So another British tourist has perished abroad, this time in a paragliding accident in Spain. The Foreign Office, ever the nanny, now urges 'safety checks'. How predictably pathetic.
Let us not mince words: this tragedy is a symptom of a deeper malady, a cultural rot that has turned leisure into a reckless pursuit of adrenaline at any cost. We live in an age of manufactured risk, where the thrill of danger is commodified and sold to the middle classes as a holiday experience. Paragliding, like bungee jumping and base jumping, is not a sport but a flirtation with death dressed up as adventure.
The Victorians, for all their faults, understood the value of measured risk. They climbed mountains with ropes and guides, not with a wing and a prayer. Today, we have turned the skies into a carnival of stupidity.
The British man, name withheld for now, is yet another statistic in a long line of holidaymakers who confuse recklessness with liberation. The Foreign Office's response is typical: issue a statement, tick a box, move on. They will not ask the hard questions.
Why do we accept such casual risk? Because we have lost the capacity for genuine self-preservation. We live in a culture that celebrates 'living life to the fullest' as if every moment must be a crescendo.
This is the intellectual decadence of our era: the belief that safety is boring and risk is noble. It is not. It is a surrender to primal urges dressed up in the language of self-actualisation.
The Roman Empire, before its fall, saw a similar phenomenon: a craving for spectacle, for extreme experiences, for the thrill of the arena. We have our own arenas now: the mountains, the skies, the oceans. But the result is the same: avoidable deaths.
Let this be a lesson. Not just to paragliders, but to all of us who have bought into the lie that risk is virtue. The Foreign Office can issue all the safety checks it wants.
They will not change a culture that venerates the very stupidity that killed this man.








