Thursday, 12 March 2026

HOW WAR HINDERS AMERICA IN THE AI RACE WITH CHINA

12 March 2026

1. The Pentagon, Strategy And Unexpected Consequences

The Pentagon has floor after floor of offices full of strategists and planners. One assumes they analyse first, second and third order effects of any conflict, prepare Plan Bs, timings and so on. They surely knew that this war was not going to work out the way Trump and Netanyahu thought it would work out they thought so and they said, three-star general Kaine said so, payborn Trump the military may not be able to complete the mission. 

And indeed, the world’s strongest military by far finds itself twelve days into a conflict and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Iran is pushing out drone boats laiden with explosives, so no tanker will risk that a nor will any insurer. 

Most commentary focuses on the obvious consequences: higher oil prices and disruption to global shipping. But there is an overlooked question. What thought has gone into the effect on America’s technological competition with China?

After all, American global leadership depends in part on winning the technology race, and today that race centres on Artificial Intelligence.

---

2. AI Runs On Electricity

Artificial Intelligence is often presented as a triumph of software and algorithms. In reality it is also a massive industrial system that runs on electricity.

Training large AI models requires enormous data centres packed with specialised processors. These installations consume extraordinary amounts of power.

Here the comparison with China is uncomfortable. Over the past two decades the United States has added relatively little to its electricity generation and transmission capacity. China, by contrast, has expanded its grid at breathtaking speed, reportedly adding the equivalent of the entire American electricity grid in roughly four years.

If the future of AI depends on access to abundant electricity, then the underlying energy infrastructure matters as much as the technology itself.


---

3. The Hyperscalers And The Infrastructure Race

At the centre of this system sit the hyperscalers.

These are the giant technology companies that operate vast global cloud computing networks. Their infrastructure forms the backbone of the modern internet, supporting Artificial Intelligence, cloud services, streaming platforms and corporate computing systems.

Companies such as Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Oracle are building ever larger data centres across the world.

These projects require two things above all: power and capital.

Much of the investment comes from the companies’ own balance sheets. But a substantial portion is financed through borrowing. That means the economics of AI infrastructure depend heavily on stable financial conditions and relatively low interest rates.

Wars complicate this equation. Military spending increases government borrowing, which pushes bond yields higher. Higher yields raise the cost of financing the massive infrastructure that AI development requires.

Amazon – through Amazon Web Services (AWS)
Microsoft – through Azure
Google – through Google Cloud
Meta – operating huge internal data-centre networks
Alibaba – dominant hyperscaler in China
Tencent – another large Chinese cloud provider

---

4. Energy Prices And The Geography Of Data Centres

Energy prices also matter.

Many hyperscale companies have been exploring locations in the Gulf region precisely because of abundant and relatively cheap energy. Large data centres require reliable electricity at competitive prices in order to remain viable.

A prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz pushes oil prices upward, increases energy costs globally and introduces uncertainty into energy markets.

This is hardly the environment that technology companies prefer when planning multi-billion-dollar infrastructure projects.


---

5. The Strategy

The ingredients required for success in the AI race are surprisingly mundane.

A modern and expanding electricity grid.
Low and stable interest rates.
Reliable energy supplies.
Oil prices somewhere in the $60 range and certainly well below $100.

In short, the geopolitical conditions that allow hyperscalers to build the digital infrastructure of the future.

American hegemony ultimately depends on technological leadership, so these under appreciated economic conditions matter as much as aircraft carriers or missile systems.


---

6. Glossary

Artificial Intelligence (AI) – computer systems capable of learning from data and performing tasks that normally require human reasoning or pattern recognition.

Hyperscaler – very large technology companies that operate massive global cloud computing infrastructure supporting AI, internet services and corporate computing.

Data Centre – a facility housing thousands of servers and specialised processors used to store and process digital information. Cf data centre v. AI data centre. 

Electricity Grid – the network of power generation, transmission and distribution systems that deliver electricity to industry and households.

Strait of Hormuz – the narrow maritime passage between Iran and Oman through which roughly one fifth of global oil trade normally passes.


---

References


International Energy Agency – Electricity 2024
https://www.iea.org/reports/electricity-2024

U.S. Energy Information Administration – Electric Power Data
https://www.eia.gov/electricity

Bloomberg – AI Data Centre Power Demand
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-05-09/ai-power-demand-data-centers

McKinsey – The Rise of Hyperscale Data Centres
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/technology-media-and-telecommunications/our-insights/the-coming-hyperscale-data-center-boom

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

FINANCIAL AND GEOPOLITICAL ORIGINS OF MODERN WEST ASIA

10 March 2026


This post argues that the modern crises of West Asia were not born from timeless sectarian hatreds, but from a specific imperial and financial settlement imposed during and after the First World War. Britain and France carved up the collapsing Ottoman world through overlapping promises to Arabs, Zionists and each other, while oil concessions, banking interests and strategic trade routes shaped the borders that followed. The result was a regional order built less on the wishes of its peoples than on the needs of empire, finance and petroleum – a system later reinforced in Iran through foreign interference, the 1953 coup, the 1979 revolution and the US-Israel Iran wars that continue to define and set fire to the region today. 

1. THE FINANCIAL AND IMPERIAL ORIGINS

A coherent historical analysis tracing how decisions made by European imperial powers during World War I - shaped by overlapping diplomatic commitments and the strategic imperatives of oil and finance - constructed the foundations of the modern Middle East.

The narrative connects the McMahon Hussein Correspondence, the Sykes Picot Agreement, and the Balfour Declaration with a parallel architecture of oil concessions and transnational capital, illuminating how contradictory promises, secret treaties, and corporate cartels configured borders, states, and conflicts that still reverberate today.



2. THE PRE WAR CHESSBOARD - DECLINING OTTOMANS AND RISING IMPERIAL AMBITIONS

For six centuries, the Ottoman Empire governed the lands that would become Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Palestine, evolving from a 17th century global power into a 19th century polity weakened by administrative corruption, military defeats (first to Russia, then to rising European powers), and economic stagnation rooted in a failure to industrialize.

 The Ottoman Empire - sultans, dynasties and legacies 

European colonial pressure intensified.

• France took Algeria in 1830 and Tunisia in 1881 and eyed Syria.
• Britain controlled Egypt and administered the Suez Canal while building profitable networks across the Persian Gulf.
• Russia pushed toward Constantinople and the Black Sea Straits.
• Italy moved into Libya.
• Germany advanced economic reach via the Berlin – Baghdad railway.

Oil - long known regionally as bitumen and pitch - gained strategic urgency in the early 20th century.

In 1901, William Knox Darcy secured from the Shah of Persia a 60 year exclusive prospecting concession for £20,000 cash, equal company shares, and 16% of future profits.

After years of barren drilling, a 50 foot gusher erupted at Majid Suleiman at 4 a.m. on May 26, 1908, birthing the Anglo Persian Oil Company (APOC).

Birth of the Anglo Persian Oil Company (APOC) at Majid Suleiman, 1908

In 1911, Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty, concluded Britain’s naval supremacy could not rest on coal alone.

The Royal Navy ran entirely on coal, but oil powered ships promised:

• greater speed
• greater manoeuvrability
• greater range

Britain possessed almost no domestic oil and relied on imports from dominant players: American Standard Oil and Royal Dutch Shell.

In 1913, Churchill told Parliament Britain must control oil at its source.

Two months before World War I, the British government purchased a 51% controlling stake in APOC, a decision that received royal assent less than a week before war began and declared a strategic intent that would steer British foreign policy for decades.

Mesopotamian oil - especially in Mosul, Baghdad, and Basra - was already attracting investors and states.

Calouste Gulbenkian, a shrewd Armenian broker, had described immense deposits beneath Ottoman soil as early as 1892 and spent his career securing personal percentages of complex deals.

By 1912, the Turkish Petroleum Company (TPC) formed.

• Anglo Persian held 47.5%
• Royal Dutch Shell 22.5%
• Deutsche Bank 25%
• Gulbenkian personally 5%

On June 28, 1914, the Ottoman Grand Vizier promised a concession for oil in Baghdad and Mosul to TPC.

Four days later, Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated, war ensued, and the Ottoman Empire joined Germany – resetting the entire landscape.


3. A WEB OF DECEIT - BRITAIN’S THREE CONTRADICTORY PROMISES

Before victory or even consultation with local populations, Britain and France were already partitioning the Middle East.

The under told dimension is financial.

The diplomatic promises mapped onto strategic calculations about oil, capital, and wartime necessity.

In 1916 Britain sought allies with religious authority, local knowledge, and mobilisation capacity against the Ottomans.

It then issued multiple contradictory promises over the same territories.

First – the Arabs.

Beginning in July 1915, Sir Henry McMahon, Britain’s High Commissioner in Egypt, entered secret correspondence with Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca – the most respected Islamic authority in Arabia.

Britain needed the Arab Revolt to counter the Ottoman Sultan’s jihad.

Across ten letters (July 1915 – March 1916), McMahon effectively promised Arab independence over a vast territory encompassing most of the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, Palestine, and Mesopotamia.

Hussein read the exchange as a genuine commitment and launched the Arab Revolt in June 1916.

His son Faisal led forces alongside T.E. Lawrence.

They captured Aqaba, sabotaged railways, ambushed convoys, and eventually entered Damascus near the end of the war believing they were stepping into the promised independent Arab state.

Thousands died believing in those letters.

Second – Sykes Picot.

Negotiations began in November 1915 between Sir Mark Sykes and François Georges Picot.

On May 16, 1916, while Arab fighters were already in the field, the secret Sykes Picot Agreement was ratified.

It allocated Syria and Lebanon to France, Iraq and Palestine to Britain, and left other territories as nominally independent but effectively controlled zones.

Sykes famously described drawing a line from the “E” in Acre to the last “K” in Kirkuk.

That line sliced through communities, trade routes, tribal lands, and family networks.

Third – Balfour.

On November 2, 1917, Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour wrote a 67 word letter to Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild.

The letter declared that Britain favoured the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.

Britain had now made three promises to three constituencies about overlapping lands – simultaneously.

 Britain's three parallel promises 


4. THE FINANCIAL ARCHITECTURE - ROTHSCHILDS, ZIONISM AND GEOPOLITICS

The Balfour letter’s addressee – Lord Lionel Walter Rothschild – reflects the Rothschild family’s long standing relationship with Palestine.

The Rothschild banking dynasty had dominated European private finance for more than a century.

Nathan Rothschild built the British branch’s influence.

Family networks financed governments, infrastructure, and extractive industries including Royal Dutch Shell and Rio Tinto.

Baron Edmund James de Rothschild, of the French branch, moved beyond banking.

Following pogroms in Russia during the 1880s and the growth of Zionist thought, he began financing Jewish settlements in Ottoman Palestine.

Beginning in 1882 he supported settlements such as:

• Rishon Lezion
• Petah Tikva
• Zikron Yaakov
• Rosh Pina
• Metula

He financed:

• houses
• roads
• wineries
• irrigation systems
• agricultural training

Over roughly fifty years he spent an estimated six million dollars of personal wealth building agricultural and industrial infrastructure.

By 1918 Rothschild linked holdings covered roughly one twentieth of Palestine’s fertile land.

In 1924 these investments were organised into the Palestine Jewish Colonization Association (PICA).

PICA acquired over 125,000 acres and helped establish more than forty settlements while developing electric power, potash extraction, cement production and the basis of an independent economy.

Place names such as Rothschild Boulevard in Tel Aviv and towns like Zichron Yaakov, Binyamina and Pardes Hanna still reflect this history.

The British government also believed support for Zionism could mobilise Jewish financial networks and political support – particularly in the United States – during the difficult later years of the war.

Thus diplomacy, finance and military strategy were closely intertwined.

 The Balfour declaration, 1917 


5. THE POST WAR SETTLEMENT - BORDERS AND OIL

After the Ottoman collapse, the Allied powers formalised their plans.

In 1918 British forces entered Mosul - three days after the armistice with Germany - securing the most promising oil territory.

This move ignored the earlier Sykes Picot arrangement.

 The Sykes-Picot Agreement, 1916 

At the San Remo Conference in April 1920 the powers formalised mandates and oil interests.

France ceded Mosul to Britain’s Iraqi mandate in exchange for a 25% share in the oil company that would exploit the region.

Territory and oil concessions were negotiated simultaneously.

American companies protested exclusion.

After prolonged pressure they were admitted into the renamed Iraq Petroleum Company.

Ownership became:

• Anglo Persian – 23.75%
• Royal Dutch Shell – 23.75%
• Compagnie Française des Pétroles – 23.75%
• American consortium – 23.75%
• Gulbenkian – 5%

The Red Line Agreement prevented partners from developing oil independently within the former Ottoman lands.

 The Redline agreement, 1928 

The boundary of the agreement was literally drawn with a red crayon around the Ottoman Empire.

Production levels could even be restricted to maintain global oil prices.

Ordinary populations were unaware their natural resources were being managed through a hidden cartel.


6. PERSIA TO IRAN – FROM CONSTITUTIONAL REVOLUTION TO THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC (1906–2026)

While the modern Middle East was being carved up between Britain and France after the First World War, Persia – later Iran – followed a different but equally decisive trajectory.

Instead of becoming a formal mandate, Iran became the battleground between national sovereignty, foreign oil interests, and great power geopolitics.

The story runs through four turning points: 1906, 1953, 1979, and the present confrontation of the 2020s.


6.1 THE CONSTITUTIONAL REVOLUTION – PERSIA’S FIRST MODERN REVOLUTION (1906)

Iran entered the twentieth century already struggling with foreign influence.

The ruling Qajar dynasty had granted sweeping concessions to foreign companies and governments, particularly Britain and Russia.

Economic hardship, corruption, and resentment against foreign domination produced a remarkable political movement.

In 1906, merchants, clerics, and intellectuals forced the Shah to accept a constitution and a national parliament (Majlis).

The goal was to limit royal authority and defend national sovereignty.

It was one of the first constitutional revolutions in the Middle East.

Yet the new system faced immediate pressure from outside powers.

In 1907, Britain and Russia signed a convention dividing Persia into northern and southern spheres of influence, effectively undermining the new constitutional government.

Iran had achieved political awakening – but not independence.

  • Constitutional Revolutiona political movement seeking to limit royal power by establishing a constitution and parliament.

6.2 OIL AND NATIONALISM – MOSSADEGH AND THE 1953 COUP

Oil transformed Iran’s political destiny.

Since the 1908 discovery of petroleum, Britain had dominated Iranian oil through the Anglo Iranian Oil Company (later BP).

Many Iranians believed their country was receiving only a small share of its own wealth.

In 1951, nationalist leader Mohammad Mosaddegh became prime minister.

His government nationalised the oil industry in order to reclaim Iranian sovereignty.

Britain responded with an international oil embargo.

In 1953, Britain and the United States organised a covert operation – Operation Ajax – to overthrow Mosaddegh.

The coup removed Iran’s elected government and restored the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, to power.

The monarchy then ruled with strong Western support for the next twenty six years.

For many Iranians this event became the defining symbol of foreign interference in their politics.

  • Operation Ajaxthe 1953 CIA and MI6 backed coup that overthrew Iran’s elected prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh.

6.3 THE PAHLAVI MONARCHY – MODERNISATION AND AUTHORITARIAN RULE

After the coup the Shah launched an ambitious programme of rapid modernisation.

This included the White Revolution, a series of reforms intended to transform Iranian society.

These reforms included:

• land redistribution
• industrial expansion
• education programmes
• women’s suffrage

But the political system remained authoritarian.

Opposition parties were suppressed.

The secret police organisation SAVAK became notorious for repression.

Meanwhile Western influence remained highly visible.

Iran became one of Washington’s key regional allies during the Cold War.

For many Iranians the system came to represent modernisation without political freedom and independence.


6.4 THE ISLAMIC REVOLUTION – THE SYSTEM COLLAPSES (1979)

By the late 1970s opposition to the Shah united a wide range of forces:

• religious leaders
• nationalists
• students
• left wing movements

Mass protests escalated during 1978.

In February 1979, the monarchy collapsed and Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini returned from exile to lead the revolution.

Iran became the Islamic Republic of Iran, replacing the monarchy with a political system combining clerical authority and republican institutions.

The revolution dramatically changed Iran’s relations with the West.

Later that year Iranian students seized the U.S. embassy in Tehran, triggering the hostage crisis and the breakdown of diplomatic relations.

  • Islamic Republica political system combining religious authority with republican political institutions.

6.5 FOUR DECADES OF CONFRONTATION (1979–2025)

Since the revolution Iran has existed in a tense relationship with Western powers.

Several key events shaped this period:

• the Iran–Iraq War (1980–1988)
• decades of economic sanctions
• disputes over Iran’s nuclear programme
• regional proxy conflicts involving groups aligned with Tehran

Diplomatic efforts have occasionally reduced tensions.

The most significant was the 2015 nuclear agreement (JCPOA).

However the agreement collapsed after the United States withdrew in 2018, reimposing sanctions.

Since then relations have deteriorated again.

Regional conflicts involving Israel, Lebanon, Gaza, Syria and Yemen increasingly intersect with the confrontation between Iran and Western allies.

  • Sanctionseconomic restrictions imposed by states to pressure another country’s government.

6.6 IRAN AND THE NEW REGIONAL STRUGGLE (2025–2026)

By the mid 2020s Iran has become a central actor in the strategic balance of West Asia.

It is simultaneously:

• a regional military power
• a centre of ideological resistance to Western influence
• a target of sanctions and strategic pressure

Tensions escalated again during 2025–2026, with Israeli and American military actions and Iranian retaliation raising fears of wider war across the region.

From Tehran’s perspective the struggle is part of a long historical arc beginning with the foreign interventions of the early twentieth century.

From Washington and its allies’ perspective Iran represents a disruptive regional challenger.

Thus the conflict that began with oil concessions and imperial rivalry more than a century ago continues to shape the geopolitics of the present.


6.7 THE PERSIAN PARALLEL

Seen alongside the history of the Arab Middle East, Iran represents a parallel story rather than a separate one.

In both cases the decisive forces were:

• foreign oil interests
• great power rivalry
• local nationalist movements
• political systems struggling between modernisation and sovereignty

But while the Arab world was shaped by colonial mandates, Iran’s trajectory was shaped by covert intervention and revolution.

The result is the geopolitical landscape visible today.

  • National sovereigntythe principle that a state should control its own political and economic decisions without external domination.

1906 - Constitutional Revolution1

1953 - CIA / MI6 coup

1979- Islamic Revolution

2025 / 2026 - Iran at the centre of a new regional war

7. A CENTURY OF CONSEQUENCES - THE ENDURING LEGACY

The secret agreements became public after the Russian Revolution.

In November 1917 the Bolsheviks published the text of Sykes Picot.

Arab leaders discovered Britain had promised their lands to other powers.

T.E. Lawrence later wrote that he felt he had been a fraud, promising freedom while knowing the agreements.

The McMahon Hussein correspondence remained secret until 1939.

Meanwhile the mandates reshaped the region.

Syria and Lebanon were divided under French control.

Iraq was created from three Ottoman provinces – Mosul, Baghdad and Basra.

Kurds promised autonomy under the Treaty of Sèvres saw it disappear in the Treaty of Lausanne.

Britain installed Faisal as king of Iraq in 1921 under a constitution designed to preserve British influence.

Palestine became the site of accelerating Jewish immigration and Arab resistance.

The Arab Revolt of 1936 – 1939 was crushed by British forces.

In 1948, Israel appeared on the map for the first time, despite its not honouring the terms of recognition required by the United Nations. Rhere followed the displacement of roughly 700,000 Palestinians - the Nakba (the catastrophe).

Refugee communities continue to exist across Lebanon, Jordan and Syria today.


8. CONCLUSION - CAPITAL AND CONFLICT

The years 1915 to 1922 reveal a powerful relationship between financial capital and geopolitical decisions.

The men drawing borders were not only diplomats.

They were linked to systems of finance, oil concessions and strategic trade routes.

Arabs were promised independence to mobilise wartime support.

Zionism gained backing partly from conviction and partly from strategic and financial considerations.

Borders were drawn according to strategic corridors and oil concessions rather than local social realities.

The people living in these territories were rarely consulted.

The lines drawn during those years became the borders of states, armies and identities.

History continues to operate through institutions, borders and unresolved promises.

Lines drawn in 1916 continue to shape political tensions today.

The Middle East seen in current headlines was constructed in those negotiations - by those men - for those interests.

The conflicts are not simply ancient rivalries.

They are the consequences of decisions taken deliberately during the collapse of an empire.

Monday, 9 March 2026

A SPECIALIST HIGH TECH AGENCY FOR THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT

OVERVIEW

A small architectural agency has just made a rather remarkable move. Instead of competing in the crowded world of traditional design studios, it has begun repositioning itself as a specialist consultancy at the intersection of AI Artificial Intelligence, software and architecture. Equipped with advanced software engineering tools and a private AI infrastructure running LLM local language models, this agency can analyse planning rules, automate design workflows and simulate development scenarios. 

The story reflects a broader shift taking place across the construction and property development sectors: in response to the increasing complexity of projects, planning regulations, cost pressures and environmental requirements, there is now a demand for far more sophisticated analysis than traditional design workflows can provide.

This is precisely where small, technically specialised and agile consultancies are beginning to play a role and architects are moving from drawing buildings to designing intelligent systems.

Just as FinTech transformed banking fifteen years ago, a new generation of small groups of engineers are creating ConTech tools that will now begin reshaping how buildings are designed and delivered.

Local language model – an AI model running on private hardware rather than external cloud services.

Design automation – the use of algorithms to generate or optimise design solutions.

1. AI And The Future Of Architecture

There is currently a great deal of noise about Artificial Intelligence replacing jobs. The debate began in software development but it is now spreading into many other professions, including architecture. AI tools can already generate code, analyse data, produce reports and create design imagery. It is therefore understandable that architects are asking whether their profession may face the same disruption.

Yet history suggests something more subtle usually occurs. New technologies rarely eliminate complex professions. Instead they remove repetitive work inside those professions. When spreadsheets appeared they did not eliminate accountants, but they removed a vast amount of manual calculation. The role of the accountant shifted toward interpretation and advice.

Architecture contains many similar forms of repetitive labour. Drawings, compliance checks, schedules and cost calculations all follow predictable patterns that software can increasingly assist with. The profession therefore evolves rather than disappears. The architect gradually becomes less of a draughtsman and more of a designer of systems.

A useful historical parallel comes from finance. Around 2008–2012, small groups of engineers began building software platforms that challenged the traditional banking system. Companies such as Stripe, Square and TransferWise (now Wise) demonstrated that a handful of technically skilled founders could create tools that were faster, cheaper and easier to use than the systems maintained by large financial institutions. What later became known as the FinTech revolution began not inside the banks, but in small technology-driven teams experimenting with software.

Something similar may now be emerging in the built environment. As digital modelling, data systems and artificial intelligence become more central to how buildings are conceived and delivered, small specialist agencies are beginning to develop software tools that complement or sometimes bypass traditional architectural workflows. If the analogy holds, the ConTech wave of the 2020s may look surprisingly similar to the FinTech wave of the early 2010s: small technical teams building new digital tools around industries that have historically been slow to changes. 

  • Artificial Intelligence - computer systems capable of performing tasks that normally require human reasoning, pattern recognition and learning.

  • Automation - the use of machines or software to perform tasks with minimal human intervention.

  • FinTech – digital technologies and software platforms designed to automate or improve financial services such as payments, banking and lending.

  • PropTech (property technology) – technology platforms transforming property development, real estate investment and building management.

  • ConTech (construction technology) – software systems and digital tools used to improve how buildings and infrastructure are designed, constructed and managed.


2. What AI Can Already Do Inside Architectural Practice

AI assisted design tools are already capable of performing several technical tasks that traditionally consumed large amounts of time in architectural studios. These tools are developing rapidly and are beginning to alter the internal structure of many design offices.

Typical examples include:

• generating multiple design variations automatically through generative design systems
• analysing planning regulations and compliance requirements
• producing early stage spatial layouts and building massing studies
• estimating material quantities and construction costs
• assisting with documentation and technical reports

The result is not the disappearance of architects but a shift in where their expertise is applied. The architect becomes the person who defines the design problem, sets the constraints, selects the appropriate computational tools and evaluates the results.

The professional role therefore becomes closer to system design than manual drawing.

  • Generative Design - computational design techniques that automatically produce many design alternatives based on defined constraints such as cost, spatial requirements or energy use.

  • BIM (Building Information Modelling) - a digital model of a building containing geometric information, materials, engineering systems and construction data.

  • Parametric Design - a design method in which relationships between elements are defined mathematically so that designs update automatically when parameters change.


3. A Quiet Revolution: The Home AI Server

A particularly interesting development is the possibility of running powerful AI systems locally rather than relying entirely on large cloud platforms. Small agencies can now operate advanced language models on their own machines.

A modest home server equipped with modern graphics processing units can run open source models such as Llama or Mistral. When configured properly these systems can function as internal research assistants and automation tools.

For a small architectural consultancy, such a system can assist with tasks such as:

• analysing planning regulations and zoning rules
• generating scripts that automate BIM or CAD workflows
• assisting in writing technical reports and proposals
• analysing property datasets and development feasibility studies
• summarising technical research and engineering standards

Because the system operates locally, sensitive project information never leaves the organisation’s own infrastructure. For consultants working with commercial clients this can be extremely valuable.

What once required a large research department can increasingly be achieved by a technically capable small agency equipped with the right tools.

  • Large Language Model (LLM) - an AI system trained on extremely large collections of text that can analyse and generate human language.

  • Open Source Software - software whose source code is publicly available and can be modified or distributed freely.

  • GPU (Graphics Processing Unit) - specialised computer hardware designed for parallel processing and commonly used to run AI models efficiently.


4. The Rise Of The Architect–Technologist

These developments are producing a new hybrid professional profile: the architect who also understands software systems.

Construction remains one of the least digitised sectors of the global economy. Research by McKinsey has repeatedly shown that productivity growth in construction has lagged far behind most other industries. At the same time, global spending on buildings and infrastructure continues to expand.

This gap creates opportunity.

An architect who can write code, automate processes and analyse data can operate at a valuable intersection between design and technology. Instead of merely producing drawings, such professionals can design the digital systems that support the entire development process.

This work might include:

• building algorithmic design tools for architects and developers
• creating automated planning analysis systems
• modelling development feasibility using property data
• integrating AI assistants into architectural workflows
• developing digital twins for buildings or infrastructure

The profession therefore expands into a new territory combining architecture, data and computation.

  • Digital Twin - a dynamic digital model of a physical building or infrastructure system that updates using real world data.

  • Algorithmic Design - the generation of design solutions using computational rules or algorithms.

  • Construction Technology (ConTech) - digital tools and software systems designed to improve the construction and property industries.


5. The Importance Of A Small Independent Agency

One aspect of this story deserves particular emphasis. The creation of a small independent agency combining architecture and software development is itself a significant entrepreneurial achievement.

Most professionals remain employees throughout their careers. Establishing an agency requires technical competence, commercial initiative and a willingness to accept uncertainty. A small agency also provides something extremely valuable: strategic freedom.

An independent structure offers its customers something unique: experimentation with new technologies, development of proprietary tools and the ability to pursue specialised consulting work. In periods of technological change this flexibility becomes extremely important.

Large firms often struggle to adapt quickly because they are tied to established processes and organisational structures. Small agencies can explore new directions with far greater agility.

  • Entrepreneurship - the process of creating and managing a business venture that involves financial risk in pursuit of profit.

  • Consultancy - a professional service in which specialised expertise is provided to organisations on a project basis.


6. A One Year Strategic Path For Repositioning

A sensible strategy for the coming year is not rapid expansion but careful repositioning. The goal is to move the agency toward the intersection of architecture and technology.

During the first phase the focus should be technical capability. The agency can configure its home AI server, integrate local language models into research workflows and develop a library of small automation tools linked to BIM or design software.

The second phase should focus on intellectual visibility. Publishing articles that explain how AI and automation can reshape architectural practice helps establish credibility. Demonstrating working prototypes is far more persuasive than theoretical commentary.

The third phase involves engagement with the market. Small developers, design studios and property investors frequently lack digital expertise. A consultancy capable of automating planning analysis, modelling development scenarios or building property analytics tools can provide specialised services that traditional firms cannot.

By the end of the year the agency can present a clear identity. Rather than appearing as a small architectural practice it becomes a technology consultancy for the built environment.

  • Strategic Positioning - defining how an organisation differentiates itself within a competitive market.

  • Built Environment - the human made surroundings in which people live and work, including buildings, infrastructure and urban spaces.

  • BIM (Building Information Modelling) - the next step beyond a digital mockup, a digital system used in architecture and construction that creates a detailed three-dimensional model of a building containing not only geometry but also data about materials, structure, costs, and construction processes, allowing architects, engineers and contractors to collaborate using a shared information model.


7. The Real Opportunity

Artificial Intelligence will undoubtedly change architectural practice. It will reduce the need for some forms of routine drafting and documentation. 

Architecture sits at the intersection of engineering, economics, regulation, aesthetics and human needs. These domains require judgement, negotiation and responsibility. Machines can assist with analysis, but they do not replace human decision making.

What AI will do is increase leverage for those who understand how to use it.

AI engineers who learn to work with computational design systems may gain enormous productivity advantages for their clients. Those who ignore these tools may find that parts of the profession move beyond them.

Seen from this perspective, a small agency experimenting with software development and locally-hosted AI models can represent something more than an interesting opportunity for experimentation and hi-tech innovation. It may actually be an early mover into an architectural practice of the future.


The agency works with developers, architects and engineering firms to design digital tools and AI systems that improve how buildings and projects are conceived and delivered.

If the ideas in this article resonate with your own work in development, design or construction technology, do feel free to get in touch.


References

McKinsey Global Institute – Reinventing Construction: A Route to Higher Productivity
https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/capital-projects-and-infrastructure/our-insights/reinventing-construction

Autodesk – Generative Design Overview
https://www.autodesk.com/solutions/generative-design

Stanford Human Centered AI – AI Index Report
https://aiindex.stanford.edu

Meta AI – Llama Large Language Models
https://ai.meta.com/llama/

Saturday, 7 March 2026

THE TRAGEDY OF BLOC POLITICS

7 March 2026

• He discusses NATO expansion after the Cold War
• He argues that the Ukraine war reflects a structural conflict in the European security system
• He contrasts Western bloc politics with emerging multipolar institutions

THE TRAGEDY OF BLOC POLITICS
Overview
  1. Europe’s Security Crisis

The war in Ukraine is often presented as a sudden geopolitical rupture. Professor Glenn Diesen argues that it is better understood as the collapse of the post Cold War security architecture in Europe.

Instead of building a cooperative system after 1989, Europe gradually returned to bloc politics. When security is organised around opposing alliances - one camp strengthening itself against another - tensions accumulate until they eventually explode into open conflict.


  1. The Security Dilemma

International politics operates without a central authority capable of guaranteeing security. In this environment every state must protect itself.

The difficulty is that defensive actions are often interpreted as threats. When one country strengthens its military or expands alliances, neighbouring states respond in kind. This dynamic is known as the security dilemma.

Over time the result can be arms races, alliance rivalry, and deepening mistrust.


  1. The Post Cold War Choice

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Europe faced a strategic decision.

One path would have been inclusive security - creating a cooperative system that included Russia in the European order. The other path was to maintain and expand the Western alliance structure built during the Cold War.

In practice the second option prevailed. NATO expanded eastward, and the logic of bloc politics gradually re emerged.


  1. Ukraine As The Fault Line

Countries located between NATO and Russia became the most vulnerable parts of this new geopolitical landscape.

Ukraine in particular was divided between competing geopolitical orientations. Some political forces sought integration with Western institutions, while others favoured maintaining close relations with Russia.

In such circumstances, internal political divisions can easily become international crises. Ukraine eventually became the central battleground in this wider strategic contest.


  1. A Lesson For The Future

Diesen’s central argument is simple. Systems built around rival blocs tend to generate instability.

When states organise themselves into opposing camps, every attempt by one side to increase its security inevitably makes the other side feel less secure.

A more stable international order requires cooperation, economic interdependence, and diplomatic frameworks that reduce rivalry rather than intensify it. Europe’s experience offers a warning to other regions not to fall into the same trap of bloc politics.



DETAIL

  1. The Tragedy Of Bloc Politics

Insights from Professor Glenn Diesen on geopolitics and international security

The war in Ukraine and the wider security crisis in Europe are often discussed as if they were sudden events or the result of personalities and politics in the moment. Professor Glenn Diesen argues that this interpretation misses the deeper structural problem. In his view, the conflict reflects the collapse of the post Cold War security architecture in Europe.

The key issue is the return of bloc politics. Instead of constructing an inclusive European security order after the Cold War, the continent drifted back into a system where states organised themselves into rival camps. When security is built in this way - one alliance against another - tensions tend to accumulate until they eventually erupt.

Understanding how Europe arrived at this point requires stepping back and looking at the deeper logic of international relations.

International anarchy the condition in which the global system has no overarching authority capable of guaranteeing the security of states.

Reference: Glenn Diesen, The Ukraine War and the Eurasian World Order (2024)


  1. The Security Dilemma

One of the most fundamental ideas in international relations is the security dilemma. In a world without a global government, every state is responsible for its own protection. When one country strengthens its security - by expanding its military capabilities or joining alliances - neighbouring states often interpret this as a potential threat.

The result is a self reinforcing cycle. Defensive actions by one state are interpreted as offensive moves by another. Each side responds by strengthening its position further. Over time this can lead to arms races, alliance rivalries and growing suspicion.

Diesen argues that the most stable international systems are those based on the principle of indivisible security. Under this concept, countries recognise that their security is interconnected. Stability emerges when states pursue security with each other rather than against each other.

Security dilemma a situation in which measures taken by one state to increase its security inadvertently reduce the security of others, leading to escalating tensions.

Reference: John Herz, “Idealist Internationalism and the Security Dilemma”, World Politics (1950)


  1. Early Attempts At Cooperative Security

Europe did once attempt to escape the logic of bloc politics. After the devastation of the Second World War, several initiatives were designed to make conflict between European states materially difficult.

The European Coal and Steel Community is perhaps the most famous example. By integrating the coal and steel industries of France and Germany - the very industries needed to wage war - the project created economic interdependence between former enemies.

Later, during the Cold War, the Helsinki Accords of 1975 established principles for dialogue between East and West. These agreements emphasised respect for sovereignty, recognition of mutual security concerns, and cooperation across ideological lines.

By the end of the Cold War many policymakers hoped that these principles would evolve into a pan European security system without dividing lines. Institutions such as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe were intended to support this inclusive framework.

Indivisible security the principle that the security of one state cannot be achieved at the expense of another.

Reference: Helsinki Final Act, Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe (1975)


  1. The Post Cold War Choice

The collapse of the Soviet Union created a historic moment. European and American policymakers faced a strategic choice about how the new security order should be organised.

One option was inclusive security - a cooperative framework that would incorporate Russia into the broader European system. The other option was a hegemonic structure built around the continued expansion of Western alliances.

According to Diesen, the second path prevailed. Instead of dissolving Cold War structures, NATO expanded eastward across Central and Eastern Europe. From the Western perspective this expansion was presented as a voluntary process driven by the desires of new member states seeking protection.

From Moscow’s perspective, however, the expansion of a military alliance towards its borders revived the old logic of bloc competition. Critics in the 1990s, including the American diplomat George Kennan, warned that such expansion could provoke a new period of confrontation between Russia and the West.

Hegemony a system in which one dominant power exercises decisive influence over the international order.

Reference: George Kennan interview, The New York Times, 5 February 1997


  1. Ukraine As A Geopolitical Fault Line

Countries located between Russia and NATO gradually became the most fragile parts of the emerging system. Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova found themselves positioned between competing geopolitical projects.

Within many of these states there were strong internal debates about the direction of foreign policy. Some political groups favoured integration with Western institutions such as NATO and the European Union, while others advocated closer economic and cultural ties with Russia.

Diesen suggests that such divisions created fertile ground for instability. When great powers compete over influence in strategically important borderlands, domestic political tensions can easily escalate into international crises.

Ukraine eventually became the central battleground in this wider contest over the future of European security.

Proxy conflict a conflict in which major powers support opposing sides in another country rather than confronting each other directly.

Reference: Glenn Diesen, Russia’s Geoeconomic Strategy for a Greater Eurasia (2017)


  1. The Logic Of Hegemonic Order

Another element in Diesen’s analysis concerns the broader idea of hegemonic peace. After the Cold War the United States emerged as the world’s dominant power. Many policymakers believed that global stability could be maintained through American leadership supported by alliances and international institutions.

This model did deliver a period of relative stability in some regions. Yet critics argue that hegemonic systems contain inherent risks. When one power dominates the international system it may become tempted to extend its influence through military interventions, alliance expansion and ideological projects abroad.

Over time this can provoke resistance from other major powers seeking to restore balance. The result is a gradual erosion of legitimacy and the emergence of counter alliances.

Hegemonic peace the theory that global order is maintained when a single dominant power provides security and enforces rules within the international system.

Reference: Robert Gilpin, War and Change in World Politics (1981)


  1. Alternative Approaches Emerging In Asia

Diesen contrasts Europe’s experience with developments in parts of Asia and the wider Global South. Several regional organisations have emerged that operate less like military alliances and more like flexible platforms for cooperation.

Institutions such as ASEAN, BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation place greater emphasis on strategic autonomy and diversified partnerships. Rather than forming rigid military blocs, these organisations encourage economic integration and diplomatic dialogue among states with very different political systems.

This model does not eliminate competition between states. However, it seeks to prevent competition from crystallising into opposing geopolitical camps that could eventually lead to conflict.

Strategic autonomy the ability of a state or region to pursue independent policies without being subordinated to the interests of a dominant power.

Reference: ASEAN Charter (2008); BRICS Summit Declarations


  1. The Central Lesson

For Diesen the lesson of Europe’s security crisis is straightforward. Systems organised around rival blocs tend to produce structural instability. When states cluster into opposing camps, every attempt by one side to strengthen itself inevitably threatens the other.

Over time this dynamic can turn geopolitical competition into outright confrontation.

A more stable order, he suggests, requires inclusive security institutions, economic interdependence with diversified partners, and diplomatic frameworks that reduce rivalry rather than intensify it.

This argument does not imply that conflict can be eliminated entirely. International politics will always involve competition between states with different interests. The challenge is preventing that competition from hardening into permanent blocs.


  1. A Warning For The Future

Europe once presented itself as a model of peace and integration. The current crisis suggests that this achievement may have been more fragile than many assumed.

If security is organised primarily through exclusion - one alliance against another - the logic of rivalry tends to reassert itself. The consequences may take decades to unfold, but eventually the structural pressures become difficult to contain.

For policymakers elsewhere, particularly in Asia, the European experience offers a clear warning. The real challenge is not simply managing relations between great powers. It is avoiding the deeper structural trap of bloc politics that can transform geopolitical competition into open conflict.


  1. References

The Rest Doesn't Care About The West's Block Mentality

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JsyNQqvGAc4

• NATO's War of Choice  The Sabotage of the Peace Negotiations

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnL4s-b6hxo


Thursday, 26 February 2026

GOLD AND SILVER UPDATE

26 February 2026

Kitco’s Jeremy Szafron interviews Daniel Oliver of Myrmikan Capital on the next phase of the gold bull market.

Oliver argues the steady central bank accumulation phase is over. Gold is now entering a more volatile stage driven by mounting stress in the US credit system, particularly private equity and commercial real estate.

He says the Federal Reserve faces a structural trap: a massive refinancing wall and the near impossibility of shrinking its balance sheet while cutting rates. Liquidity injections may ease panic, but they cannot fix insolvency.

The interview also highlights tightening conditions in the physical gold market. Banks are raising margin requirements on smelters, forcing reduced inventories and contributing to volatility.

Applying historical balance sheet ratios, Oliver argues gold may need to reprice significantly higher to stabilise the Fed’s balance sheet, suggesting levels around $8,000 to $12,000 under traditional coverage assumptions.


  1. GOLD, CREDIT AND THE COMING RESET
    Daniel Oliver On Kitco

Source:

Daniel Oliver’s interview ranges across sovereign debt, private equity, Fed mechanics, gold ratios and digital currencies.

Gold and Silver Update

────────────────────────

  1. PHASES OF THE GOLD BULL MARKET

Oliver divides the bull market into three phases.

Phase One
Triggered by the weaponisation of the dollar in 2022.
Central banks began accumulating gold to reduce geopolitical risk.

Phase Two
Credit stress inside the US system.
Private equity refinancing pressure.
Shrinking bond liquidity.
The Fed quietly re-expanding its balance sheet.

Phase Three
A sovereign debt confidence crisis.
Possible monetary reset.
Major gold repricing event.

The central claim is that gold is responding not to CPI but to structural credit stress.

Key Glossary

  • Weaponisation of the dollar – Use of the US dollar system as a geopolitical tool via sanctions or asset seizures.*

  • Sovereign debt – Debt issued by a national government.*

  • Monetary reset – A restructuring of the international monetary system after systemic stress.*

  • Credit cycle – The expansion and contraction of lending over time.*

  • Repricing event – A sharp shift in asset valuations after new financial information emerges.*

────────────────────────

  1. GOLD AS CAPITAL, NOT RETAIL MONEY

Oliver distinguishes between transaction money and capital.

Gold historically functions as capital.
It stores surplus wealth.
It settles sovereign imbalances.

It is not designed for buying groceries.
Silver historically played that role.

This framing matters because pricing assets in gold reveals different trends than pricing them in dollars.

Key Glossary

  • Capital – Accumulated wealth used to preserve or generate future wealth.*

  • Fiat currency – State declared money not backed by a commodity.*

  • Reserve currency – A currency widely held by central banks for trade and savings.*

  • Gold standard – A system where currency is convertible into gold at a fixed rate.*

  • Gold coverage – The proportion of monetary liabilities backed by gold reserves.*

────────────────────────

  1. PRIVATE EQUITY AND THE CREDIT RISK

Private equity operates through leverage.

Borrow heavily.
Acquire companies.
Optimise cash flow.
Refinance at lower rates.

This model worked for forty years of falling rates.

It becomes fragile when rates rise.

The refinancing wall is approaching.
Defaults may emerge gradually rather than explosively.

Key Glossary

  • Private equity – Investment funds acquiring companies using significant borrowed money.*

  • Leverage – The use of borrowed capital to amplify returns and risk.*

  • Debt maturity wall – A large volume of debt coming due within a short period.*

  • Credit default – Failure to meet repayment obligations.*

  • Liquidity risk – Risk that assets cannot be sold quickly without price loss.*

────────────────────────

  1. THE FED’S BALANCE SHEET CONSTRAINT

Oliver argues it is mathematically inconsistent to both shrink the Fed balance sheet and lower rates.

Post 2008, reserves flooded the system.
The Fed now controls rates by paying interest on reserves.

If reserves become scarce again, the mechanism fails.

Any renewed crisis likely expands the balance sheet.

Gold revalues accordingly.

Key Glossary

  • Balance sheet expansion – Increase in central bank assets through bond purchases.*

  • Central bank reserves – Deposits commercial banks hold at the central bank.*

  • Excess reserves – Reserves held beyond required minimum levels.*

  • Interest on reserves – Payments made by central banks to banks for holding reserves.*

  • Interest rate transmission – The mechanism through which policy rates influence lending rates.*

────────────────────────

  1. GOLD PRICE TARGETS VIA COVERAGE RATIOS

Historical observation
Central banks once held gold equal to one third to one half of liabilities.

Applying that ratio today:

33 percent coverage implies roughly 8000 dollars.
50 percent implies roughly 12000 dollars.

This is not a forecast.
It is a balance sheet arithmetic exercise.

Critically, modern Fed assets are lower quality than 19th century commercial paper.

Key Glossary

  • Coverage ratio – The proportion of gold reserves relative to monetary liabilities.*

  • Implied gold price – The theoretical gold price required to balance a central bank balance sheet.*

  • Net present value – Present value of projected future cash flows discounted for time and risk.*

  • Mortgage backed securities – Bonds backed by pools of mortgage loans.*

────────────────────────

  1. SILVER DYNAMICS

Silver differs from gold.

Seventy five percent is by-product supply.
Industrial demand is price insensitive.
Solar and electronics require it.
Gold silver ratio stretched beyond 100 to 1.

Small shifts in demand create large price moves.

Key Glossary

  • Inelastic supply – Supply that cannot quickly expand despite price increases.*

  • Inelastic demand – Demand that changes little despite price shifts.*

  • Gold to silver ratio – The price of gold divided by the price of silver.*

  • Spot price – Current market price for immediate delivery.*

────────────────────────

  1. PHYSICAL MARKET STRESS

Smelters hedge inventory via futures.

Banks reduce margin tolerance during volatility.

Result
Less inventory held.
Lower throughput.
Higher premiums.
More volatility.

The plumbing of the market tightens.

Key Glossary

  • Futures market – A market trading contracts for future delivery of commodities.*

  • Hedge – A position taken to offset price risk.*

  • Margin call – A broker demand for additional collateral after losses.*

  • Volatility – Degree of price fluctuation over time.*

  • Illiquidity – Difficulty selling assets quickly at fair value.*

────────────────────────

  1. DIGITAL CURRENCY AND CONTROL

Governments increasingly explore digital systems.

CBDCs allow transaction traceability.
Capital controls become easier.
Account freezing becomes instantaneous.

Historical precedents include:
1933 gold confiscation.
1960s capital controls.

Gold functions as private capital outside banking systems.

Key Glossary

  • Central bank digital currency – State issued programmable digital money.*

  • Capital controls – Restrictions on movement of money across borders.*

  • Financial repression – Policies directing private savings to fund government debt.*

  • Sovereign default – Failure of a government to meet its debt obligations.*

────────────────────────

  1. CRASH OR FINANCIAL REPRESSION?

Oliver prefers liquidation to prolonged stagnation.

A crash reveals true prices.
Repression delays adjustment.
2008 postponed restructuring.

The next adjustment may be larger because distortions are larger.

Key Glossary

  • Financial repression – Policies suppressing interest rates and redirecting savings to the state.*

  • Liquidation – Forced sale of assets to repay debts.*

  • Credit bubble – Asset inflation driven by excessive lending.*

  • Hyperinflation – Extremely rapid currency debasement with explosive price increases.*

────────────────────────

  1. FINAL REFLECTION

The framework rests on three pillars:

Geopolitical reserve shift.
Private credit fragility.
Sovereign balance sheet mathematics.

Timing is uncertain.
Arithmetic is not.

The interview does not predict apocalypse.
It predicts balance sheet logic asserting itself.

Gold is positioned as capital insurance against systemic restructuring.

And miners represent embedded leverage without margin calls.

────────────────────────

Thursday, 19 February 2026

JOHN GRAY ON WHY I'M NOT A POST LIBERAL

19 February 2026

JOHN GRAY ON WHY I'M NOT A POST LIBERAL

Do you agree : the state intervenes to enforce the rules of co-existence, not to manufacture a morally DEI-correct “progressive” citizenry.... 

John Gray thinks mixing up security (=the job of the state) with moral re-education is politically fatal because all you'll wind up with is the backlash you fear most. We don't want a virtue-signaling state, we want a strong and neutral state... didn't we separate church and state a long time ago? 

Gray says liberals believe tolerance and discussion and debate will lead to better outcomes, but he says he is a Hobbesian in the sense that "rubbing along" ( as he calls tolerance of disagreement) is a good idea not because it leads to harmony but because the alternative - intolerance of people you disagree with - is far worse, as history shows.

Liberals think the state is there to ensure order if groups fail to rub along. Gray's idea is liberalism brings you peace, but NOT liberalism as a Moral Crusade. 

But then how strong should this strong Hobbesian state be? It's not there to force DEI conformance... How is a Hobbesian state working for order any different from the curtailment of "rights" that people in the UK already endure?

These are just random thoughts... Gray does nail it though when he says that outsourcing value-laden decisions to technocrats is an administrative approach that is never going to work, because the whole problem is the clashes of values between subgroups, and that's what politics is there to solve.

He says somewhere near the beginning that Enlightenment liberalism just can't work because it assumes one rational set of universal values, whereas we've got all these different cultural subgroups vying for power and resources.

Post-liberalism, like Alasdair MacIntyre, on the other hand is no better - a) it thinks that classical liberalism, in the face of all these different subgroups, "hollowed out" what was once a shared moral culture, and b) post liberalism dreams of restoring a thick moral unity that never in actual fact existed.

The post-libs argue liberal neutrality is incoherent; you need politics to push common moral goods. As we've seen, Gray does not agree. 

But pushing common moral goods often ends up hunting minorities as spoilers... If you assume consensus is natural, you are right and dissent is wrong and looks like sabotage, so the state needs to go after dissenters. How's that different from what we've got?

And so, would (a return to) cultural homogeneity (eg Britain the 1950s) bring seamless moral unity? High conformity, certainly. But also rigid gender roles, criminalisation of homosexuality, colonial wars (Kenya, Malaya)... If you look at the history of our gallant country, it's a bit of a myth to think that there were ever peaceful pastoral scenes - we even chopped off the head of our king... Axe, not guillotine.

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

A SENSITIVE ADOLESCENT WATCHING HER GRANDPARENTS GROW OLD

17 February 2026

A SENSITIVE ADOLESCENT WATCHING HER GRANDPARENTS GROW OLDER

I. When You Begin To Notice

There comes a moment, often in adolescence, when a young person begins to see their grandparents differently. They are no longer simply kind figures who bring sweets or tell stories. They appear more fragile, sometimes more anxious, occasionally more rigid or critical. For a sensitive teenager, this can be confusing, even unsettling. It may feel as though something is “going wrong”.

In truth, what they are witnessing is not failure but ageing, ageing in its full psychological depth. Growing old is not only a physical process. It is an emotional and existential one.


II. The House They Built

Much of adult life is spent building. School, exucation, work, training, reputation, property, wealth, business, family - these are the bricks and beams of identity. For decades, people are occupied with construction. They are needed. They are productive. They are busy. They become the achievements.

Later in life, however, the activities of building slow down. Retirement arrives. Children leave home. Social roles shrink. At that point, a person must live inside and reconcile themselves to what they have built. If their identity was based entirely on achievement, the house can feel strangely empty. If they also built inner depth - maybe reflection, self-knowledge, acceptance of change within and without - the house feels warmer.

A teenager observing their grandparents may notice this difference without having language for it. One grandparent may seem peaceful and reflective. Another may seem restless or dissatisfied. What she is seeing is the difference between achievement and integration. Achievement builds the house. Integration makes it habitable.


III. The Shadow That Emerges

The Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung wrote about the shadow, meaning the parts of ourselves we prefer not to see - regrets, weaknesses, unfulfilled desires, mistakes made. When people are busy, these aspects can remain hidden, but later in life, when external distractions diminish, they have a tendency to resurface.

This may express itself as repeated complaints, irritation, moral rigidity, or nostalgia for a past that feels safer than the present. For a sensitive adolescent, such behaviour can feel personal. It is important to understand that it often appears like a personal comment by the grandparent on the young person, but in reality what is happening is that the older person may be reflecting on their own life rather than making a judgement of the young.

To see things in this way may help the young person to soften their understanding of what's going on. One begins to understand that ageing can expose unresolved chapters of a long story.


IV. The Search For Meaning

In youth, the central question is often “Who will I become?” In older age, the question shifts to “Did my life matter?” This is not self-pity. It is a natural psychological turn toward meaning.

When grandparents repeat stories, dwell on memories, or reflect on earlier decades, they are not merely being repetitive. They are organising their life narrative. Psychologists describe this as the movement toward ego integrity — the ability to look back on one’s life with a sense of coherence rather than despair.

Ther is a long-running Harvard Study of Adult Development that has consistently found that, in later life, meaning and relationships matter more for wellbeing than wealth or status. What appears from the outside as reminiscence is often an attempt to weave experience into a whole.


V. Mortality In The Background

An adolescent may not consciously think about death, but an older person often does. Friends pass away. Health shifts. Time feels finite rather than expansive. This awareness can bring gratitude and tenderness. It can also bring fear or defensiveness.

A teenager who senses this tension is perceiving something real. Mortality sits unspoken in the room, no one names it. Some older people reconcile themselves to it. Others resist it. Both reactions are human.

Understanding this changes the emotional atmosphere. What looked like stubbornness may partly be vulnerability. What felt like criticism may partly be anxiety.


VI. What The Adolescent Is Learning

To witness ageing closely is an education. It reveals that life is not only about ambition or visibility. It is about becoming whole. It shows that success does not automatically guarantee peace. It teaches that inner work matters as much as outer accomplishment.

For a sensitive young person, this can be both sobering and profound. He or she is seeing the later chapters of a story while they're still writing the first. They may feel sadness or tenderness or even feel fear of what ageing means. All of these responses are natural.

What the young person does not need to feel is responsibility. After all, they cannot repair another person’s unfinished psychological work. But what they can offer is presence, listening, and respect. That is often more powerful than advice.


VII. A Wise Old Conclusion

Old age is not merely decline. It is a stage of reckoning and integration. Some navigate it with serenity. Others struggle. Most do a mixture of both.

A sensitive adolescent who begins to see this clearly is already developing wisdom. He or she is learning that human beings are layered up and unfinished at every age.

And perhaps, without yet fully realising it, they are also learning how to build their own house in a way that one day will make it easier to live inside.


Friday, 13 February 2026

EMPIRE, MIGRATION AND ADAPTATION

13 February 2026

Living with differences - ethnic, religious, racial... you name it 

Are today’s tensions really new, or simply another turn in long historical cycles of empire, technology and migration? From the East India Companies to Windrush and modern mass migration, this piece explores how scale, economics and perception shape our politics; and why calm adaptability may be the most practical and healthy response of all.



The major events shaping the perception by ordinary people in West Asia of western governments 


This graphic image identifies the major events that have shaped the perception held by ordinary people living in the West of people who have come to live in Europe from west Asia. 


1. Where Did Our Present Troubles Begin?


Was it the birth of corporate capitalism with the Dutch East India Company in 1602, when trade and profit became organised on a global scale and banks were set up to creating capital markets? Or the expansionist reach of the British East India Company, which fused commerce, empire and military force? Perhaps the decisive moment was Napoleon's invasion of Egypt, when European rivalry crashed directly into the Islamic world - and reshaped geopolitics for centuries to come.

We can point to any of these moments as a beginning, although history doesn't really offer such neat starting lines. It moves instead through overlapping cycles: economic expansion and contraction, social cohesion and fragmentation, geopolitical ascent and decline.... And eventually all Empires and in reset. Alongside the phases are natural disasters, which have killed more people than wars, and technological revolutions, which have shifted power more decisively than ideology ever could. The printing press, steam power, oil, electricity, nuclear energy, silicon chips, AI - each altered who led and who followed. Our present “Troubles” are less a sudden rupture and more a predictable phase in these long rhythms. Who knows how or when this particular Order will end. 


2. History In The Public Mind


Those timelines we discussed are not merely charts of events; they are reflections of how societies remember. They reveal which episodes we choose as origins and how we connect causes across centuries. History is always a story of push and pull as is individual choice. Europeans went “over there” driven by trade, ambition and opportunity, convinced of their civilisational, shall we call it "confidence" . Others later came “over here” drawn by stability, law and economic possibility, vibrancy, lower taxes, believing they were entering a functioning civil society (and incidentally hollowing out their own societies that they leave behind because as we know it's the ambitious who leave and the top ten percent who generate maybe 80% of government tax revenue) . That is a society governed by institutions and shared rules rather than clan loyalties or arbitrary force.

For both sides, these movements once felt rational. Expansion created wealth; migration filled labour shortages. Yet scale alters perception. What once appeared episodic and manageable can, at higher volumes, feel continuous and eventually the numbers  become threatening.


3. Immigration: Then And Now


Immigration into Britain is not new. After the Second World War, the arrival of the Windrush generation from 1948 onwards followed from the creation of the NHS and the rebuilding of industry. Labour was needed, Commonwealth citizens responded. In 1972, the expulsion of Asians from Uganda by Idi Amin brought another distinct wave, many of whom went on to establish successful businesses and professional careers. These were defined episodes, shaped by particular events.

What feels different today is the continuity and scale. Net migration to the UK in 2023 exceeded 700,000, according to the Office for National Statistics, a figure unprecedented in peacetime. The drivers are structural: ageing populations require workers; service economies rely on lower labour costs; instability abroad pushes people outward. Migration is therefore not simply a matter of people wanting to leave difficult conditions; it is equally about advanced economies demanding labour to sustain growth and support welfare systems. This is less a moral narrative than an economic one.

According to the ONS, Office for National Statistics, the number of people moving permanently into the UK is as follows (note this is long-term immigration ie people entering the UK intending to stay for at least 12 months) :

2023 - 1.47 million

2024 - 1.30 million

2025 - 898,000


4. Integration, Multiculturalism And Political Cleavage


Different countries have adopted different responses. France traditionally pursued assimilation, expecting newcomers to adopt a unified civic identity. Britain leaned towards multiculturalism, assuming diverse cultures could coexist under shared legal tolerance. Neither model has been flawless. Assimilation can feel rigid and exclusionary; multiculturalism can drift into parallel communities with limited interaction.

Across Europe, these tensions have fed the rise of populist movements, defined loosely as political currents claiming to defend “ordinary people” against distant elites. Surveys such as Eurobarometer show declining institutional trust since the financial crisis of 2008, suggesting that dissatisfaction extends beyond immigration alone. Yet macro-level political cleavage does not necessarily translate into daily interpersonal hostility. On the ground, most people work together, live alongside one another, manage the practicalities of coexistence, even share the exoticism, with far less drama than vote seeking political discourse click baiting social media suggest.


5. The Individual Perspective And The Question Of Stress


This is where perspective matters. At the level of personal interaction, civility - simple mutual respect in public behaviour - resolves more tension than grand ideological arguments. Global interconnection, driven by technology and trade, is not easily reversible without significant economic contraction. We may debate policy, quotas and enforcement, but the broader system of interdependence is unlikely to disappear even as national interests harden around spheres of influence.

From a personal standpoint, one of the most reliable predictors of longevity and wellbeing is adaptability. Psychological flexibility reduces stress and enhances resilience. Curiosity about differences, or at least tolerance, rather than fear of them, lowers emotional temperature and allows individuals to navigate change without constant agitation, internal and external. It is rarely helpful to approach vast historical processes with permanent outrage. An engineer’s mindset serves better: observe the system, measure its effects, adjust where possible and avoid unnecessary emotional entanglement.... "just get on with it". 

We should remember that history will continue its cycles regardless of our preferences. The practical response is neither denial nor despair but temperate engagement. Study the forces at work, act responsibly each within their own sphere of influence, remain civil, and cultivate a low-stress adaptability. In unsettled times, that may be one of the most amazingly radical choices available.

KIDS LEARNING FROM STREET ART

13 February 2026

 little girl looking at a street mural

A great photo, take the time to look at it carefully - built up from two layers, plus a third, hidden, layer. What's happening here?

First, is the graffiti itself, painted across a steel roller shutter and the wall of what looks like a worn-out industrial building, could be in Manchester or East London. It’s colourful, chaotic, doubtless the work of multiple street artists over time, the symbols go back a long way.

You’ve got the Union Jack defaced, the CND peace symbol, hearts, a bright green frog emoticon, the number 86.

The slashed Union Jack says "I reject" or "I'm frustrated". The hearts soften the tone - hearts signify universal love, love wins, follow your heart. The frog adds a touch of irony - don't be so serious. "86" nix is street slang for "get rid of" - to eject, dismiss, or remove (someone). "26" bottom right is where a signature goes: the artist or crew collective or maybe the year of the latest contribution.

Symbols from late-20th-century Britain, 1977 “God Save the Queen, the fascist regime”, Ban the Bomb, Corbyn-era symbolism. The more things change, the more they rhyme.

Second, is the little girl. She's not painting. She's not reacting dramatically. She's just standing there, slightly detached - she could be licking an ice cream, but she isn't. Maybe she looks passive, but she isn't neutral.

The question we have to ask ourselves is: what is she understanding from the kaleidoscope of symbols? Is this just background noise to her? Is it liberating? Does it even register as "art" or is it just chaos without meaning?

To put a child in front of symbols is not going to be something passive for the child, children are learning, absorbing a narrative, she is learning about the country she's growing up in.

And then there’s the third element.This is the one that isn't there: the grandfather, not there in the photo because he is looking at it. “How things have changed”, he exclaims. That’s the emotional frame around the whole photograph. So this isn’t just about street art, in actual fact it’s about continuity. About whether the transmission between generations is smooth, or whether there’s likely to be rupture (an end-of-empire theme beloved of this blog). If you, granddad, see broken symbols, she might see colour and expression. How things have changed, yea - in the same symbols from your youth and hers, you see decline and erosion and frustration at the lack of progress, but she may see freedom and liberation and hope.

Put all this together and here is a really powerful image. A child placed deliberately in front of a frazzle of political and emotional graffiti, symbols and history. Big State narratives being overwritten by youth culture. Authority challenged, icons defaced, messages all mixed and broken up. To one eye it looks anarchic, post-industrial, "no more heroes anymore"; to another, it looks creative, playful and pluralistic - everyone gets a chance to chip in.

So this isn't so much a mural about political change, it's a mural about inheritance. Legacy, transmission, inheritance. What grandparents are anxious be transmitted through their offspring to their grandchildren, and what of that their grandchildren are sufficiently interested to understand and want for their own futures.