Wednesday, 8 July 2026

IN PRAISE OF THE SAUSAGE ROLL

One contemplates, with the weary resignation of a man who has seen empires rise and fall and still found time for a decent pie, the latest bulletin from the front lines of British civilisation. A school – one of those institutions charged with the solemn duty of turning out the next generation of shoulder-to-shruggers – has banned the sausage roll. Not because it has committed some heinous crime against humanity, you understand, but in the name of “healthy eating”. The phrase itself arrives with all the solemnity of a government circular, smelling faintly of steamed broccoli and unconvincing compromise. Give the kids a break, indeed. Or rather, give them anything but the one item that has sustained the British working lunch since time immemorial.

The sausage roll is not merely food; it is a minor miracle of understatement. A modest cylinder of pastry, golden as a modest parliamentary majority, encasing a savoury sausage that knows its place. It requires no cutlery, no apology, no Instagram filter. You can eat it with one hand while holding a newspaper in the other, or while pretending to listen to your uncle’s opinions on the cricket. In its flaky, slightly greasy embrace lies the very soul of British pragmatism: something hot, portable, and unpretentious that gets the job done without making a song and dance about it. Compare this to the average modern “wellness” offering – some sad rectangle of quinoa pretending to be excited – and one begins to suspect that the war on the sausage roll is not about nutrition at all. It is about joy. And joy, as we all know, is terribly difficult to regulate.

Of course, the official reason is impeccable. Salt. Fat. The usual suspects. One pictures the committee meeting: earnest officials in lanyards, armed with charts and a touching faith in their own benevolence, deciding that the nation’s youth must be spared the horrors of a decent midday snack. Never mind that generations of British children survived on sausage rolls, fish fingers, and the occasional packet of crisps, went on to invent penicillin, win wars, and queue politely in the rain. No, the modern child must be protected from pleasure itself, lest it interfere with their future as anxious, low-cholesterol adults.

Yet one cannot help noticing – with the dry eye of a satirist who has seen this sort of thing before – that the sausage roll’s great offence is not its calorific content but its principal ingredient. Pork. That most un-Islamic of meats. Suddenly the healthy eating push takes on the faint aroma of accommodation, the quiet, relentless logic of not wanting to cause offence. Schools, canteens, and high streets have been performing these small, deniable acts of cultural subtraction for years now. A pork pie disappears here, a rasher of bacon there, all in the name of “inclusivity” or “practicality”. The sausage roll, that stubborn emblem of a pre-lanyard Britain, becomes inconvenient. Better to ban it outright than to explain to little Ahmed or little Emily why one child’s lunch is different from another’s. Far simpler to declare the whole thing unhealthy and have done with it.

This is the genius of the thing. By wrapping religious sensitivity in the bland rhetoric of public health, one achieves the perfect bureaucratic sleight of hand. Nobody is forced to say the awkward words; the sausage roll simply ceases to exist, like a cancelled comedian or an old statue that someone found embarrassing. The children, meanwhile, are left with whatever beige alternative the authorities deem sufficiently neutral – probably something involving chickpeas and the distant hope of flavour. One imagines them staring mournfully at their lunchboxes, wondering what crime the humble sausage committed to deserve such erasure.

Britain has always been rather good at this sort of thing: sacrificing small pleasures on the altar of good manners. We gave up smoking in pubs, proper tea breaks, and the right to call a spade a spade, all without much fuss. But there comes a point when even the most phlegmatic islander might raise an eyebrow. The sausage roll is not an exotic import or a niche delicacy; it is as native as rain on a bank holiday. To surrender it, not to superior firepower or economic necessity, but to the gentle pressure of not wanting to hurt anyone’s feelings, feels less like tolerance and more like a slow-motion abdication.

Let us be clear, in the driest possible terms: no civilisation was ever sustained by avoiding offence. Great nations were built by people who got on with things, including eating whatever sausage happened to be available. The Romans had their garum, the French their terrines, and the British – God help us – the sausage roll. To pretend otherwise is to engage in the sort of polite self-deception that eventually hollows out a culture from within. One does not preserve harmony by pretending that pork is a hate crime. One preserves it by telling the truth, however flaky the pastry.

So here is a modest proposal, offered in the spirit of Jonathan Swift and a man who just wants his lunch: bring back the sausage roll. Not as an act of defiance, but as an act of common sense. Let the children have their flaky contraband. Let the nation remember that a people who can laugh at themselves, queue without rioting, and enjoy a decent bit of pig in puff pastry are worth preserving. If that causes a few awkward conversations in the staff room, so be it. The alternative is a future of joyless, halal-compliant beige rectangles, and a Britain that has finally succeeded in boring itself to death.

In praise of the sausage roll, then. Long may it roll – unapologetically, unhealthily, and unrepentantly British. The rest of us can always have the salad.

Tuesday, 7 July 2026

GO GET 'EM NIGE !!

One has to admire the sheer theatrical timing of it all. In an age when most politicians treat their parliamentary seats like rented storage units—something to be clung to until a better offer materialises—Nigel Farage has done the unthinkable. He has resigned his Clacton seat, not to slink off into some lucrative directorship or after-dinner speaking circuit, but to force a by-election and invite the good people of Essex to have another crack at him. It is the political equivalent of throwing your own hat into the ring and then daring the ring to throw it back. Bold? Certainly. Reckless? Only if you believe the whispering gallery of the commentariat, those same oracles who have spent years predicting his imminent political extinction with all the cheerful certainty of a stopped clock.

The mainstream media, that great cathedral of received opinion, has greeted this development with its customary blend of manufactured outrage and thinly veiled panic. One can almost hear the rustle of corduroy trousers in the editorial offices as the usual suspects clutch their pearls and mutter darkly about "undermining democracy." Undermining it? Farage is doing the opposite: he is subjecting himself to the one verdict that still carries some residual weight in this country—the verdict of actual voters. Not focus groups in Islington, not panels of the great and the good on the BBC, but the sturdy folk of Clacton who have had rather more direct experience of open borders, net zero zealotry, and the general sense that Westminster regards them as an inconvenient relic of old Britain.

The trigger, of course, is the latest great scandal: a £5 million donation from a crypto chap that Farage apparently failed to declare with the punctiliousness demanded by the parliamentary standards commissars. How terribly shocking. One pictures the horror in the salons where such sums are usually laundered through think tanks, consultancies, and green investment vehicles without so much as a raised eyebrow. The establishment's outrage is always exquisitely calibrated. When the money flows in approved directions—perhaps to a favoured charity run by the spouse of a senior civil servant, or into the coffers of a party whose policies align neatly with the Davos consensus—it is simply "philanthropy." When it arrives in Farage's vicinity, it becomes a constitutional crisis demanding immediate resignation, ritual flogging, and preferably a by-election the commentariat hopes he will lose.

This is the same media class that spent years treating Farage as a sort of ambulatory Brexit contagion, to be quarantined at all costs. Every pint he drank was analysed for signs of incipient fascism. Every cheeky remark was elevated to a hate crime. They have predicted his downfall so often that one wonders whether some of them keep a special bottle of champagne in the fridge, labelled "For Use Upon Nigel's Demise—Do Not Open Until Actual Evidence Appears." Yet here he remains, like one of those indestructible garden weeds that laughs at glyphosate. The fury visible on his face the other day was not, one suspects, the petulance of a man caught out, but the exasperation of someone who has watched the game rigged against him for decades and has finally decided to flip the table in the most public way possible.

Let us be clear: this by-election is precisely what Farage says it is—a people versus the establishment affair. On one side, the voters who never quite bought the narrative that mass immigration would enrich their communities without any noticeable downsides, that net zero would merely involve a few windmills and not the deliberate impoverishment of the working class, and that the great offices of state exist primarily to serve their interests rather than lecture them on their moral shortcomings. On the other, the entire apparatus: the broadcasters with their carefully neutral voices masking visceral loathing, the standards watchdogs who discover ethical lapses with remarkable selectivity, the think-tankers who regard any challenge to the post-2016 settlement as a form of mental illness.

The left-wing commentariat, those tireless guardians of the narrative, will of course frame Farage's move as cynicism. How dare he turn scrutiny into a democratic contest? The proper procedure, in their view, is to submit meekly to the process, accept the predetermined verdict, and retire to the backbenches with a suitable expression of contrition. That Farage instead chooses to let Clacton decide is portrayed as somehow anti-democratic—an exquisite inversion that only our finest minds could manage. One is reminded of those Soviet officials who, when faced with public discontent, would solemnly announce that the people had been misled by foreign agents and required further re-education.

Yet for all the sneering, the essential truth remains. Farage has repeatedly shown himself willing to risk everything on the judgment of ordinary citizens. He did it with UKIP, with the Brexit Party, and with Reform. Each time the smart money said he was finished; each time he demonstrated that the smart money had mistaken its own echo chamber for the country at large. The man possesses that rarest of political commodities: an instinct for what actually bothers people when the polls close and the cameras switch off. While others discourse learnedly about "vibes" and "optics," Farage understands that when your town feels unrecognisable, when your energy bills could fund a small African republic, and when your children are being taught that their heritage is a catalogue of crimes, these are not mere "concerns" to be managed. They are realities to be confronted.

So go on then, Nige. Let them throw everything at you—the inquiries, the headlines, the solemn editorials about "standards in public life" from people whose own standards would make a alley cat blush. The people of Clacton have seen you before. They know the difference between a performer and a fighter. And if they send you back to Westminster with an even larger majority, it will not merely be a personal triumph. It will be a long, sardonic raspberry blown at the entire complacent apparatus that has spent years trying to pretend the public are mere extras in their grand progressive drama.

The establishment hates nothing quite so much as being reminded that it is not, in fact, in charge. Farage's resignation is that reminder delivered with style. One almost pities the poor dears in the television studios as they prepare their next round of furrowed brows and meaningful pauses. Almost. But not quite. After all, they have had it coming for rather a long time.

Monday, 6 July 2026

PROMINENCE FOR THE POMPOUS

One must admire the sheer, unblushing cheek of it. In an age when the average citizen has finally prised the remote control from the cold, dead fingers of the television schedules and wandered off into the wilds of YouTube, the British government has decided that what the public really needs is not freedom, not choice, not even decent broadband, but prominence. Prominence for the very broadcasters who have spent years assuring us that everything is fine, that the institutions are sound, and that any dissenting voice is either Russian, far-right, or both simultaneously. The consultation paper—elegantly titled Watch This Space, as though it were a jaunty invitation to a fireworks display rather than a quiet suffocation of the alternatives—proposes that YouTube and its unruly ilk should be compelled to give pride of place to the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, and the rest of the familiar chorus line. Legacy media, they call it. One is tempted to call it something rather less polite.

The logic, if one can dignify it with the term, is impeccable in its circularity. People are getting their news from funny little channels run by individuals who own neither a suit nor a focus group. This cannot stand. Misinformation, that dread modern plague, is apparently running riot because algorithms—those mysterious, almost sentient forces—fail to direct the bewildered masses towards the soothing, authoritative tones of Clive Myrie or whoever happens to be reading the autocue this week. Never mind that the public service broadcasters have themselves been caught in more U-turns than a London taxi driver during rush hour. Never mind the scandals, the lavish payouts, the quiet admissions that perhaps the licence fee payer was not always told the full story on everything from climate to COVID to the precise location of certain parties in Downing Street. No: the solution, as ever, is more of the same, only louder and harder to avoid.

One pictures the scene in Whitehall. Earnest civil servants, their faces lit by the gentle glow of PowerPoint, fretting over the dangerous pluralism of the internet. “The people,” they murmur, “are choosing incorrectly.” It is the eternal complaint of the mandarin class: democracy would be so much easier if the electorate would simply shut up and listen to their betters. And so we arrive at this splendidly Orwellian notion of mandatory prominence. Not censorship, heavens no. Merely a gentle algorithmic nudge—more like a bureaucratic cattle prod—ensuring that the state-approved channels float to the top while the awkward squad sinks quietly beneath the waves of recommended videos. One almost expects the consultation document to include a helpful diagram: a pyramid with the BBC at the apex and, at the base, some poor chap in his bedroom recording a podcast between shifts at the warehouse.

The irony, of course, is exquisite. Alternative media exists precisely because so many grew weary of the legacy product. For years the main channels and newspapers operated as a sort of mutual protection society: government leaks to friendly journalists, journalists provide cover for government, repeat until public trust reaches absolute zero. Then along came the internet, that great leveller, and suddenly anyone with a laptop and an unwillingness to be condescended to could have their say. The result has been messy, noisy, frequently ridiculous—and, on balance, vastly preferable to the previous arrangement. It is the sort of development that used to be celebrated as “democratisation of the means of communication.” Now it is treated as a problem requiring urgent administrative correction.

Mr DeSanto’s original post captured the mood with commendable brevity: you cannot hate the government enough. One is inclined to agree, though hatred is perhaps too energetic an emotion for the occasion. Better to offer a dry, weary amusement, the sort PJ O'Rourke himself might have mustered while watching another batch of cultural apparatchiks tie themselves in rhetorical knots. For this is not really about misinformation. It is about control. It is about the deep, abiding horror felt by the governing classes whenever the proles start comparing notes without official supervision. During times of social unrest—those awkward moments when the public proves annoyingly unconvinced by the official narrative—the need for 'prominence' becomes especially pressing. One shudders to think what constitutes 'trusted news' in the eyes of the drafters of this document. Presumably anything that aligns neatly with the prevailing consensus in Islington and the senior common rooms.

The consultation closes on 31 August. One hopes a few brave souls will respond in the proper spirit: pointing out that if the public service broadcasters were half as indispensable as claimed, they would not require the heavy hand of the state to elbow their way to the front of the digital queue. Perhaps some enterprising alternative creator will produce a video essay on the subject, complete with clips of past broadcast howlers, set to the ironic strains of Land of Hope and Glory. It would, naturally, be buried deep in the recommendations, somewhere between makeup tutorials and conspiracy videos about lizards. That, after all, is the point.

There is something almost touching about the government’s faith in its own propaganda machinery. They genuinely seem to believe that if only the algorithms can be fixed, the punters will return, grateful and docile, to the familiar comforts of the evening news. It is the same touching delusion that once led the Soviet authorities to issue stern directives about the correct interpretation of tractor production figures. The internet, however, is not so easily managed. It is a hydra: cut off one head and another appears, usually with better production values and a sharper tongue. Forcing prominence on the old guard may succeed in irritating the independent sector for a while, but it will also confirm everything those independent voices have been saying about institutional arrogance and the quiet authoritarian streak that runs through modern British governance.

In the end, this consultation is less a policy proposal than a symptom. It reveals a political class that has lost the confidence to argue its case in the open marketplace of ideas and now seeks to rig the shop window. One can almost hear the sigh of relief in Whitehall: at last, a way to make the nasty online voices a little quieter without resorting to anything so crude as outright bans. Prominence, you see, sounds so very reasonable. Like giving the best seats in the theatre to the most important people. That the 'important people' have spent the last decade boring half the audience to tears is, of course, beside the point.

The rest of us will continue watching whatever we damn well please. And if the government finds that displeasing, perhaps it should ask itself why so many have turned elsewhere in the first place. The answer, one suspects, will not be found in another consultation paper. But it will make excellent material for the next wave of alternative content—precisely the sort that no amount of algorithmic prominence will ever quite manage to bury.