Episodios

  • Who is stealing the light?
    Dec 28 2025

    Burnout is not a personal failure. It is the result of an economic system that steals time, daylight and energy from our lives.

    In this fifth video in my Christmas series on light, I explore the relationship between light, healing and health — and why modern work patterns deny people access to the very conditions they need to recover and thrive.

    Light regulates sleep, hormones, mood and immunity. Yet long hours, commuting, shift work and poor housing mean many people barely see daylight at all. Artificial light cannot replace what we lose.

    This is not accidental. It is structural. Productivity is prioritised over health, time over care, and people are blamed when they break.

    Light is a public good. Time should not be a privilege.

    A society that denies people light cannot be surprised when they struggle to heal.

    Más Menos
    7 m
  • Staying alive is living with light
    Dec 27 2025

    Everything tends towards decay unless energy is applied. That is not ideology – it is physics.

    In this Christmas lecture, I explore light through the lens of entropy and explain why care, maintenance, and public services are not optional extras but survival mechanisms.

    Austerity withdraws energy from our systems. Neoliberalism assumes self-maintenance. Both are wrong.

    If we want societies to endure, we must invest in care – because entropy never rests.

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    6 m
  • The economy runs on light
    Dec 26 2025

    Every economy runs on light. That is not a metaphor – it is physics.

    Without light, there is no life. Without life, there is no labour. Without labour, there is no economy. Yet modern economics behaves as if energy, health, and human limits do not matter.

    In this Boxing Day video – part three of my Christmas series on light – I explain why labour is transformed solar energy, why burnout is an energy failure, why infinite growth on a finite planet is impossible, and why fossil fuel capitalism is about power, not necessity.

    Light reconnects economics to life itself – and forces us to rethink wealth, growth, and what an economy is actually for.

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    6 m
  • The light of Christmas
    Dec 25 2025

    At Christmas, cultures across the world speak of light returning. This is not theology or astronomy. It is about survival, hope, and responsibility in hard times.

    In this video, I explore how wisdom traditions — Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, Islamic, and Indigenous — understand light as care, presence, and justice. And why modern capitalism inverts that meaning, treating wealth as light and poverty as darkness.

    This is the Christmas story without preaching — and with a question we cannot avoid as 2026 approaches: who do we illuminate, and who do we leave unseen?

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    6 m
  • Why light matters this Christmas
    Dec 24 2025

    This is the first in a six-video Christmas series exploring light not just as a festival symbol but as a political and economic necessity.

    Light has always meant understanding, truth, and freedom. Darkness, by contrast, protects power and privilege.

    In this video, I explore why learning is never neutral, why ignorance is often designed, and why economics that cannot be explained cannot be trusted. If democracy requires informed consent, then light is not optional; it is essential.

    This channel exists to shed light on political economy. At Christmas, that feels like exactly the right place to begin.

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    6 m
  • What we need for Christmas
    Dec 23 2025

    As Christmas approaches, many people ask what they want.

    But there is a more important question we should be asking: what did we need – and not get?

    In this video, I look at the UK’s real economic failures over the last year:

    • persistent poverty
    • housing insecurity
    • untreated illness
    • a hidden personal debt crisis
    • rising political hostility

    These are not marginal problems. They are systemic failures of economic policy and political courage.

    I also set out what we actually need: poverty reduction as a national objective, secure housing, investment in care, fair taxation, and politicians willing to stop fearing bond markets and start acting in the public interest.

    This is not about pessimism. It is about honesty – and hope.

    Because if Christmas means anything, it must mean that change is still possible.

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    7 m
  • My word of the year
    Dec 22 2025

    As Christmas approaches, I reflect on my word of the year: pleonexia — an ancient Greek term describing the insatiable desire to take more than your fair share, even when it harms others.

    Once you understand pleonexia, you start to see it everywhere: in big tech, in bond markets, in tax avoidance, and in government policy that treats human suffering as an accounting inconvenience. This video argues that much of what we excuse or defend in modern economics is, in fact, a moral failure hiding in plain sight.

    If we want an economy based on care rather than cruelty, contribution rather than entitlement, we first have to name the problem. That is where political economy begins.

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    7 m
  • The right way to tax wealth in 2026
    Dec 21 2025

    The push for wealth taxes has been one of the defining economic debates of 2025. The question now is whether we want policies that work.

    In this video, I argue that the fastest, fairest way to tax wealth is through higher taxes on the income, gains and transfers that wealth generates — not through complex and slow-to-deliver wealth taxes.

    This approach raises more revenue, strengthens compliance, exposes hidden wealth, and keeps open the option of a wealth tax later if it is still needed.

    If we are serious about justice, democracy and effective government, this is the path we should take.

    Más Menos
    10 m