Steven Murphy
If you agree, help build…

Britain’s pensioners are the wealthiest retired generation in British history. They built the deficit. They accumulated the debt. They elected the governments. They took the gains. They were protected through every crisis while everyone around them absorbed the pain.
And now the bill has arrived, who do they think should pay it?
This is the conversation Britain has been too afraid to have. Until now.

He markets himself as this working‑class lad, the man of the people, the bloke who “gets it” because he supposedly comes from the same world as the scaffolders, the brickies, the offshore workers, the lorry drivers, the warehouse pickers — the people who actually keep the country running. But the reality doesn’t show that at all. He isn’t their poster boy. He’s the poster boy for the tax‑funded union world, the comfortable public‑sector bubble where the income is guaranteed, the risks are minimal, and the consequences never land on your own doorstep.

Every government promises to reduce it, every government quietly lets it rise, and every government hopes nobody notices. People think it’s ideology or incompetence or cowardice. But the truth is simpler, and far more uncomfortable.
Immigration isn’t being controlled because the country can’t afford to control it. It’s not a moral issue or a humanitarian issue, it’s a mathematics problem. The UK’s financial numbers don’t add up.

We treat the Mediterranean as if it were infinite — an endless provider of beauty, warmth, and escape. But beneath the surface, the cost of our demand is building. Something is moving there, slow and silent, just out of sight. You can’t see it yet. You can’t feel it yet. But it’s coming. The question is no longer whether nature will push back, but when.

As we have travelled along the evolutionary highway, something strange has happened. We have subconsciously shifted from viewing the Earth and its resources as the things that sustain us, to treating them as a leisure park built for our entertainment.
We have built social and financial systems that prioritise individual gain over ecological balance, ignoring the cascading effects of our actions.

We are living through the exhaustion of old systems. Election cycles repeat, promises pile up, and debt deepens — while the planet buckles under the weight of unchecked population growth and consumption. Politicians recycle tired policies, evading accountability and offering no real alternatives.