Posts

The Enshittification of Everything Has a Cure... Tax the Shit Out of Shit!

Image
Something has gone wrong with almost everything at once. Here is why, and what we can do about it. There is a word for what is happening to us, and we have the writer Cory Doctorow to thank for coining it. Enshittification. The process by which platforms, products and services that once genuinely worked for us are slowly, methodically degraded, their value extracted from our pockets and our attention and redistributed upwards, until what remains is a hollow shell wearing the face of something we once found useful. The name is crude because the phenomenon is crude. But Doctorow is missing something. His diagnosis is sharp; his prescription is not. This essay attempts to identify the root cause and, more importantly, the cure, because until we name the driving force correctly, we will keep producing clever analyses and achieving precisely nothing. The genius of Doctorow's framing is that it describes a mechanism, not merely a feeling. Things are not just worse. They are being made wo...

Scotland’s deer crisis: who pays the bill for the Highlands’ most expensive hobby?

Image
 Opinion • Land Reform • Ecology A million deer roam Scotland, kept in numbers by a culture of sporting estates and trophy hunting. The public pays £135m a decade for the privilege. It doesn’t have to be this way. There is a peculiar kind of cognitive dissonance required to look at the Scottish Highlands and call them wild. The bare, treeless hills are romantic to the tourist’s eye but catastrophic to the ecologist’s. They are not a natural landscape. They are the product of centuries of land management in the interests of a very small number of people, sustained to this day at extraordinary cost to everyone else.   New figures,  revealed by The Ferret , crystallise the scale of this dysfunction. Scotland’s publicly funded forestry bodies have spent more than £134m controlling deer over the last decade. Forestry and Land Scotland alone spent £77.6m between 2014 and 2025, a sum that has nearly doubled from £5.3m to £10.4m in a single decade. A further £56.4m was ...

Starmer's Big Lie: Every "Investment" Announcement Is Britain Being Sold to the Epstein Class

Image
The Investment Lie: How Britain Is Selling Its Future to Pay Its Rent & That Includes Our Wildlife Every few months, the prime minister or minister steps up to a podium and announces, with great fanfare, that billions of pounds of “investment” are flowing into Britain. Into communities. Into nature. Into housing. Into our future. The numbers are always impressive. The press releases are always confident. The backdrops are always carefully chosen: a construction site, a wind farm, a rewilded hillside, a smiling family outside a new home. And it is, almost entirely, a lie.   Not a lie in the technical sense that the money does not exist, or that nothing will be built. Something will indeed be built. Some trees will be planted. Some houses will go up. Some wetlands will be restored. The lie is in the word “investment” itself, and in the silence about who ends up owning what, and on what terms the rest of us get to use it. What Investment Actually Means Investment, in the hones...