So a man makes a racist gesture at a World Cup match, and the empire of tolerance demands an apology. The UK, that bastion of anti-discrimination legislation, stands as a shining example to the world. How very Victorian of us. We have become a nation of scolds, obsessed with the purity of public thought, policing every utterance and gesture as though the barbarians are at the gates. But the barbarians are inside. They are us.
Let us step back and examine this through the lens of Gibbon. The Roman Empire did not fall because of a single barbarian invasion. It decayed from within, through moral decrepitude and a loss of civic virtue. We now see a similar phenomenon: a society so consumed with virtue signalling that it mistakes apology for progress, gesture for substance. The man who made the racist gesture is merely a symptom of a deeper rot: a culture that has abandoned the very concept of robust, pluralistic debate for a pathetic piety.
Consider the Victorian era, a period of unparalleled imperial confidence. The Victorians did not apologise for their prejudices; they wore them as badges of honour. They believed in a hierarchy of civilisation and were unashamed to say so. Today, we have replaced that with a hollow egalitarianism that demands we all genuflect before the altar of equality, even as the temple is burning. The UK’s anti-discrimination laws are the new religion, with apologies as penance. But penance without genuine repentance is mere theatre.
This event, a man making a fool of himself at a football match, is trivial. Yet it is treated as a national crisis. Why? Because we have lost perspective. We have become intellectually decadent, mistaking the trivial for the profound. The constant hyperbole about racism is itself a form of cultural narcissism, a way for the elite to assert moral superiority over the masses. The apology is not for the victim; it is for the apologiser, a performance of virtue.
Historical cycles teach us that great civilisations rise when they are capable of confronting harsh truths and decline when they substitute sentiment for substance. Britain’s current obsession with apologising for past sins is a sign of decline, not moral progress. The real racism of our time is not the boorish gesture of a drunk at a football match, but the condescending assumption that non-white Britons require constant protection from the unwashed masses. That is the true indulgence of the elite.
I propose a different path: stop treating these incidents as national emergencies. A man made a racist gesture. He apologised. The end. Let us reserve our moral outrage for genuinely systemic injustices, not for the drunken follies of individuals. Otherwise, we risk becoming a society so fragile that it cannot withstand even the mildest of insults. And then the barbarians will truly have won.
In the end, this apology is not about racism. It is about our need for a secular confession, a ritual cleansing that allows us to pretend we are better than we are. But history will judge us not by the number of apologies we issue, but by the substance of our actions. And on that front, I fear we are found wanting.








