So Canada has taken the extraordinary step of banning Texas cattle. Why? A flesh-eating screwworm crisis, apparently. The UK, of course, is being held up as the gold standard for biosecurity. Because nothing says 'Victorian virtue' quite like strict quarantine protocols and a sense of imperial superiority.
Let us pause to reflect on the sheer absurdity of this situation. The United States, a country that boasts of its advanced agricultural technology, finds itself unable to contain a parasitic fly. Meanwhile, Canada, our polite northern neighbour, acts with the decisiveness of a Roman prefect closing the gates against barbarians. And the British, ever the schoolmasters, nod approvingly from their sceptred isle.
But this is not merely a story about screwworms. It is a parable of decadence. The Roman Empire fell, in part, because it neglected its borders. The US, in its hubris, allowed its biosecurity to slacken. Now it pays the price in beef exports. The UK, having learned from its own agricultural disasters (foot and mouth, BSE, the great potato famine of the 1840s), maintains a system that would make Queen Victoria proud.
We must ask ourselves: what does this imbroglio reveal about national identity? The Canadians, with their quiet efficiency, embody the spirit of a nation that takes its responsibilities seriously. The Americans, by contrast, seem to be re-enacting the last days of the Roman Republic, complete with plagues and political paralysis. And the British? Well, we are the ghost at the banquet, reminding everyone that civilisation requires constant vigilance.
Some will argue that this is an overreaction, that the screwworm crisis is a minor event blown out of proportion by sensational journalism. But I say this is precisely the kind of incident that historians will point to in future centuries as a harbinger of decline. When a great power cannot protect its livestock from a parasite, what hope is there for its political institutions?
The UK's biosecurity standards are not merely a technical achievement. They are a cultural artefact, a testament to our collective memory of past catastrophes. We remember the Great Plague, the Potato Famine, the collapse of our own agricultural systems. The Americans, living in a perpetual present, have forgotten these lessons. They are now paying the price.
In conclusion, Canada's ban on Texas cattle is a grim reminder that history is cyclical. Empires rise and fall, but parasites remain. The UK's praise is well deserved, but let us not be smug. For every nation that falls to decadence, another rises to take its place. The question is whether we can maintain our standards long enough to avoid the same fate.
And now, if you will excuse me, I have a pressing engagement with a plate of Canadian beef. At least I know it is screwworm free.









