Thursday, 28 May 2026

THE MARTYR AND THE AFTERMATH

In the summer of 2020, a man named George Floyd expired on the pavement of Minneapolis while an officer’s knee pressed upon his neck. The world, or at least that noisy portion of it which mistakes its own shrieking for moral clarity, promptly canonised him. Murals sprouted like pious fungi, cities burned in ritual purification, and entire political vocabularies rearranged themselves around the sacred syllable “Floyd.” One did not have to approve of the manner of his death—few civilised people did—to notice that the subsequent sanctification had about it the whiff of something unwholesome: a useful corpse pressed into service as a battering ram against institutions already wobbling under their own accumulated absurdities. 

Let us be clear at the outset, as the more fastidious among us still occasionally are: George Floyd did not deserve to die. He was a flawed human being, like most of the rest of us, caught in a moment of resistance and physiological distress. The spectacle was ugly. But martyrdom is rarely bestowed upon the perfect; it is conferred upon the convenient. And Floyd proved supremely convenient. Fast-forward to Southampton, December 2025. An eighteen-year-old student, Henry Nowak—British-Polish, studying accountancy and finance, walking home from a night out with his football teammates—is stabbed four times by a 23-year-old man carrying a 21-centimetre shastar, that splendidly euphemistic Punjabi term for “very large knife worn openly like a fashion accessory.” 

The attacker, Vickrum Digwa, later informs the arriving officers that the bleeding boy had racially abused him. On this slender and, as it turned out, video-unsubstantiated claim, the police handcuff the victim while he is still leaking life from chest and leg wounds. Nowak collapses. He dies in the street. No riots. No global convulsion. Barely a shrug from the commentariat that had spent weeks in 2020 genuflecting before the altar of systemic this and institutional that. 

One pictures the scene: the young man, phone still perhaps recording the Snapchat frivolities of student life, now recording his own extinction. The officers, one imagines, performing the mental arithmetic that has become compulsory in certain Western police forces since the great awakening: Accusation of racism versus visible arterial bleeding. Hmm. Better safe than sacked. The caution that dare not speak its name is the fear of becoming the next viral villain, the next Derek Chauvin, the next sacrifice to the gods of equity. This, then, is the true legacy of Floyd’s martyrdom—not the improved policing its celebrants promised, but the institutional paralysis that followed. A climate in which the dread of being called the wrong word outweighs the immediate imperative to staunch the blood of a dying teenager. Two-tier policing, they call it in Britain, though the tiers seem increasingly to sort themselves along predictable lines. One tier for those whose victimhood is liturgically certified; another for those whose deaths arrive without the correct hashtags attached. 

Modern progressivism has a genius for turning tragedy into brand equity. Floyd’s death was packaged, trademarked, and exported with the efficiency of a major Hollywood franchise. “I can’t breathe” became the secular Kyrie Eleison. Statues fell. Budgets were defunded. Crime spiked in multiple American cities while commentators solemnly explained that noticing the spike was itself a form of violence. Meanwhile, in Britain, knife crime—often involving the very sort of ceremonial blades that somehow evade the enthusiastic attention of the authorities—continues its grim statistical ascent, and the response remains a masterclass in administrative euphemism. The sardonic detail, of course, is that Nowak was allegedly the racist in the piece. A Polish-British lad, scarcely out of school, supposedly hurling slurs sufficient to justify both a fatal stabbing and subsequent arrest while bleeding out. One is reminded of those Soviet show trials in which the accused helpfully confessed to every deviation before disappearing. The script writes itself; reality is merely required to supply the corpses.

None of this diminishes the awfulness of Floyd’s final minutes. A man should not die that way, overdosing or not, resisting or not. But the elevation of that single death into a planetary indictment required a machinery of selective outrage that has since proven incapable of noticing, let alone mourning, the Henry Nowaks who follow. The same voices that spent 2020 cataloguing every micro-aggression suddenly discover that some stabbings are just… local difficulties. Cultural enrichment, perhaps. Best not to dwell. The cult of Floyd demanded that policing be reimagined as inherently oppressive. What it delivered was policing reimagined as selectively timid—bold when confronting the wrong sort of citizen, tentative when the optics might prove inconvenient. 

The result is not justice but a grotesque inversion: the stabbed boy in handcuffs, the knife-carrier’s narrative indulged until inconvenient facts emerge. A martyrdom that was meant to save lives has instead, in its long penumbra, cost them. Henry Nowak deserved better than to become an ironic footnote in the Church of Floyd. He deserved, at the very least, the prompt application of first aid rather than restraints. His death was not an “overdose” or a complicated altercation; it was the straightforward consequence of blades and bureaucratic terror. That such an event can pass with comparative quiet while lesser (or at any rate, differently packaged) tragedies convulse continents tells us more about the state of our moral priorities than any number of earnest editorials ever could. 

The saints of our age are chosen by algorithm and activist convenience. Their miracles are selective. And the rest of us, it seems, are expected to keep dying quietly, without disturbing the narrative.

Wednesday, 27 May 2026

IT STILL AIN'T HALF HOT, MUM

It is May in Britain, and the nation is once again being gently roasted—not by some vengeful sun god, but by the familiar combination of high pressure and high dudgeon. Temperatures have climbed into the low-to-mid thirties, pensioners are sitting in their gardens wondering if this is what the Algarve feels like without the airfare, and the usual suspects have declared a national emergency. The weather maps, those innocent rectangles of isobars and shading, have been recoloured in shades of apocalyptic crimson that would make a Victorian fire engine blush. One almost expects the Met Office to issue a severe warning for the imminent arrival of the Four Horsemen, probably delayed by Southern Rail.

The liberal climate alarmists are up to their old tricks again, and one must admire the consistency. Every warm spell is no longer mere weather—perish the thought—but a harbinger of the End Times, brought to you by ordinary people who persist in wanting affordable energy, functioning boilers, and the right to drive a van without a guilt surcharge. The script is as reliable as an episode of Midsomer Murders: record broken (provisional, of course), maps turned volcanic red “for accessibility reasons,” solemn experts wheeled out to explain that this is what normal British May weather looks like when the working class refuses to embrace socialism.

One pictures the scene in the newsroom. A junior producer, fresh from a seminar on decolonising the jet stream, rushes in waving a graphic. “Look! Dark red over Kent! It’s worse than we thought!” The senior correspondent, who once reported on actual wars but now specialises in thermometers, nods gravely. “The public must understand: this is not a heatwave. This is neoliberalism’s fault. If only we’d nationalised the clouds and taxed the Gulf Stream.” Somewhere in the background, a think-tank fellow is already drafting the inevitable piece: “Why Your Barbecue Is Killing the Planet.” The recolouring of the maps is particularly inspired. Not so long ago, a pleasant 28°C was rendered in a polite shade of primrose or optimistic orange. Now the same temperature requires hues previously reserved for the surface of the sun or a particularly angry vindaloo. One suspects the graphic designers have been taking lessons from Hollywood trailer editors: more saturation, more drama, fewer facts. 

The aim is not to inform but to unsettle. A quiet pensioner enjoying a cup of tea on his patio must be made to feel that his very existence is contributing to the downfall of the Maldives. Never mind that Britain has experienced hot Mays before—1944, 1976, and various other years when people simply opened windows and got on with it. History is what happens to other people. The deeper comedy lies in the class politics of it all. The alarm is loudest among those who can afford to lecture from behind double glazing or, better still, from a second home in the Dordogne. For the ordinary working man— the plumber, the delivery driver, the factory hand sweating in overalls—the heatwave means coping with a van that turns into a mobile kiln and coming home to a house designed like a brick oven. No one is installing air conditioning on a roofer’s wages. Yet it is these same people who are cast as the villains: stubborn, short-sighted, insufficiently enthusiastic about net-zero targets that require them to shiver in winter and boil in summer while Beijing opens another coal plant. 

The solution, naturally, is more windmills, more subsidies for the already subsidised, and a quiet acceptance that energy bills will rise until the lights dim in solidarity with the planet. One wonders what the alarmists would have made of 1976. That year the country baked for weeks, reservoirs turned to dust bowls, and people queued for water. Did they declare the death of Western civilisation? No, they put on shorts, complained about the hosepipe ban, and carried on. There were no endless rolling broadcasts about how a warm summer proved the need for international wealth redistribution dressed up as climate policy. The difference is not the temperature. It is the ideology.

The real objection of the righteous is not to heat but to normality. A British heatwave reminds us that the climate has always varied, that humans are adaptable, and—most unforgivably—that most people quite enjoy a bit of sun. They like ice cream, pub gardens, and the gentle satisfaction of knowing the barbecue won’t be rained off. This cannot stand. Joy must be problematised. Every cheerful family on the beach is an affront to the models. Hence the frantic search for villains: insufficiently green voters, insufficiently repentant consumers, anyone who fails to treat a warm Bank Holiday as a moral failing.

By the time you read this, the heat will likely have broken. Rain will return, as it always does in these damp islands, and the same pundits will pivot seamlessly to flooding as further proof of the same narrative. The wheel turns, the grants flow, the maps are updated with fresh alarming colours. Meanwhile, the ordinary punter— the one who pays the taxes and endures the sermons—will simply remark that it’s been a decent spell and wonder why everyone else is in such a state. The climate may or may not be changing; the evidence is debated by those who bother with data rather than drama. 

What is beyond dispute is that the alarmists never miss an opportunity. A heatwave is not weather to them. It is recruiting material for the cause. And if the maps need to glow like the embers of capitalism itself to make the point, then so be it. After all, it’s only a little artistic licence in the service of saving the world. Pass the factor 50—and the salt for the next sermon.

Sunday, 24 May 2026

KYLE BUSCH (1985 - 2026): AN OBITUARY

Kyle Busch, the American racing driver whose name was synonymous with both velocity and a certain theatrical volatility, has turned his last lap at the age of 41. He left this mortal coil much as he navigated the final laps of many a race: suddenly, noisily, and with the air of a man who had already calculated the optimal line through whatever came next. 

Born in Las Vegas in 1985, Busch discovered early that life, like a restrictor-plate pack at Daytona, rewards those who refuse to lift. He entered NASCAR’s top tier in 2005 and proceeded to treat it as his personal coliseum. Two Cup Series titles, 63 wins, and a rap sheet of memorable on-track altercations followed. To the uninitiated, he was simply “Rowdy.” To those who understood, he was a driver of ferocious natural talent who could make a heavy stock car dance with the delicacy of a matador.

It has long been fashionable in certain European drawing rooms to dismiss NASCAR as mere left-turning chaos for the culturally deprived. Formula One enthusiasts, sipping their prosecco while watching million-euro prototypes whisper around circuits designed by architects, would do well to abandon such snobbery. The skill required to pilot a 3,400-pound stock car inches from disaster at 190 mph, surrounded by 39 other competitors who all believe they are the hero of their own story, is not lesser than that demanded by any other code of racing. It is merely different, louder, and more democratically entertaining. Busch proved this repeatedly. He could wheel a car with the best of them, and frequently did so while appearing to be conducting an argument with physics itself.

Off the track, he was a more complicated figure: blunt, occasionally combustible, yet possessed of a surprising loyalty to his crew and family. He built a formidable legacy not only in victories but in reminding the sport that personality, for better or worse, still mattered. In an era increasingly dominated by data and diplomacy, Busch remained gloriously, defiantly human.

He is survived by his wife Samantha and their children. The racing world will be quieter without him, though the echoes of those V8s he so loved will rumble on. In the end, Kyle Busch did what all great drivers strive for: he made the rest of us feel, for a few hours on a Sunday afternoon, that life itself was travelling at full throttle.