Sunday, 5 July 2026

AMERICA REFUSES THE GLOBALIST SCRIPT

One might have thought, in these enervated times, that the spectacle of a nation turning 250 would be an occasion for the usual dirge: solemn academics in tweed lamenting the death of everything, NGOs wringing their hands over carbon footprints and historical sins, and European commentators sighing that the whole experiment had finally run its course. Instead, America threw a party. Fireworks blazed, crowds gathered, and the doom-predictors were left looking like minor prophets who had booked the wrong apocalypse. It was, in its noisy, excessive, slightly vulgar way, rather magnificent – a reminder that while the rest of the world perfects the art of managed decline, the United States still specialises in unmanaged exuberance.

The global elite, that loose confederacy of Davos devotees, Brussels bureaucrats, and Silicon Valley saviours, had hoped for something different. Their preferred script involved genteel failure: empty malls, polite protests, and a grateful populace ready to accept the soft tyranny of net-zero serfdom and equity quotas. For years they have peddled the miseries of global communism by another name – centralised control dressed up as compassion, surveillance as safety, and the slow erosion of the individual beneath the weight of the collective good. America, stubbornly, keeps declining the invitation. It has done so since 1776, and with a certain cheeky consistency ever since.

Consider the flaws, for they are legion and loud. America is brash where others are subtle, litigious where others are resigned, and occasionally capable of electing leaders who speak like auctioneers on a caffeine jag. Its cities can be violent, its inequalities glaring, its popular culture a riot of junk food for the mind. Yet these are not bugs in the system; they are the inevitable by-products of a society that refuses to sit still and be improved by experts. In more orderly nations, the trains may run on time, but the spirit has often missed its connection. America’s chaos is the sound of people still arguing with one another, still inventing, still failing upwards. From the Wright brothers to Silicon Valley, from jazz to the moon landing, its greatest hits have emerged not despite the mess but because of it. Personal liberty is a messy business. It permits bad taste, bad choices, and the glorious right to be wrong.

No recent figure has embodied this raucous refusal quite like Donald Trump. Love him or loathe him – and the chattering classes have made their preference abrasively clear – he promoted America with a salesman’s gusto that neither Joe Biden nor Kamala Harris could have mustered on their most caffeinated days. Where his predecessors offered managed decline wrapped in progressive pieties, Trump flogged the old republic like a slightly dented but still serviceable classic car: loud, powerful, and unapologetically itself. He understood that nations, like individuals, thrive on confidence rather than constant apology. Under his watch, the 250th birthday became less a funeral for the past and more a defiant birthday bash. The elite recoiled in horror; the country, by and large, enjoyed the fireworks.

This is not to say America is flawless or that its founding beliefs are immune to corrosion. The constitutional architecture – that Enlightenment scaffolding of limited government, free speech, and the right to pursue happiness on your own terms – requires constant maintenance. Yet as long as enough Americans remember that government is their servant rather than their shepherd, the republic retains its improbable vitality. Socialism, in its various fashionable guises, has failed everywhere it has been tried with sincerity: the body count in the last century remains a grim testament. Each time it reappears in fresher packaging – stakeholder capitalism, climate emergency authoritarianism, digital social credit – America serves as the control group that refuses the experiment. Its very existence is an affront to the planners.

The sardonic truth is that humanity’s best chance at freedom now rests with a country the sophisticated affect to despise. While Europe drifts into demographic winter and regulatory paralysis, and while rising powers perfect new forms of authoritarian efficiency, America remains the last major redoubt of the heretical idea that ordinary people, left largely to their own devices, can achieve extraordinary things. Its culture – raucous, commercial, endlessly renewable – exports both its best and its worst, but the worst is at least optional. You can switch it off. Try doing that with the mandatory ideologies elsewhere.

So let the elites continue their seminars on how to make the world more “equitable” by making everyone equally miserable. America will keep producing vaccines in record time, blockbusters no one asked for, and eccentric billionaires who want to colonise Mars. It will argue with itself, sue itself, and occasionally embarrass itself on the world stage. And it will, with any luck, continue to reject the velvet handcuffs of collectivism. Protect that raucous, flawed, indispensable republic – its Constitution, its wild culture, its founding suspicion of power – and the rest of us retain a fighting chance. 

The evils of socialism have been defeated before. With America still in the ring, throwing punches and cracking jokes, they will be defeated again. The fireworks, one suspects, are only just beginning.

Saturday, 4 July 2026

COOL AIR DENIED BY HOT HEADS

In this 'sweltering summer' of 2026, as Europe has baked like an overambitious croissant under a record heatwave, one could almost hear the collective murmur of continental discomfort rising above the cicadas. Citizens of the Old World, long accustomed to treating extreme weather as a character-building exercise, found themselves once more at odds with the stubborn realities of thermodynamics. And into this furnace stepped the humble air conditioner, that mechanical miracle of chilled air and modest electricity bills, now elevated to the status of geopolitical metaphor. As one sharp-eyed observer put it on that indispensable barometer of modern thought, X: Europe sees problems through a zero-sum lens. AC uses too much electricity? We should use it less. 

America, by contrast, shrugs and says: get more power. One pictures the scene with a certain dry relish. In Brussels, earnest officials in sustainably sourced linen suits debate whether installing cooling units might offend the delicate sensibilities of Gaia herself. In Warsaw or Madrid, families retire to stifling apartments where the night brings no relief, consoling themselves that at least their carbon footprint remains elegantly petite. Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the average American household – that temple of refrigerated comfort – hums along at a crisp 72 degrees Fahrenheit, its occupants perhaps debating baseball statistics or the merits of larger trucks, blissfully unaware that their very existence is a provocation to European climatological conscience.

The European approach possesses a certain austere poetry, a monastic commitment to suffering that would have impressed the medieval flagellants. Why install machines that guzzle power when one might instead master the noble art of perspiration? Windows flung open at dawn, shutters drawn by noon, and a strategic deployment of damp cloths: these are the traditional remedies, passed down like heirloom guilt. That only one in five European homes boasts proper air conditioning – compared to nine out of ten in the United States – is not mere coincidence or economic footnote. It is philosophy made manifest. Electricity, in this worldview, is a finite pie, and any attempt to enlarge the pie smacks of vulgar American optimism, that naïve belief that human ingenuity might yet outpace human folly.

How deliciously European it all is. One detects the faint whiff of Calvinist self-denial mixed with modern green orthodoxy, a potent cocktail that renders discomfort not merely tolerable but morally superior. Campaigners warn that widespread AC adoption would add a whisper of warming to the global thermometer – 0.05 degrees by 2050, or some such precise horror – while conveniently overlooking that elderly citizens dropping in the streets might represent a rather more immediate statistical inconvenience. The logic is impeccable in its circularity: we must not adapt too comfortably to the changing climate, lest we fail to feel sufficiently guilty about having caused it. Suffering, in this scheme, becomes the ultimate renewable resource.

America, of course, offers its own brand of cheerful absurdity. There, the AC unit is less appliance than constitutional right, a mechanical expression of the pursuit of happiness. One can imagine the average Texan or New Yorker confronting a heatwave with the same brisk efficiency they apply to other inconveniences: throw money at the problem, preferably in the direction of engineering. If more power is required, build more plants, drill more wells, or – in these enlightened times – festoon the landscape with solar arrays and windmills that somehow never quite manage to operate when the wind drops and the sun hides behind a convenient cloud. The zero-sum game holds no appeal for a nation that has always preferred the infinite pie, preferably served à la mode.

Yet even here, the satirist finds rich material. The United States' embrace of comfort can veer into self-parody, with shopping malls maintained at Arctic temperatures while the car park shimmers like a mirage. One wonders whether the national passion for air conditioning has not contributed to a certain softening of the collective character, a diminished tolerance for minor meteorological impositions. Where Europeans endure their heatwaves with stoic grumbling and strategic siestas, Americans simply adjust the dial and reach for another cold beverage. Both approaches contain elements of denial: one denies human frailty, the other denies planetary limits.

The true comedy lies in the mutual incomprehension. Europeans view American cooled interiors as decadent, wasteful, almost immoral – the environmental equivalent of driving a Hummer to collect the morning croissant. Americans, for their part, regard European resistance to AC as a form of performative masochism, the sort of thing that produces excellent literature and terrible plumbing. When French politicians of the right begin clamouring for subsidised cooling units while their Green counterparts issue dire warnings about energy consumption, one senses the familiar European instinct for turning practical questions into theological ones. The European Commission, in its wisdom, declines to take a position on air conditioning – neither pro nor con, merely committed to "energy efficiency" and "building renovation." This is bureaucratic genius: the perfect non-answer for an imperfect world.

Beneath the sardonic observations lies a deeper truth about differing civilizational instincts. Europe, scarred by centuries of scarcity, war, and careful husbandry, instinctively reaches for the hair shirt. America, born of abundance and frontier optimism, reaches for the thermostat. Neither impulse is wholly foolish. The European wariness of unchecked consumption has its virtues, as does the American faith in technological deliverance. Yet both seem increasingly inadequate to the realities of a warming planet that refuses to behave according to anyone's five-year plan.

As the heatwave of 2026 breaks records and claims its victims, one cannot help but admire the exquisite timing of it all. Just when Europe most needs cooling, it finds itself trapped in a debate about whether cooling is permissible. The air conditioners sit in warehouses, their potential unrealised, while citizens fan themselves with copies of environmental manifestos. Meanwhile, the planet, indifferent to such philosophical niceties, continues its slow bake. Perhaps the ultimate joke is on all of us: we argue about thermostats while the temperature keeps rising, each side convinced that the other has fundamentally misunderstood the nature of the pie.

In the end, the AC debate reveals less about climate science than about human nature. We are a species capable of splitting the atom and landing on the moon, yet somehow unable to agree on the proper temperature for a living room. Europe will doubtless continue its experiment in virtuous discomfort, America its experiment in mechanical indulgence. Both will write eloquent essays about their choices. And the rest of us, sweating gently in the middle, may eventually conclude that the wisest course involves a little less sermonising and a little more sensible engineering – preferably with the air conditioning turned up just enough to think clearly. After all, even the most committed environmentalist eventually discovers that principles are easier to maintain at 24 degrees Celsius than at 38.

Friday, 3 July 2026

SONY CUTS IT'S DISCS OFF

One can only marvel at the serene efficiency with which Sony has chosen to euthanise the last lingering pretence that a PlayStation owner actually owns anything. From January 2028, new games will arrive not as reassuringly solid discs—those charming plastic coasters of yesteryear—but as pure, weightless digital grace notes delivered straight into the maw of your console. The company calls this adaptation to consumer trends. One might more accurately call it the final, courteous eviction notice served on the very idea of private property in the realm of entertainment.

The announcement itself was a masterpiece of corporate minimalism: a quiet blog post, the textual equivalent of a soft cough in a boardroom. No trumpets, no confessions, just the calm statement that physical production will cease and that the future belongs to the PlayStation Store. One pictures the executives nodding sagely over their oat-milk lattes, congratulating themselves on having read the runes of the market. The runes, of course, say that most people already prefer digital downloads. This is rather like observing that most people already accept being herded into airport security queues and concluding that the logical next step is to abolish homes altogether and issue everyone with a sleeping pod at the terminal.

Let us be clear about what is being lost. A physical disc was never merely a delivery mechanism. It was a small, durable monument to the transaction. You bought it, you owned it, you could lend it to your dubious mate with the dodgy taste in shooters, sell it when your interest waned, or display it on a shelf like a retired athlete showing off his medals. The second-hand market, that great democratising bazaar, allowed the impecunious teenager in Bolton to play the same blockbuster as the trust-fund hipster in Shoreditch, albeit six months later and at half the price. Sony’s move does not merely inconvenience collectors; it abolishes the very concept of circulation. The game becomes a revocable privilege, a digital tenant whose lease the landlord may terminate whenever the servers feel peckish.

One is reminded of the music industry’s earlier, equally pious march into the streaming abyss. Once upon a time you owned your records. Now you rent access to a library that might vanish if the licensing agreements shift, the company is acquired by a private equity firm with a cough, or someone important decides that a particular artist has committed wrongthink. The film studios followed suit, turning your expensive 4K television into a polite suggestion box that occasionally forgets you ever paid for The Godfather. Gaming, that last redoubt of the enthusiast who liked to touch his possessions, is now being frog-marched down the same corridor. The water has been warming so gradually that many players have mistaken the sensation for a particularly luxurious spa treatment.

The sardonic beauty of the arrangement is that Sony can maintain the pretence of benevolence. “We are aligning with how most of our community prefers to access and play games today,” they murmur, as though the community had been consulted in anything resembling a binding referendum. In reality, the preference for digital has been gently cultivated through years of smaller inconveniences: longer load times for discs, exclusive bonuses for downloads, the creeping knowledge that a physical copy might still require a day-one patch the size of a minor Soviet novel. It is the classic technique of the courteous monopolist: make the old way slightly more irritating until the new way feels like liberation. The customer does not so much choose as discover that the alternative has quietly been discontinued.

The deeper comedy lies in the transformation of the gamer from proprietor to tenant. You will pay the full price—often a robust seventy or eighty pounds—for what is essentially a long-term lease on electrons. Should Sony decide, in a fit of righteousness or server-maintenance enthusiasm, to delist a title, your purchase evaporates with the serene finality of a deleted tweet. The small print, that unread epic of our age, has always insisted that you were buying a licence rather than the game itself, but physical media at least gave the lie a comforting solidity. Now the pretence can be dropped. You own nothing, and you will be expected to look grateful for the privilege of paying handsomely for the experience.

Nor should we ignore the quiet euthanasia of the retail ecosystem. GAME and its dwindling brethren already resemble melancholy museums of a dying civilisation. When the last physical copies disappear, so too does the casual browser’s chance encounter with a bargain, the tactile pleasure of scanning shelves, the small human theatre of the high street. Everything funnels toward the great digital silo where prices are whatever the algorithm decides they ought to be on any given Tuesday. Competition, that tiresome old concept, becomes a nostalgic memory, like rotary telephones or honest politicians.

One might expect howls of outrage from the gaming commentariat. Instead, the reaction has been the familiar blend of resigned cynicism and performative fury. Some speak of boycotts, as though the industry had not already calculated that the vocal minority will be outnumbered by the silent majority who simply want to shoot aliens with minimal friction. Others announce their intention to retreat to PC gaming, where Steam at least offers the illusion of ownership and the occasional generous sale. A few, in the grand tradition of cornered consumers everywhere, mutter darkly about piracy, conveniently forgetting that the same companies they now distrust spent years telling us that pirates were morally equivalent to maritime terrorists.

The truth is more melancholy. We have been trained, across multiple industries, to accept the exchange of ownership for convenience. It is easier, after all. No more scratched discs, no more trips to the shop, no more storage problems. The machine remembers what you bought better than you do—until, of course, it forgets. In the gleaming future, your entire library will exist in a shimmering cloud, accessible from any device until the day the cloud decides it would prefer a different business model. At that point you may reflect, with the bitter wisdom of hindsight, that convenience was the sugar coating on the relinquishment of control.

Sony have not merely changed a distribution format; they have completed the conversion of the customer into the product’s permanent, grateful subscriber. The disc is dead. The licence reigns supreme. And somewhere in a brightly lit Tokyo conference room, a group of executives is doubtless already calculating how much more profitable it is to sell people the same dream repeatedly than to let them wake up and keep it.