Category: Politics

  • We like to think we’re tolerant, but we rarely are. Blaming migrants, benefit claimants, and minorities is easier than facing the systems and people truly responsible for the mess we’re in. While we argue sideways, they keep laughing anyway.

    The Comfort of Blaming Others
  • Disillusionment with politics is often seen as apathy, but what if it’s something sharper — recognition? When the patterns of power never change, and every “new” leader carries the same agenda in a different suit, refusal to vote becomes not…

    The Rational Disillusion: Why So Many Turn Away from Politics
  • Modern democracy looks vibrant on the surface — full of choice, debate, and noise. But behind the spectacle lies something quieter and more enduring: the machinery of power itself. This piece explores how fear, militarisation, and illusion keep citizens obedient…

    The Machinery of Power: How Illusions Keep Democracies Obedient
  • When four men were arrested for projecting images of Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein onto Windsor Castle, the charge of “malicious communications” raised more questions than it answered. On the surface, it looked like a simple stunt — but the…

    Windsor Castle, Trump, and the Weaponisation of Law
  • Israel’s assault on Gaza isn’t an invasion in the conventional sense — it’s a demolition. Cities are meant to be taken; Gaza is being erased. Behind the rubble lies a blueprint: not victory in war, but the permanent removal of…

    Gaza: This Isn’t an Invasion, It’s a Demolition
  • When Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana announced they were forming a new political party, the predictable response from political commentators was to warn of “splitting the left vote.” But here’s the thing — Labour hasn’t been left-wing for a long…

    A New Force on the Left: Why Corbyn & Sultana’s Movement Could Change the Political Landscape
  • Examining the Intersection of Identity and Political Consistency In recent years, political discourse has shifted in profound ways, exposing an unsettling tension between personality-driven allegiance and adherence to tangible policy principles. At the heart of this paradox lies the figure…

    Personality Over Policy: The Trump Paradox and the Illusion of Principles
  • We often hear politics described as a battle between the left and the right — Labour vs. Tories, Democrats vs. Republicans, socialism vs. capitalism. But sometimes, it starts to feel like that whole divide is less about genuine choice and…

    The Illusion of Choice? Left, Right, and the Politics of Division
  • Nigel Farage has been a prominent figure in British politics for many years, known for his charismatic and often controversial approach. His rise to prominence has been marked by his ability to appeal to the working class, despite being far…