In a ghastly spectacle that would make even the most jaded coroner reach for a stiff G&T, a Brazilian woman has met her maker following a rope-jumping incident in São Paulo. The tragedy, as reported by our esteemed colleagues at the BBC, has prompted the usual solemn hand-wringing and stern editorials about the need for global safety standards. But let’s be honest, dear reader: when it comes to wrapping human beings in cotton wool so thick it could muffle a dying scream, Britain is the undisputed world champion. We have regulations for the regulations. We have risk assessments for the risk of doing a risk assessment. And yet, somehow, people still manage to expire in the most absurd ways. Perhaps it’s time we exported our bureaucratic genius to the developing world, along with our fondness for queue-jumping and passive-aggressive notes left on windscreens.
The victim, a 34-year-old thrill-seeker whose name I shall not repeat lest I be sued, was participating in a ‘bridge swing’ – that peculiarly Latin American pastime of hurling oneself off a perfectly good structure with a piece of elastic tied to one’s ankles. The rope, as it transpired, was not nearly as elastic as the Brazilian economy, and the poor woman’s neck met a pavement with an enthusiasm that no amount of risk assessment could have mitigated. Local authorities, in a flurry of panic, have suspended the activity pending an investigation. Because, you see, nothing says ‘we care about safety’ like banning things after someone has already gone splat. It’s the bureaucratic equivalent of closing the stable door after the horse has bolted, set fire to the barn, and filed a compensation claim.
Now, I can already hear the pious tut-tutting from the health and safety mandarins in Whitehall. “Ah, but in Britain, such a tragedy would never occur,” they will bleat, stroking their clipboards with smug satisfaction. And they are correct. In Britain, we have what is colloquially known as ‘the HSE’. The Health and Safety Executive, a government body so powerful that it once banned a vicar from using a stepladder to change a lightbulb, lest he fall and sue the Church of England for not providing a cherry picker. Under British rules, every bridge swing would require a full risk assessment, a qualified supervisor with a certificate in ‘Extreme Elasticity Management’, and a safety harness so complex that by the time you are strapped in, you have lost the will to jump. You are then free to enjoy a cup of tea and a biscuit while filling out a post-activity questionnaire on ‘emotional impact’. Thrilling it is not. But at least you are alive to complain about the bureaucracy.
Of course, we Brits are not content with just regulating our own fun. Oh no. We have a moral obligation to teach the rest of the world how to have fun in a manner befitting a nation of shopkeepers and insurance adjusters. We have exported our health and safety culture with missionary zeal. British safety consultants now roam the globe, clipboards in hand, muttering about ‘adequate supervision’ and ‘dynamic risk assessment’. They are the new colonialists, but instead of flags, they plant warning signs. Instead of guns, they brandish liability waivers. And yet, despite our best efforts, people still die in foreign lands while doing things that we have deemed too dangerous for our own citizens. The Brazilian rope jumper is just the latest casualty in the war against having a good time.
I propose a new solution: mandatory British safety inspections for all high-risk activities worldwide. Let us send a team of HSE inspectors to every bungee jump, zip line, and fairground ride on the planet. We shall make them so safe that nobody will want to do them anymore. We shall replace the adrenaline with paperwork. We shall turn death-defying stunts into death-by-boredom. It is the only way to ensure that no one, anywhere, ever dies while having fun. Because that is the British way: to make everything so dreadfully safe that life itself becomes a statistically insignificant event. And then, when the last thrill-seeker has shuffled off this mortal coil due to a paper cut from a risk assessment form, we can all file a collective claim against the universe for the loss of joy.
Until then, I shall raise a gin and tonic to the Brazilian woman who, in her final moments, experienced something we have long since lost: the sheer, unadulterated thrill of living dangerously. Cheers, love. The paperwork’s on its way.








