So it has come to this. A Love Island US star, all tan lines and manufactured drama, finds herself on the receiving end of a mob’s fury because her past includes a badge and a gun. The public, ever vigilant in its crusade against moral impurity, has decided that a former police officer cannot be permitted to sunbathe on television without a thorough reckoning. One imagines the ghost of Augustus Caesar nodding sagely from the afterlife: even in the empire’s twilight, the games must have their scapegoats.
Let us examine this phenomenon with the cold clarity it deserves. The star in question, whose name will no doubt be forgotten by the time the next season airs, was uncovered—the verb itself implies a shameful secret—to have served as a police officer. Cue the righteous indignation. Hometown protests, social media pile-ons, the whole theatre of public shaming that we have perfected in this, our decadent age. But what exactly is the crime here? Has she committed an atrocity? Has she abused her power? No, the mere fact of association is enough. She wore the uniform, therefore she is tainted.
This is intellectual decadence dressed as activism. We have reached a point where the past is not a prologue but a prison. Every person must be scrubbed clean of any history that might offend the sensibilities of the online mob. The Victorian era, for all its hypocrisy, at least understood the value of redemption. Today, we prefer the stocks. We prefer to hound and to harass, all from the safety of our smartphones.
Compare this to the fall of Rome, where the praetorian guard—the police of their day—were alternately revered and reviled depending on who held the emperor’s ear. When the guard lost its prestige, Rome lost its stability. Our own police forces are similarly at a crossroads, maligned by some and defended by others. But to tar every individual who ever served with the same brush is not justice; it is tribalism. It is the very opposite of the reasoned discourse that a functioning republic requires.
The irony, of course, is that Love Island is perhaps the most artificial, hollowed-out form of entertainment we have. It is bread and circuses for the Netflix age. And yet we demand that its participants be paragons of virtue, their pasts as pristine as their Instagram feeds. This is not a moral crusade. It is a hunting party. We have run out of real monsters, so we manufacture them from the ranks of reality television.
What does this say about national identity? In Britain, we have our own version of this madness, where yesterday’s hero is today’s villain with alarming speed. We have forgotten that people are complex, that a police officer can also be a mother, a friend, a person trying to make a living in a brutal industry. We have forgotten that forgiveness is a virtue. Instead, we have elevated condemnation to an art form.
So let the mob have its victory. This star will be cancelled, her fifteen minutes reduced to ash. But the rot goes deeper. It is the rot of a society that no longer believes in second chances, that prefers purity to humanity. In the long arc of history, this will be our epitaph: they were so busy burning witches that they forgot to build a civilisation.








