So here we are. Britain, the nation that once ruled the waves and mapped the stars, is now deploying flies and dogs to combat a flesh-eating screwworm. One might laugh if it weren’t so pathetically symbolic. Our government, in a fit of post-imperial panic, has backed a US plan that sounds less like cutting-edge biosecurity and more like a Monty Python sketch. ‘Release sterile flies,’ they say. ‘Train sniffer dogs,’ they bark. And we are expected to applaud this as a triumph of modern science.
Let us recall the Victorians. When faced with a pestilence, they did not fiddle about with insect air forces. They quarantined entire ports, burned infected ships, and if necessary, carpet-bombed the problem with colonial efficiency. Today, we have ‘biosecurity threats’ and ‘multilateral frameworks’. We have meetings about meetings. The screwworm, a maggot that burrows into living flesh, is a fitting metaphor for our own intellectual decay: a parasite that feeds on the host until nothing remains but a hollow shell.
This is not merely a technical problem. It is a moral and cultural one. We have lost the nerve to act decisively. Instead, we outsource our defence to sterile flies and Labrador retrievers, as if the animal kingdom will save us from ourselves. The Romans used legions. We use lab coats. The difference is everything.
But perhaps I am being too harsh. The plan has its merits. Releasing sterile male flies to mate with wild females is elegant, in a Darwinian sort of way. And dogs can sniff out infected livestock faster than any human inspector. Yet the deeper question lingers: why must we always wait until the worm is at our door? Biosecurity is not a technology; it is a state of mind. Until we recover the will to act preemptively, to treat threats as enemies rather than inconveniences, we will always be playing catch-up with nature’s horrors.
What does this say about Britain? It says we are a nation that has traded Churchillian resolve for bureaucratic tinkering. We debate the colour of the recycling bin while the screwworm eats our cattle. We worry about offending foreign sensibilities while the parasite crosses borders unchecked. The fall of empires is rarely a single event; it is a slow slide into irrelevance, masked by a veneer of good intentions.
I am not advocating for draconian measures. I am advocating for pride. For a sense that we are capable of more than this. The flesh-eating screwworm is a natural phenomenon. Our response is a cultural phenomenon. And right now, our culture is producing a response that is risible. We deserve better. The question is whether we still have the stomach to demand it.










