Here we are again. Another story that would have seemed like a far-fetched thriller plot a generation ago now merely elicits a weary sigh. A Norwegian teenager, barely out of childhood, arrested on British soil on suspicion of planning a targeted assassination. The details are scant, as they always are in the early hours of a breaking story, but the implications are as clear as the chime of Big Ben: we are living through the late stages of an empire, and the barbarians are no longer at the gates—they were born inside them.
Let us not pretend this is an isolated event. This is the logical endpoint of a culture that has spent the last half-century dismantling every pillar of its own identity, only to be shocked when the children of that wreckage turn to violence. The teenage years, in any civilisation, are a time of restless energy. In a healthy society, that energy is channelled into ambition, exploration, and the slow, steady building of a future. In a decadent one, it festers into nihilism, entitlement, and a chilling disregard for life itself.
Consider the parallels with the late Roman Republic. When the old virtues of duty and honour gave way to luxury and spectacle, the youth found themselves adrift. They had been raised on a diet of bread and circuses, their minds saturated with the thrill of the arena. They no longer believed in anything larger than themselves. Sound familiar? Our own circuses are the endless scroll of social media, the cult of celebrity, and the hollow gospel of self-expression. A teenager’s mind, pliable and impressionable, is bombarded with a thousand contradictory messages: be yourself, but conform; change the world, but only through likes and shares; stand for something, but don’t offend anyone. The result is a generation that is simultaneously arrogant and lost, capable of both grand gestures of empathy and monstrous acts of violence.
What makes this case particularly emblematic is the international element. A Norwegian teen, finding his way to England to allegedly commit a crime. This is the dark underbelly of the globalised world. We have so thoroughly eroded the significance of national borders that the idea of a foreign teenager plotting a murder in a country not his own seems almost routine. Yet in a healthier era, this would have been an extraordinary, almost unthinkable event. The very fact that it is even possible speaks to a breakdown of sovereignty and a loss of the communal bonds that once held nations together.
The language of the reporting is instructive: “targeted hit.” This is the argot of gangland violence and spy thrillers, now applied to a teenage suspect. We have become so accustomed to the aesthetics of crime that we no longer register the dissonance. A child, allegedly acting as an assassin. The Victorian era, for all its repressions, would have looked upon this with horror—not because violence was absent, but because it understood that the young were to be shaped into citizens, not left to fester into threats.
Of course, there will be the usual chorus of calls for understanding, for mental health interventions, for a deeper look at the social conditions that lead to such acts. And to a point, they are right. But we must also have the courage to say the unsayable: that some of the blame lies with a culture that has lost its nerve, that has become so terrified of imposing any form of moral or intellectual structure on its youth that it has left them to construct their own—and the results are prisons, graves, and shattered families.
Let us not comfort ourselves with the thought that this is an outlier. Every civilisation that has reached the height of its powers has faced this moment: the moment when the young no longer feel bound by the old rules, when violence becomes a tool of personal expression, when the very concept of a meaningful life is abandoned for the cheap thrill of transgression. The Romans turned to gladiatorial combat and excess. The Victorians fell into a prudish hypocrisy that eventually crumbled under its own weight. Our turn has come, and we are facing a century of such stories unless we wake from this stupor of self-absorption.
For now, the teenage suspect sits in a British police station, the focus of a counter-terrorism investigation. The story will have its day in the headlines, then fade, overshadowed by the next outrage. But the question will remain: what sort of culture have we built, that produces children capable of this? And what will be left of us when we finally admit the answer?












