London, that great imperial metropolis once of iron will and rigid etiquette, now finds itself a stage for the clownish antics of a visiting MAGA provocateur. The report is stark: a self-styled influencer, a strident disciple of the Trumpian cult, has admitted to assault at a London Tube station. The Home Office, in a rare flash of spine, now reviews his visa status. One must ask: what does this squalid episode reveal about the state of our nation?
Consider the setting. The London Underground, that Victorian marvel of engineering and order, a testament to a civilisation that prized punctuality, discipline, and quiet civility. Now it is a backdrop for a brawl with a man who makes his living by offending sensibilities. This is not an isolated incident. It is a symptom of a deeper intellectual and cultural rot.
We live in an age of decadence, a period eerily reminiscent of the late Roman Republic, where spectacles and vulgarity replaced virtue. The influencer class, these modern-day gladiators of outrage, peddle a politics of grievance and bravado. They are the court jesters of a dying empire, and we, the audience, are the ones who clap. Our ancestors built an empire on the back of stoicism and duty. We now import its destroyers and give them platforms.
Let us not mistake this for a mere immigration issue. The man’s visa status is a minor detail in a grander tragedy. The tragedy is that our society has lost its moral compass. We no longer know what to defend. The Victorian values of restraint and decency are mocked as passé. The result? A Tube carriage becomes a theatre of the absurd, where a foreign interloper feels entitled to assault a fellow passenger while livestreaming his own disgrace.
Some will call for tighter border controls. Others will decry the Home Office as too slow. They miss the point. The barbarians are not at the gates. They are already inside, feeding on our cultural marrow. We have become so enamoured with the idea of openness and tolerance that we have forgotten the value of walls. Not just physical borders but the invisible walls of shared norms, of mutual respect, of a common identity.
The influencer’s actions are a mirror. They reflect our own descent into what the ancients called stasis, a civil war of values. We argue over pronouns while our public spaces descend into chaos. We elevate the crass and the loud, believing that authenticity means abandoning all decorum. The result is a vacuum, and vacuums are filled by the most aggressive voices.
What is to be done? I propose not a policy but a posture. We must rediscover the stiff upper lip, not as an affectation but as a philosophy. We must teach our children that not every thought needs to be broadcast, that not every insult warrants a response, that dignity is a form of strength. The Home Office can deport this man, but it cannot deport the cultural disease he represents.
Let this incident be a wake-up call. The empire is not dead. It is asleep. And while it slumbers, the clowns and the conquerors dance on its corpse. Wake up, Britain. The Tube is not a circus. It is a symbol of what we once were. It is time to remember.









