So, the robots have arrived. Not in the Terminator sense, but in the shape of six-wheeled delivery pods trundling along British pavements, dispensing groceries and takeaway with the soulless efficiency of a spreadsheet. And what has been the response? A backlash. A luddite uprising of the sort that would have made the machine-breakers of 1811 blush. Councils are now demanding a rethink, businesses are warned of 'autonomous risks', and the usual suspects are wringing their hands about job losses and safety. All of which misses the point rather magnificently.
Let us take the long view. Every technological revolution from the spinning jenny to the smartphone has been greeted with howls of protest. The Victorians, for all their bluster about progress, had their own anxieties about the 'mechanical age'. But here is the difference. In the 19th century, the response was to adapt, to upskill, to build cathedrals of industry and empire. Today, the response is to regulate, to delay, to form committees. We have swapped the dynamism of the Industrial Revolution for the bureaucratic torpor of the administrative state.
Consider the objections. First, safety. The robots, we are told, are a hazard to pedestrians, especially the elderly and the very young. This is a risk, no doubt. But compare it to the risks we already accept: the two-tonne SUVs that plough through our streets, the delivery vans that double-park with impunity, the cyclists who treat red lights as optional. The robot is a minor inconvenience by comparison. Yet we single it out because it is new, because it lacks a human face, because it offends our romantic sensibilities about the 'human touch'. This is not risk assessment. This is aesthetic prejudice.
Second, jobs. The narrative is always the same: robots will replace delivery drivers, van drivers, warehouse workers. This is true in the short term. But it is also true that the Luddites were wrong. Mechanisation did not destroy labour; it transformed it. The cotton mills of Manchester did not permanently impoverish the working class; they eventually raised living standards across the board. The problem is not mechanisation but our failure to prepare for its consequences. We live in an age of unprecedented wealth, yet we cannot seem to educate our population for the jobs of tomorrow. That is not a technological failure. That is a failure of culture, of politics, of will.
Third, the aesthetics. The robots are ugly. They are slow. They are, in the words of one councillor, 'an eyesore'. Here we touch on something deeper. We have become a nation that prioritises appearance over function, comfort over progress. We would rather maintain the picturesque charm of our high streets than tolerate the necessary ugliness of innovation. The Victorians did not have this luxury. They built railways through the countryside, viaducts that scarred the landscape, factories that belched smoke. They did it because they understood that civilisation demands sacrifice. We, by contrast, demand that progress be seamless, invisible, and entirely without cost. This is the decadence of a society that has forgotten how to build.
The real risk is not that the robots will cause an accident. The real risk is that we will smother them in regulation, complaint, and delay. That we will become a museum of a nation, preserving our quaint pavements and our quaint jobs and our quaint sense of self, while the rest of the world charges ahead. The fall of Rome was not a single event; it was a slow decline into stasis, a loss of the will to adapt. We are witnessing that same stasis today. The robots are not the problem. The problem is us.
So by all means, let us have a rethink. But let it be a rethink about our attitudes, not about the technology. Let us ask why we have become so risk-averse, so change-averse, so contemptuous of the future. Let us ask why we prefer the comfort of the familiar to the productive discomfort of the new. Or we can continue to grumble, to regulate, to delay, and to watch our global standing crumble as surely as the Roman aqueducts fell into disrepair. The choice is ours. But make no mistake: the robots are coming. The only question is whether we will meet them as builders or as mourners.









