy to get in and out of. In other words, they want precisely what the first Leaf more or less was.

Instead, manufacturers keep adding weight, complexity and gizmos because somewhere in a boardroom somebody decided that a basic EV might not justify a £40,000 price tag. So the cars become ever more elaborate while ordinary people quietly keep their old petrol hatchbacks going for another decade out of sheer irritation.

The tragedy is that established manufacturers already knew perfectly well how to build simple, practical little cars. They spent decades refining exactly that formula. Then electrification arrived, handing them a once-in-a-generation opportunity to simplify the motor car mechanically, and they responded by turning it into a consumer electronics platform with wheels.

For much of the twentieth century, car makers understood perfectly well that the real breakthrough was not luxury motoring, but accessible motoring. What we actually need now is an electric People's Car. Not a luxury statement. Not an autonomous mobile wellness pod. Not a two-tonne techno-barge capable of reaching sixty in four seconds while displaying a map of nearby vegan coffee outlets. Just a simple, affordable electric car.

Plastic wheel trims. Physical buttons. Cloth seats. A heater that works. Enough range for ordinary life. Easy access. A proper spare wheel would be nice. A battery that can be replaced without requiring a second mortgage. Something that can survive ten years of supermarket car parks, garden centre excursions and mildly incompetent reversing.

The original Volkswagen Beetle succeeded because it gave ordinary people affordable transport they could understand and maintain. The Citroen 2CV did much the same by reducing motoring to the bare practical essentials. The original Mini squeezed remarkable usefulness into a tiny footprint, while the Smart Fortwo at least recognised that many people simply needed a compact urban runabout rather than a leather-lined command centre.

All of them started with the same basic question: what do ordinary people actually need? Modern EVs often feel designed around an entirely different question: how many expensive features can we add before the monthly finance payment becomes visible from space?

And then the industry wonders why so many people are hanging on to fifteen-year-old Hondas and Toyotas like survivors of a vanished sensible age. The industry does not need another electric spaceship. It needs the electric equivalent of a good cardigan.


The Department of Definitely Not War

There is something magnificently absurd about an administration that resurrects the “Department of War” while simultaneously insisting America is not actually at war.


That takes a special level of brass neck. It is like opening a chain of brothels called “The House of Passion”, then insisting under oath that no sexual activity is taking place because technically everyone is merely engaged in “horizontal negotiations”.

For decades the United States rather self-consciously called it the Department of Defence. That wording came out of the post-war era when America wanted to present itself, at least rhetorically, as a reluctant superpower. A nation that fought when necessary, not because it fancied a scrap after breakfast.

Then along comes the Trump administration, apparently having watched too many films involving Patton, aircraft carriers and slow-motion flag waving, and decides that “Department of War” sounds much tougher. Which, admittedly, it does. It also creates a small practical problem. If you rename the building after war, people will eventually assume you intend to use it for war.

Pete Hegseth positively revels in it. You can almost hear the excitement. Secretary of War. Splendid stuff. Probably practised saying it in the mirror while tightening a tactical waistcoat before marching off to brief journalists about how America is definitely not fighting one of those vulgar old-fashioned wars.

Yet the moment anyone asks awkward constitutional questions, the entire performance folds faster than a garden marquee at a village fete. Suddenly the language changes completely.

“War? No no no. Nobody said war. This is merely a conflict. A military operation. A strategic freedom event.”

You can almost picture the White House communications meeting.

“Sir, American bombers have struck Iranian targets, the Gulf is full of warships, oil prices are climbing, shipping insurers are panicking, and Congress wants to know whether this counts as war.”

“Right. We need something softer.”

“How about kinetic liberty management?”

“Excellent. Get Fox on the phone.”

The trouble is that Trump himself keeps forgetting the script. One moment he is proudly talking about “winning the war”. The next moment aides are sprinting behind him with dictionaries trying to replace the word with “disagreement”. Hegseth does the same thing. He lapses into normal English whenever he stops concentrating, which rather suggests they both know perfectly well what this is.

Because ordinary people are not idiots. If missiles are flying, warships are mobilising, people are dying, and oil tankers are being rerouted around half the planet, then calling it a “conflict” fools nobody except perhaps the sort of man who thinks renaming Twitter “X” was a masterstroke of civilisation.

And there is a deeper irony here. Trump built much of his political identity around attacking “forever wars”. Iraq. Afghanistan. The endless interventionist machine. That message resonated because many Americans were exhausted by decades of blood, debt and strategic chaos dressed up as democracy promotion.

But now the same movement wants the aesthetics of war without admitting to war itself. They want the swagger, the uniforms, the martial rhetoric, the dramatic maps on television, the “Department of War” branding, the chest-thumping speeches about strength and victory. They just do not want the legal scrutiny, congressional votes, casualty counts, rising petrol prices, or awkward historical comparisons that come with the actual word.

Trump insists he wants peace. Which naturally raises the awkward question of what the opposite of peace might be.

It is politics as rebranding exercise. Like a man repainting “Titanic” on the side of the ship and insisting it now counts as a coastal leisure experience while the band is already tuning up behind him.

And somewhere in all this sits the Constitution, quietly gathering dust in the corner while everyone pretends not to notice it. One suspects James Madison did not envisage future presidents solving war powers disputes by simply crossing out the word “war” with a marker pen.


Thursday, 7 May 2026

Don’t Worry, They’re Self-Isolating

There is something faintly surreal about the phrase “the passengers are now self-isolating in the UK” being delivered as though it should instantly reassure anyone who lived through COVID.


Five years ago “self-isolation” theoretically meant remaining indoors while avoiding human contact. In practice it often meant someone posting on Facebook about “doing the responsible thing” before being spotted outside the pub having a quick pint because “it doesn’t really count if you sit near the heaters”.

So now we are told that passengers from a ship carrying a rare and rather nasty virus have been repatriated and are responsibly isolating themselves at home. Which may well be true. Most people probably will follow the guidance. But Britain rather used up its reserves of unquestioning trust on this subject during the pandemic years.

COVID revealed an awkward truth about public health messaging. A sizeable proportion of the population interpreted guidance the way medieval theologians interpreted fasting rules. Technically forbidden, but perhaps a crafty exemption could be arranged for a Tesco run, collecting a parcel, or meeting friends because “it’s outdoors”.

To be fair, hantavirus is not COVID. The transmission risk appears vastly lower, and health authorities are not suggesting it spreads casually through passing contact or supermarket queues. Rationally speaking, the danger is probably limited.

Psychologically, however, the phrase “self-isolating” now lands rather differently. The authorities still use it with the calm confidence of a phrase retaining moral authority. The public hears it more like “replacement bus service” or “your call is important to us”. Technically meaningful, perhaps, but heavily worn by experience.

Part of the problem is that COVID quietly demolished the assumption that sensible rules would automatically be widely followed. The public watched politicians bend restrictions, celebrities reinterpret them, and ordinary people construct elaborate loopholes involving Scotch eggs, garden furniture and “essential” social visits that somehow lasted six hours and required prosecco.

That erosion of trust matters because public health systems rely far more on voluntary cooperation than coercion. Britain is not about to establish armed quarantine compounds every time somebody arrives carrying an exotic virus from abroad. The entire system depends on most people behaving sensibly most of the time.

Which, to be fair, they usually do.

It is just that the phrase “self-isolating” no longer quite carries the reassuring tone officials imagine it does. It now sounds more like a gentleman in a hi-vis jacket at Swindon station announcing that the 14:32 service has been cancelled, but passengers should remain confident because “alternative arrangements are in place”.

You can almost hear the conversation already.

“Don’t worry, they’re self-isolating.”

“Right. Like everybody did last time.”

“Yes.”

“Well, that’s all splendidly reassuring then.”


It Wasn’t Done Properly

I was watching an interview on YouTube the other day, on Vlad Vexler’s channel, where he had Anthony Scaramucci on to talk about Donald Trump. It was an odd pairing, but quite a revealing one. You had a philosopher explaining the theory of what’s going wrong, and a man who’d been inside the circus describing how it actually feels when the ringmaster walks in.


Scaramucci’s most useful point was not really about Trump as an individual. It was about the people who back him. Both he and Vexler kept returning to the same underlying theme: a feeling of lost agency. A sense among many voters that decisions affecting their lives are increasingly made somewhere else, by someone else, and that their role is reduced to occasionally choosing which set of professional managers explains things to them afterwards.

That loss of agency curdles into anger remarkably quickly. Not some carefully worked through policy platform, just a growing sense that the system has not delivered and is not listening. Trump, for all his faults, looks like a wrecking ball, and that is precisely the attraction. You can see a milder version of the same instinct in parts of Reform support here. Not identical, but close enough to recognise. The appeal is disruption.

And there is a logic to that. If you feel excluded, appeals to “stability” sound like a request to preserve someone else’s comfort. So people take a gamble. They may not even particularly like the man holding the hammer, but they quite like the idea of the wall coming down.

What Scaramucci adds, though, is a slightly more uncomfortable layer. He suggests that if you want to understand Trump himself, you have to look at two drivers at the same time: narcissism, and money. Not ideology, not some grand alternative system, but a combination of personal validation and very practical self-interest.

Seen through that lens, the wrecking ball starts to look less like an end in itself and more like a tool. If holding power allows you to protect yourself and enrich your circle, then staying in control becomes rather important. Scaramucci’s blunt take is that Trump would pardon himself and everyone around him if he could, and that without that protection the legal exposure for people in his orbit becomes significant. If he were no longer there to provide that cover, whether through losing office or simply no longer being there, then those who have benefited from that arrangement could find themselves in serious trouble. Whether you agree with that or not, it shifts the picture. The supporters may be voting to smash the system. He may be using that momentum to keep it in a shape that suits him.

The problem is the assumption that sits underneath the whole arrangement. The unspoken deal is that if the system is smashed, the people at the top will suffer most. That the pain will somehow flow upwards. It’s a comforting thought. It just doesn’t match how the world tends to behave.

Capital moves. Labour doesn’t.

If things become unstable, money does not stay put out of principle. It hedges, relocates, waits, or buys cheaply when others are forced to sell. The people who can do that are usually the ones already doing rather well. Everyone else is tied to place. Job, house, family, school, all the things that make life real rather than theoretical. When the shock comes, it does not land evenly. It rarely does.

Vexler’s point about institutions is that they depend on good faith, and that populists exploit that by ignoring the rules. True enough, but it only explains half the story. Institutions also lose trust when they become remote, self-referential, and quietly protective of their own interests. If decisions feel pre-cooked, if outcomes look oddly consistent no matter who votes for what, then people stop believing the game is being played straight. That is not a philosophical failure, it is a practical one, and it is how you end up with a queue of volunteers for something disruptive.

Which brings us to Europe. Trump is not a passing American eccentricity that can be waited out. He is one example of a broader shift. The next version may be more competent, more disciplined, and far harder to handle. So this is not a holding pattern until things return to normal. It is a change in the weather.

And there is a further complication. If the people drawn to that disruptive instinct see no real improvement in their own position, even after backing someone like Donald Trump, they are unlikely to conclude that the method was wrong. They are more likely to conclude that it was not done properly. That the tool was blunt, not that the idea was flawed.

You can see the same manoeuvre in the Brexit argument. For some, disappointing outcomes are not evidence that the project was oversold, under-thought, or structurally flawed. They are taken as proof that it was not fully or correctly implemented. “Brexit wasn’t done properly” becomes less a critique than a reason to double down.

At that point, the search is not for stability, but for competence. Not someone to swing harder for effect, but someone who can apply pressure more effectively and with clearer intent.

And that is where it becomes more dangerous. If the next figure from that camp has watched Donald Trump turn power into protection, influence and wealth, why would he not do the same? The people who voted for disruption may find themselves with someone even better at using the system for personal advantage while insisting it is being torn down on their behalf.

Externally, the consequences follow. A more transactional, more self-interested United States becomes a less predictable and less trusted partner. Alliances fray, cooperation becomes conditional, and the country edges further towards a system that looks less like a broad democracy and more like a competition between well-connected interests.

That is why Mark Carney’s approach stands out. No theatrics, no flattery, no public sulking. Just a clear understanding that you deal with what is in front of you while preparing for what comes next. More importantly, he has been explicit that the old order is fraying and that Europe needs to act like it. Standing on its own two feet is not a slogan, it is a bill. Defence capability that is actually usable, energy policy that does not depend on wishful thinking, industrial capacity that can survive shocks, and trade policy that is not written on the assumption that someone else will keep the system stable.

That is the uncomfortable bit. It is expensive, politically awkward, and requires countries that quite like disagreeing with each other to do rather less of it. It is much easier to talk about strategic autonomy than to fund it or agree on it. But dependency on an unpredictable ally is still dependency, however politely you describe it.

And then back to the people who feel left out of it all.

They do need to feel listened to, and that does mean tangible change. Not slogans, not warm words, not another consultation exercise. Real improvements in pay, costs, services, and a sense that the rules apply evenly. But it is not just about handing out benefits. People are not simply asking for a bit more money. They are asking for fairness and for a system that does not feel rigged.

At the moment, the structure leans the wrong way. We tax income, which is visible and tied to place, more consistently than wealth, which is mobile and often sheltered. With enough advice, income can be softened at the edges, but it rarely disappears. Wealth can sit, grow, and be rearranged. That difference matters, because it feeds the suspicion that the system is harder on those without options.

The answer is not a neat switch to “tax wealth instead”. Wealth moves as well, just differently, and taxing it is more complicated than people pretend. But leaving the imbalance untouched is not neutral either. If labour carries the weight while capital keeps its flexibility, the anger will keep replenishing itself.

So the lesson from all of this is not simply that Trump is a problem, or that Reform is dangerous, though both may be true. It is that anger without a credible outlet turns into a desire to break things, and breaking things is a gamble where the risks are not evenly shared.

Europe has had its warning. Its voters have had one too. The next version will likely be quieter, more polished, and more effective. If nothing else changes, people will back it again and see what, if anything, feels different the second time around.


Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Local Government, National Game

There was a time when local government meant something recognisably local. Not perfect, and certainly not democratic in any modern sense, but at least anchored in the place it purported to serve. Councillors were shopkeepers, engineers, solicitors, the sort of people who had to live with the consequences of their decisions and could be confronted about them in the street. If they failed to collect the bins, they heard about it. Directly.


Now we have imported the entire Westminster circus into the business of emptying wheelie bins and approving loft extensions.

Candidates stand under the banners of Labour, Conservative, or whichever logo focus groups have decided is least toxic this month, and voters obligingly treat a decision about parking permits as though it were a referendum on the fate of Western civilisation. It would be funny if it were not so debilitating.

The result is a system in which accountability is blurred to the point of near invisibility. Councillors campaign on national slogans, get elected on national swings, and then govern locally with a mixture of caution and deflection. When a council fails to maintain its roads or drifts into effective bankruptcy, responsibility dissolves into a familiar fog. If things go wrong, blame central government. If things go right, issue a press release implying heroic intervention.

This is not politics as representation. It is politics as brand management.

The deeper problem is structural, and more awkward to fit on a leaflet. Local authorities are tightly bound to Whitehall through funding settlements, statutory duties, and ring-fenced grants. Councils raise only a limited share of what they spend. The rest arrives with conditions attached, often dictated by shifting national priorities rather than local need. Social care is the clearest example. Demand rises, costs rise, and councils are legally obliged to provide services, yet the funding framework lags behind. The gap is not ideological. It is arithmetic.

Strip that system away entirely and the illusion becomes obvious. Affluent areas would manage, even thrive, on their own tax base. Poorer areas would face a blunt choice between higher taxes, worse services, or financial collapse. The current model does not eliminate that imbalance, but it disguises it just enough to keep the show on the road. National politics fills the space where genuine local power ought to be.

Having hollowed out local autonomy, we then pretend that electing a different colour rosette will transform outcomes. It is a neat trick. It keeps the argument noisy while ensuring very little that matters can move very far.

And so local elections become a kind of mid-term tantrum. Voters, understandably irritated with the government of the day, kick the nearest available proxy. Councils change hands not because the outgoing administration mismanaged refuse collection or botched planning policy, but because someone in Downing Street said something idiotic six months earlier. It is cathartic, perhaps, but it is not rational governance.

Independents still exist, in the way that hedgerows survive beside motorways. Occasionally you find one doing something sensible and grounded, usually ignored by the broader machinery. They are reminders that local politics could be something other than a branch office of national campaigns.

The defenders of the current arrangement will say that parties provide clarity, coherence, a set of values. That sounds plausible until you notice that the "values" in question have remarkably little to say about potholes, planning committees, or adult social care budgets. What parties really provide is a shortcut for disengaged voters and a shield for underperforming councillors.

The honest position is uncomfortable. Local government has been colonised by national politics because it suits both sides. National parties gain another arena in which to fight their endless war. Local politicians gain cover, resources, and a ready-made identity. Meanwhile the underlying constraints remain exactly as they were.

The only people expected to take it seriously are the voters.


Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Antisemitism - A History of Reinvention

I apologise in advance for a long post.


It is always slightly telling how quickly people reach for a single culprit when antisemitism comes up.

Spend five minutes in a comment thread and someone will have decided it was all Christianity, or all Islam, or all the West, or all the East. The conclusion tends to arrive first, and the history gets dragged in afterwards to back it up.

History, awkwardly, does not play along.

Long before Christianity enters the picture, Jews are already an awkward fit in the Greek and Roman world. Not because anyone had yet dreamt up elaborate conspiracies, but because they did not behave as expected. They would not join in with civic religion. They would not hedge their bets by adding a few local gods. They stuck to their own rules.

That mattered because religion was not a private hobby. It was part of public life and loyalty. Refusing to participate was not just eccentric, it looked like opting out of the shared system. Less some grand stand, more the sort of quiet non-compliance that makes everything around it a bit harder to run.

It is not a theory of societal corrosion. It is closer to the irritation you get when one component in a standard assembly insists on its own thread pattern. The system expects everything to line up. One part refuses. Things start binding. After a while, people stop questioning the system and start blaming the part.

Then Christianity arrives and changes the nature of the complaint. The Roman version was basically practical: they do not join in. Christianity turns it into something moral. Jews are not just different, they are wrong about something central. In many strands, they are cast as having rejected the Messiah and, more seriously, as bearing responsibility for the crucifixion.

Alongside that comes a more structured idea, even if nobody at the time would have put a tidy label on it. Christianity presents itself as the fulfilment of Judaism, the thing that replaces it. If that is true, then Judaism is not simply different, it is outdated and stubbornly so. That is a much more durable basis for hostility.

Once Christianity becomes dominant in Europe, these ideas stop being occasional grumbles and become part of the furniture. They are taught, repeated, and reinforced over centuries. Ghettos, expulsions, and increasingly odd accusations follow. The hostility is no longer situational. It is just there, in the background, doing its thing.

Then, just as religion begins to loosen its grip, the whole thing is rebuilt on a different foundation. The 19th century does not get rid of antisemitism, it updates it. Out goes theology, in comes race. Now it is not what Jews believe that matters, it is what they are supposed to be. Conversion no longer solves anything. You cannot convert out of a category that has been defined as biological.

That shift matters more than anything that came before. It makes antisemitism immune to assimilation. You can change your religion, your language, your level of integration, and it makes no difference. You remain the wrong type.

You can see it plainly in the Dreyfus Affair. A modern state, a professional army, and still quite prepared to bend reality to fit the assumption that a Jewish officer must be the traitor. From there it is not a large step to the Holocaust, where the idea is taken to its logical and fairly horrifying conclusion.

After 1945, that version is thoroughly discredited, at least in public. But the underlying habit does not disappear. It adapts. Conspiracies come back with updated language. Old suspicions get dressed up a bit better, or just pointed somewhere else.

And this is the point where people assume the religious story has finished. It has not. It has just been translated. Modern antisemitism manages perfectly well without religion.

Instead of “they rejected the true faith”, you get “they are a race”, or “they control finance”, or “they pull the political strings”. The language shifts to suit the age. In the 19th century it borrowed biology. In the 20th, ideology and conspiracy. Now it often turns up dressed as geopolitics, sounding serious enough to pass without much inspection.

It is the same basic move each time. Take a complicated system, decide someone must be pulling the levers, and then point at a group you already think is a bit different. If they happen to be clustered in a few obvious roles - often the only ones they were allowed into - so much the better. You can then pretend that is proof of control rather than the result of being pushed there in the first place.

Which is why the modern argument about Zionism manages to generate so much heat and so little clarity.

Opposition to Zionism is not, in itself, antisemitic. It never has been. There have always been Jews who opposed it, alongside others who supported it. Some objected on religious grounds, some because they disliked nationalism in general, and some for a more cautious, slightly unglamorous reason.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many Jews in Europe were trying to integrate into the societies they lived in. They were newly emancipated, building careers, becoming part of national life. For them, Zionism carried a risk. If Jews were arguing for a separate national homeland, it could be taken as proof that they were not really loyal citizens where they already were.

That fear was not fanciful. Accusations of divided loyalty were already circulating quite happily without any help. Zionism risked handing critics a neat exhibit to point at. So some Jews opposed it not out of hostility to other Jews, but because they thought it might make things worse.

At the same time, Zionism was not just an abstract idea being debated in European drawing rooms. It involved real migration to a place that was not empty. In the late Ottoman and early Mandate period, Jews were a small minority in Palestine, often only a few percent of the population. The arrival of increasing numbers of Jewish migrants changed the local balance, and it would have been surprising if that had not produced tension with those already living there. You do not need a conspiracy to explain that, just basic human reactions to rapid demographic change.

You can see versions of the same dynamic playing out much closer to home now. It does not take very large numbers for people to feel that change is happening to them rather than with them. If something on the scale of early Zionist migration were to happen in Britain, especially with arguments about land or sovereignty attached, it is fairly obvious how that would go. It would not stay polite for long.

History, being awkward again, managed to prove several things at once. Antisemites did indeed use Zionism as evidence of divided loyalty. At the same time, what happened in Europe persuaded many others that assimilation was not quite the protection they had hoped it would be. And in the Middle East, a local conflict took shape that had its own logic, not reducible to European arguments about Jewish identity.

If you turn to the Islamic world, the pattern is different, and less tidy. Early Islam builds in a category for Jews and Christians as “People of the Book”. They are recognised, allowed to practise, and folded into society, but on a lower rung. Not equality, but not exclusion either. More a managed imbalance that people put up with because the alternatives are not especially attractive.

For long stretches, that produces a workable arrangement. Jewish communities flourish in places like Al-Andalus and later the Ottoman Empire. There are harsher periods and occasional outbreaks of violence, but not generally the same rolling pattern of expulsions seen across medieval Europe.

The modern shift comes later, and in a rather less comfortable way. From the 19th century onwards, European antisemitic ideas start to circulate more widely. Myths that had been distinctly European begin appearing elsewhere, as in the Damascus Affair. By the 20th century, you have nationalism, colonial pressure, and the Israel Palestine conflict all feeding into the mix.

So contemporary antisemitism in parts of the Muslim world is not simply a straight continuation of early Islamic attitudes. It is a blend. Some older assumptions about hierarchy, a significant layer of imported European thinking, and a large dose of modern politics.

Which leaves you with a slightly inconvenient conclusion. There is no single origin story that neatly assigns blame to one civilisation. What you have instead is a recurring pattern. A group that stands out. A surrounding society that expects conformity. A period of tension. And then the familiar slide from different, to difficult, to dangerous.

The explanations change with the times. Religion, race, conspiracy, geopolitics. Each era finds its own way of dressing it up and persuading itself this time it is justified.

And if you listen to how people argue about it now, usually with great confidence and very selective history, you can hear the same pattern playing out. Just with better vocabulary, a few more references, and the same old habit of deciding who to blame before working out why.


Monday, 4 May 2026

The Slow Death of Meaning in the Meat Aisle

There was a time when words meant things. “Aberdeen Angus” meant a specific Scottish animal. “Wagyu” meant a Japanese one, raised with the sort of care normally reserved for minor royalty.

Now they mean, more or less, “something that once had a relative of that persuasion”.

The modern supermarket has performed a neat act of linguistic dilution. Breed names have been turned into mood music. “Angus” is no longer a description, it is a hint. “Wagyu” is less a definition than a gentle nudge in the direction of luxury.


It is rather like being sold a Labrador that turns out to have one Labrador grandparent and a great deal else besides. Does it technically contain Labrador? Yes. Is it what any normal person would understand by “a Labrador”? Not unless one adopts a very generous view of genetics and a dim view of plain English.

The Wagyu version of this is particularly brazen. Proper Japanese Wagyu is tracked, graded, and documented to within an inch of its life. What turns up here under the same name is often a perfectly decent cross-bred animal, whose connection to Japan is faint enough to require imagination. Yet the label stands, serene and untroubled, inviting you to make the flattering assumption.

None of this is illegal. That would be crude. It is something more polished. The words are just accurate enough to pass muster, and just vague enough to do the real work.

And that is the trick. Not to lie, but to encourage the customer to do a small amount of self-deception. To read “Wagyu” and quietly supply the rest of the story. To see “Angus” and fill in the missing pedigree.

If it were honestly labelled “Wagyu-cross” or “Angus-cross”, the spell would break at once. Which is precisely why it isn’t.

We are not being sold bad beef. We are being sold good beef wearing a borrowed name, and trusting that nobody will look too closely at the family tree. It's a bit like a dual national.


Sunday, 3 May 2026

Clarity, Not Chants at Palestine Protests

There is always a moment, usually quite early on, when a protest stops being about what is actually happening and starts being about the protest itself. You can almost hear it happen. The chant goes up, someone films it, and within hours the argument has shifted entirely.


In this case, the starting point is not complicated. Palestinians are being killed in large numbers by Israeli military action. People see that, feel it is wrong, and go out to protest. That is not extreme or controversial. It is a fairly basic human reaction to civilians being caught in the middle of a war.

Where it starts to go sideways is the language. “Globalise the Intifada” is one of those phrases that sounds powerful if you are saying it and rather different if you are hearing it. To the person chanting, it may mean solidarity or resistance. To a reasonable listener, particularly a Jewish one, it can land as a reference to uprisings that included attacks on civilians during the Second Intifada. That gap between intention and reception is doing most of the work here.

And once that gap opens up, the whole thing tilts. Instead of talking about civilian deaths or the conduct of the Israeli government, we end up arguing about whether a chant is threatening. It is an oddly efficient way of derailing your own protest. You begin with a strong, straightforward moral point and end up defending wording that half your audience hears as something else entirely.

The law does not help you out of that hole. Under the Human Rights Act, you are perfectly entitled to protest, even noisily and in ways that annoy people. But those rights are qualified. If there is a real risk of disorder or intimidation, the state can step in. Vague, loaded slogans make that argument easier to make, whether you meant them that way or not.

This is the bit that tends to irritate people, but it is also the practical one. If your aim is to stop civilians being killed, then say exactly that. Call for a ceasefire. Call for restraint. Call for whatever policy change you think might make a difference. It is not about watering anything down. It is about keeping your message clear enough that it cannot be bent into something you did not intend.

There is a temptation, of course, to reach for something sharper. It feels more forceful, more like you are doing something rather than just stating the obvious. But there is a difference between sounding strong and being effective. If your wording allows a reasonable person to think you might be cheering on violence, you have handed your opponents an argument they did not previously have, and they will use it.

None of this means the government gets a free pass. There is a familiar pattern where ministers discover a sudden enthusiasm for public order powers when protests become awkward. If every uncomfortable slogan is treated as incitement, you are no longer policing risk, you are managing dissent. The courts, under the same Human Rights Act, have a habit of taking a dim view when that line is crossed, but by that point the damage is usually done.

So we end up in the usual untidy British compromise. Protest is allowed, but watched. The police hover at the edges trying to decide when irritation turns into risk. Activists are free to say what they like, but not free from the consequences of choosing language that muddies their own case.

And the slightly deflating reality is this. If you want to change minds, you have to persuade people who do not already agree with you. Shouting something they can plausibly interpret as a threat might feel satisfying in the moment, but it is not, on balance, the cleverest way to go about it.


The Clip Is Not the Story

There is a very familiar sort of mistake people make when they are shown half a story and quietly invited to supply the rest. You see a clip on the news. A man is on the ground. Two officers are kicking him. He has just been Tasered. You wince, slightly, and say something along the lines of, “That looks a bit much.” My wife and I did exactly that. Not a grand moral stance, just a quick reaction to what was in front of us.

And what was in front of us was incomplete.


What we did not know, because it was not made clear in that first burst of coverage, was that the man still had hold of the knife. That one detail, quietly missing from the picture, changes everything. A man on the ground without a weapon is one thing. A man on the ground still gripping a knife, with police within arm’s reach, is quite another. The optics are worse than the reality because the camera cannot show risk, only movement.

The awkward truth is that the context probably was there, at the scene. The person filming would have seen more than we did. But what survives the journey from pavement to screen is a narrow slice of events, framed, cropped, and stripped of whatever sits just outside the shot. By the time it reaches the viewer, you are no longer watching the whole incident, just the most arresting fragment of it.

And then modern news does what modern news tends to do. It moves quickly and it leads with the pictures. A clip like that will always get aired before anyone has had time to ask the dull but necessary questions. What exactly was he holding. What were the officers reacting to. What happened just before the camera started rolling.

It is not unreasonable to expect a bit more care at that point. If you are going to broadcast a clip like that, the obvious question is what the person behind the camera actually saw. A simple line, early and clearly delivered, that the suspect still had a knife would have reframed the entire sequence. Instead, the image led and the explanation, if it arrived at all, came later and more quietly. Not a grand conspiracy, just careless editing at exactly the point where it matters.

There is another layer to this which the broadcasters ought to have anticipated. People do not watch these clips in isolation. They bring with them a backlog of stories about police overreach and misconduct. Some of those stories are entirely justified. Some are less clear. But they all leave a residue.

So when a clip appears of a man on the ground being kicked by officers, the mind does not start from zero. It reaches for the nearest familiar explanation. It feels like you have seen this before. It feels like you already know what it is. That makes the initial judgement feel more solid than it actually is.

Most people see something like that, have a reaction, and leave it there. Perhaps they revise it when more information comes in. No harm done. A private misreading disappears as quickly as it formed.

But when someone like Zack Polanski does the same thing in public, it lands rather differently. The fleeting thought becomes a broadcast conclusion. The fragment is treated as the whole. And because it comes from a political figure, it carries weight it does not deserve.

He is now being lined up and scolded by the Great and the Good, many of whom will have had precisely the same initial reaction when they saw the footage. The difference is not superior judgement. It is simply that they kept quiet long enough for the missing piece to emerge. It is easy to be holier than thou once the full picture has turned up.

With elections looming, and law and order suddenly back in fashion, the criticism has acquired a certain sharpness.

None of that rescues the original error. If you are a high profile political figure, you do not have the luxury of treating a half seen video as if it were the full account. The more ambiguous the footage, the more cautious you need to be, not less. In this case, that meant waiting for the missing fact. The knife.

If you insist on apportioning blame, it probably sits something like this. The media, about half. They chose the images, set the tone, and did not make the crucial context clear early enough. Zack Polanski, perhaps forty per cent. He took an ambiguous fragment and presented it as a conclusion. The remaining ten per cent belongs to the medium itself, where short, decontextualised clips routinely mislead.

Most people were briefly misled. The media made that easy. He made it public.

The context was there on the pavement. It just was not in the clip. The news did not do enough to bridge that gap. And yet the real mistake was to assume that the gap did not exist and to fill it with certainty.

We had the same thought as Polanski, as I'm certain many others did but refuse to admit it. We just left it there, as did others.