Episodios

  • Can the Greens deliver?
    Feb 8 2026

    Mass membership growth means something real is happening in the Green Party in England and Wales. People - who I call the watermelons, as they're red inside and green outside - are choosing commitment to that party over despair. But, critically, movements can outrun institutions.

    In this video, I set out the opportunity facing the Greens, the risks they must avoid, and the hard truth that values alone are not enough. If plausible, deliverable, policy does not follow, and fast, the consequences will be severe.

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    11 m
  • Will Trump's crypto bubble crash?
    Feb 7 2026

    Bitcoin has halved in value since October, and this is not a routine market correction. It is a crash.

    In this video, I explain why crypto has no underlying value, why the collapse still has further to go, and why banks that lent money so people could speculate on Bitcoin are now exposed.

    I also look at the growing fragility in stock markets and tech valuations, including AI, and explain why this could become a systemic crisis that makes 2008 look mild by comparison.

    Trump promised that crypto and markets would make his supporters rich. If those bubbles burst, the political consequences could be just as severe as the financial ones.

    This is not speculation. The evidence is now visible in the markets.

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    6 m
  • Keir Starmer is finished
    Feb 6 2026

    Keir Starmer’s authority collapsed in the House of Commons this week, and it will not recover. This video explains why his judgment failed, why sacking aides will not save him, and why Labour is now a hollowed-out party with no credible future leadership.

    But this crisis goes much further than Starmer. It exposes systemic failure in Labour, growing paralysis in government, and deeper institutional rot that threatens the Union and the monarchy itself.

    This is not a scandal. It is an executive collapse in slow motion.

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    14 m
  • Why you need a pay rise
    Feb 5 2026

    If people do not have spending power, businesses will not invest, innovate, or hire. It really is that simple.

    This video breaks down the real sequencing of growth and explains why politicians have got everything wrong. Pay rises aren't the reward for growth; they are the precondition for it, because people without money to spend cannot ever drive the growth politicians crave.

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    13 m
  • What if Trump stops the vote?
    Feb 4 2026

    What if a US president simply refuses to allow an election to take place?

    This video is not a conspiracy theory. It is a risk analysis based on polling data, Trump’s own record, and the legal powers he has already claimed. I examine what could happen if the 2026 US midterms are cancelled or ignored, how states might respond, the risk of constitutional rupture, and why this matters not just for America, but for the UK and Europe as well. Democracy only survives if it is defended.

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    13 m
  • Is GDP a useless measure?
    Feb 3 2026

    GDP dominates political debate, but it tells us almost nothing about real prosperity, well-being, or care.

    Created as a technical statistic of massive use in wartime, GDP was never meant to measure success and yet it now drives policy, justifies inequality, and is used as an excuse for austerity.

    In this video, I explain why GDP is conceptually flawed, how it rewards harm and ignores distribution, and why we urgently need economic measures that value care, prevention, and human flourishing instead of economic churn of no value at all.

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    19 m
  • What's the choice? Care or fascism?
    Feb 2 2026

    This video argues that we are facing a stark economic and political choice: fascism or care.

    Fascism is not history. It is happening now. It has a distinct economic logic built on extreme neoliberalism:

    • Market worship
    • Punishment instead of protection
    • Austerity
    • Fear, and
    • The use of the state to enforce cruelty while insulating wealth.

    The economics of care offers a different framework entirely. It puts human needs first, makes security and freedom from fear a public duty, and insists that markets must serve people rather than control them. Care is not sentimental. It is economic realism, social resilience, and democracy’s defence.

    This is not an abstract debate. The structures we build now will decide whether we live in a society organised around fear or one organised around care.

    That is the choice. And there is no neutral ground.

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    10 m
  • Politics has run out of road
    Feb 1 2026

    Neoliberal politics promised growth, efficiency, and renewal. What it has delivered is inequality, insecurity, and democratic exhaustion. The right has failed.

    But, as this video explains, much of the left has no alternative to offer. Labour’s fiscal rules, growth-first economics, and treatment of public services as costs are not left-wing ideas – they are neoliberalism with a softer tone.

    No wonder most people are alienated from the whole political process: it has run out of road.

    Without care at the centre of economic thinking, markets fragment society, trust collapses, and democracy weakens. Better management is not enough. We need care as a new organising principle.

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    7 m