So the United Kingdom’s economy has contracted. The Treasury, in its infinite wisdom, now braces for a longer conflict in Iran. One must resist the urge to roll one’s eyes at the sheer predictability of it all. We have seen this film before. It is a tired, grainy reel from the projectionist’s floor, dusted off and run again for a generation too besotted with its own cleverness to recognise a classic disaster.
Listen closely: the sound you hear is the faint echo of Roman coins devalued to nothing, the rustle of Victorian bonds turned to wallpaper. We are witnessing not a mere economic blip, but a systemic failure of imagination. The Tehran effect, as the pundits will soon call it, is merely the catalyst. The rot was already there, festering beneath the polished floorboards of Whitehall.
For decades, the British establishment has congratulated itself on its sophistication, its multicultural savoir-faire, its ability to transcend the messy business of national interest. We have outsourced our defence, our manufacturing, our very sense of self to a globalised fantasy. And now, when the world reminds us that history is written in blood and oil, we find our cupboard bare. The Treasury’s frantic arithmetic is a comedy of errors: assuming that wars are line items on a spreadsheet, that the will of nations can be hedged like a derivatives portfolio.
This is not the first time the West has stumbled into the Middle East with a calculator in one hand and a moral imperative in the other. Consider the Suez Crisis of 1956, that glorious fiasco where Britain learned that empires require more than nostalgia. Or the 1973 oil shock, which revealed the West’s dependency on petrostates even as we lectured them on human rights. Today’s contraction is the latest verse in a very old song: the chorus of decline.
And yet, what truly irks is the refusal to learn. Our chattering classes, those guardians of progressive orthodoxy, will blame the Tories, or Brexit, or climate change, or the patriarchy. Anything but the uncomfortable truth: that a nation which forgets its own character, which treats its history as a museum exhibit rather than a living guide, will find itself adrift. The Victorians, for all their hypocrisy, understood that imperial burdens required imperial wallets. They paid for their wars, built their infrastructure, and maintained a culture of self-reliance. Today? We expect the world to run on goodwill and quarterly reports.
The Iran conflict is a mirror. It reflects not just Iranian intransigence, but our own hollowed-out statecraft. We have spent thirty years pretending that diplomacy is a substitute for power, that economic interdependence prevents war. Tell that to the Treasury, now counting the cost of a conflict they assured us would never happen. The contraction is a symptom of a deeper malaise: intellectual decadence. We have elevated the manager over the statesman, the analyst over the prophet. Our leaders cannot lead because they no longer know what they stand for.
Mark my words: this will get worse before it gets better. The longer conflict will expose the fragility of our supply chains, the brittleness of our social contract, the hollowness of our identity. We will be told to tighten our belts, to sacrifice for the greater good. But the greater good of what? A globalist dream that is already dead? A European project that never truly embraced us? A multicultural experiment that has eroded any sense of shared destiny?
What we need is not technocratic tinkering, but a reacquaintance with reality. The reality that nations are built on blood and soil, not on spreadsheets and treaties. That prosperity flows from strength, not sentiment. That the lesson of the Fall of Rome is not that all empires must fall, but that they fall when they forget what made them great. Britain, once the master of the global order, is now its dupe. The ghosts of our empire do not haunt us; we merely refuse to listen to their warnings.
So yes, the economy contracts. The Treasury braces. But until we recover a sense of national purpose, a willingness to defend our interests without apology, and a culture that values substance over style, we will continue to stumble from crisis to crisis. The only question is whether we will learn before the next contraction becomes a collapse.








