Seventeen injured, an ambulance siren drowning out the strum of a flamenco guitar, and the Foreign Office issuing a travel alert for the Costa del Sol. The tourist train crash at the Cártama festival is not merely a local mishap. It is a parable of our age.
Let me put this in perspective. In Victorian times, the British traveller endured rickety carriages and bandit-infested roads with stoic resilience. He packed a Webley revolver and a copy of Baedeker. Today’s tourist expects a climate-controlled coach, a guide with a microphone, and a sanitised experience of “authentic” Spain served on a tapas plate. The moment reality intrudes—a derailment, a fainting spell from too much sangría—the entire apparatus of the nanny state springs into action. Travel alerts, consular assistance, litigation. We have become a nation of guzzling, fragile creatures who demand that foreign lands conform to our safety standards.
Consider the historical parallel. The Roman Empire collapsed when its citizens could no longer tolerate discomfort, when the legions became mercenaries and the populace demanded bread and circuses. The modern tourist is the new Roman plebeian, ferried from resort to festival in a brightly painted choo-choo train, expecting his paella to be gluten-free and his fiesta to be risk-assessed. The Cártama crash is a small but telling symptom of a broader sickness: the illusion that we can consume culture without participating in its inherent chaos.
Of course, the inevitable calls for regulation will follow. More safety checks, slower speeds, better barriers. The Spanish authorities will bow to British pressure, and the tourist train will become a sterile, dull, and entirely predictable ride. The spontaneous joy of the Spanish festival—the crush of bodies, the unexpected spill of wine, the near-miss with a horse—will be further sanitised. We will have won safety and lost soul. The Foreign Office alert, issued in its careful bureaucratic prose, is really an epitaph for adventure.
And yet, the greatest irony is this: the tourists will keep coming. They will flock to Spain’s tapas season, undeterred by a minor derailment, because the very decadence that makes them soft also makes them oblivious. They will clamber back onto the next pastel-coloured train, smartphones out, filming the aftermath for Instagram. The crash will be a story, not a warning. The fall of Rome was not a single event but a long decline punctuated by such absurdities. The Cártama festival train is our chariot race, our gladiatorial combat, but without the blood or the meaning. Just 17 minor injuries and a British travel alert. How utterly, terminally modern.









