Iran, American Hegemony, and Western Resolve.

For years, Iran has functioned not as a normal state with normal ambitions, but as a regime that exports pressure through proxies, intimidation, missile programs, and calibrated disorder. Ottawa itself has repeatedly described Iran as “the principal source of instability and terror in the Middle East,” while stressing that Tehran must never be allowed to obtain or develop nuclear weapons. That matters because it cuts through the usual fog. This was not a strike against a harmless status quo. It was a strike against a regime that has spent years making the region more combustible, more violent, and more difficult to govern. (Canada PM)

That does not make war clean. It does not make every target choice wise. It does not make every legal question disappear. But it does clarify the strategic question. If a regime repeatedly funds, arms, and directs forces that destabilize the region, then eventually someone must decide whether deterrence is a word or a policy. The American and Israeli action in Iran is best understood in those terms. Not as a fantasy of moral purity, but as a decision to reimpose costs on a state that had grown used to exporting them. Ottawa’s own language makes that case harder to evade than many critics would like. (Canada PM)

This is the part many Western governments still struggle to say plainly. Order is not maintained by sentiment alone. It is not maintained by declarations, concern, and another exhausted appeal to “the international community.” Canada’s March 3 statement admitted the core reality: years of negotiations, sanctions, international monitoring, and multilateral pressure did not neutralize the Iranian threat. That is a brutal admission, and an important one. It means the soft-language consensus failed on its own stated terms. At some point, if the threat remains, either somebody acts or the speeches become a form of theatre performed over a steadily deteriorating map. (Canada PM)

“American hegemony, however much the word offends refined opinion, has often been the hard outer shell of a wider Western order.”

So yes, there is a case for saying the strikes were good in strategic terms. Iran was not a stabilizing power that got misunderstood by the usual Western moralists. It was a revolutionary regime that helped build and sustain a network of armed clients and auxiliaries across the region. Striking at that centre of gravity carries risks, but so did allowing it to operate under the assumption that the West had become too managerial, too conflict-averse, and too morally confused to act decisively. The risk of action is real. The risk of permanent indulgence was real too, and too often treated as invisible. (Canada PM)

That is why this moment matters beyond Iran. Not because one campaign settles the world. Not because every adversary will instantly become cautious. But because power still communicates. It communicates especially to regimes that have spent years studying the West and concluding that we prefer procedure to force, messaging to punishment, and managed humiliation to escalation. The lesson of Iran may not be that America will always act. It is simpler and more important than that: America still can act, and under some conditions still will. Even the White House’s preferred language of “peace through strength” matters less here as slogan than as signal. Adversaries do not have to admire the wording to understand the demonstration. (Canada PM)

That broader message is where China enters the discussion, but only carefully. It would be too strong, and probably false, to say Beijing has “backed down” because of Iran. Reuters reporting on Chinese military activity around Taiwan points to a narrower and more ambiguous picture: visible Chinese air activity around Taiwan has fallen sharply, but Taiwanese officials and analysts offered multiple possible explanations, including a possible Trump-Xi meeting atmosphere and internal turbulence inside China’s military. They explicitly warned against reading too much into a short lull. So the honest claim is not that China has folded. It is that Beijing is being reminded, in public, that the United States still possesses both the means and, at times, the appetite to use hard power. That is an inference. It is not yet a proved geopolitical shift. (Reuters)

The January Venezuela raid helps make that point, though only in a limited sense. Reuters reported that U.S. officials explicitly framed the operation as a warning to Beijing to keep its distance from the Americas. That does not prove deterrence has been restored, and it does not establish a new global pattern on its own. It does show that the message was sent. In Venezuela and now Iran, Washington has demonstrated that recent American power has not been purely rhetorical. Rivals may draw their own conclusions, but they are being given fresh evidence that the United States still possesses both the means and, at times, the appetite to use hard force. (Reuters)

And that matters because American hegemony, however much the word offends refined opinion, has served for decades as the hard outer shell of a wider Western order. It has not produced a perfect world. It has produced something rarer: a world in which hostile powers, rogue regimes, and ambitious revisionists often had to think twice. That “think twice” space is not everything, but it is a great deal. Lose it, and you do not get peace. You get more tests, more probes, more daring clients, more rulers gambling that the old sheriff now prefers seminars to force. The language may rankle. The reality remains. (Reuters)

“Ottawa could identify the arsonist, but still felt compelled to lecture the firefighters on process before the building stopped burning.”

And then there is Canada, performing once again its favourite late-imperial routine: saying the truest thing in the room and then rushing to blur it. On March 3, Carney said Iran is the principal source of instability and terror in the Middle East and condemned Iranian violence against civilians. On March 4, he also stressed that the United States and Israel acted without engaging the United Nations or consulting allies, including Canada, and reaffirmed that international law binds all belligerents. In other words, Ottawa could identify the arsonist, but still felt compelled to lecture the firefighters on process before the building stopped burning. (Canada PM)

That is the embarrassment. Not caution as such. Caution can be prudent. The embarrassment is the inability to rank moral and strategic realities in the right order. A serious government can say: Iran is the principal destabilizing force, diplomacy failed, the strikes carry grave risks, and the next task is preventing a wider regional catastrophe. That would at least sound like an adult hierarchy of judgment. What we got instead was a familiar Canadian blend of partial clarity and procedural recoil, as if sounding too decisive might itself be a diplomatic offence. (Canada PM)

The deeper issue is civilizational confidence. A West that cannot impose costs on regimes that menace its allies, fuel regional disorder, and exploit every sign of hesitation will not be admired for its restraint. It will be read as tired. The value of American hegemony, whatever its flaws, has never been that it creates a frictionless world. It is that it has often underwritten a world in which enemies of the West had reason to fear miscalculation. That fear is not barbarism. It is one of the costs of preserving order. Remove it, and you do not get a more humane international system. You get a more predatory one. (Canada PM)

So the case for the strikes is not that war is noble or that consequences will be tidy. It is that deterrence sometimes has to become visible again. Iran built power by betting that the West preferred delay to decision. In this case, that bet was answered with force. Even America’s enemies, and Canada’s evasive political class, may have been reminded of something they had started to forget: strength still speaks, and sometimes it is the only language a revolutionary regime believes. (Canada PM)

References

Prime Minister of Canada. “Statement by Prime Minister Carney on the evolving situation in the Middle East.” March 3, 2026.

Prime Minister of Canada. “Prime Minister Carney delivers remarks to media in Sydney, Australia.” March 4, 2026.

Reuters. “Chinese military flights around Taiwan fall, Trump-Xi meeting may be factor.” March 5, 2026.

Reuters. “With Venezuela raid, US tells China to keep away from the Americas.” January 11, 2026.

A lot of arguments don’t end because someone “lost.” They end because someone drops a category word: harmful, hateful, unsafe. The conversation gets reclassified as an emergency, and suddenly you are no longer debating a claim. You are defending your right to be in the room.

If you’ve felt this happening more often lately, you’re not imagining it. The move is simple: treat disagreement as injury, then treat your refusal to retract as more injury. It’s a neat little loop. You can’t disprove it, because your attempt to disprove it is counted as part of the harm.

So the goal here isn’t to “win” every exchange. The goal is to stay clear, stay calm, and avoid being dragged into fog.

Three rules help.

1) Ask what the harm is, mechanically

“Harm” is a suitcase word. People pack a dozen meanings into it, then wheel it around as if it’s one thing.

Don’t fight the suitcase. Open it.

Try:

  • “What kind of harm do you mean: emotional distress, social exclusion, incitement, discrimination, or something else?”

  • “What’s the actual path from my claim to the harm you’re naming?”

  • “Is the harm that you dislike the idea, or that you think it leads to a specific outcome?”

This isn’t a gotcha. It’s basic hygiene. If a person can’t tell you what they mean, you cannot respond intelligently. You’re shadowboxing.

A good rule of thumb: if they can’t name a mechanism, they aren’t making an argument. They’re placing a stop sign on the table and acting like the sign is evidence.

And notice the comfort “harm” provides. It allows someone to skip the hard part, the part where they explain why your claim is false, or why it leads to a concrete bad result. They can just announce: “That’s harmful,” and then expect you to retreat on cue.

Make them do the work. Not as punishment, but because without that work you are not in a debate. You are in a moral weather report.

2) Separate moral judgment from permission to censor

Even if a statement is rude, wrong, or ignorant, it does not automatically follow that it should be suppressed or punished.

That leap is the whole game.

You’ll notice how quickly some conversations smuggle in this assumption: if it’s harmful, it must be disallowed. But that premise is not neutral. It’s political. It’s also the premise that makes “harm” such a powerful word, because it offers a shortcut from “I condemn that” to “you don’t get to say that.”

Break the spell with a calm distinction:

  • “You’re free to think I’m wrong. That doesn’t mean you’re entitled to make me silent.”

Or softer:

  • “We can disagree strongly and still protect the right to say it.”

This forces a choice. Are they arguing that you are mistaken, or are they arguing that mistaken speech is illegitimate?

In a plural society, we tolerate a lot of speech precisely because we do not trust any faction, left or right, religious or secular, activist or corporate, to define “harm” without expanding it until it covers whatever irritates them this week.

Also: don’t let “consequences” do lazy work. Yes, speech can have consequences. So can silence. So can mandatory agreement. So can the habit of treating adults like fragile glassware.

You can live in a world where people criticize each other sharply. That’s normal. What you cannot do, without slowly breaking civic life, is turn moral condemnation into a veto.

Criticism is fair game. Coercion is not.

3) Don’t get trapped in intent court

When someone says “That’s hateful,” they often mean: “Your intent must be hateful.”

Now you’re in a trial about your inner motives, which is the safest place for them. It’s unfalsifiable. You can’t prove you don’t hate. They can’t prove you do. But they can keep you stuck there forever while the original claim remains untouched.

So: state your intent once, briefly, then return to the claim.

A template that works:

  • “My intent isn’t to attack anyone. The claim is X. If X is wrong, show me where.”

That’s it. One sentence of intent, then substance.

If they refuse and keep circling back to your hidden motives, set a boundary:

  • “If your position is that disagreement equals hate by definition, then there isn’t a debate to have.”

This is not escalation. It’s diagnosis. Because at that point the argument is no longer about facts, reasons, or tradeoffs. It’s about social control: the category word has been used to declare you out of bounds, and your only permitted move is submission.

The point of the exercise

The goal isn’t to dunk on people. It’s to keep the conversation from being hijacked by fog words and moral shortcuts.

So:

  1. Define the harm (mechanism, not mood).

  2. Separate judgment from censorship (criticism isn’t a veto).

  3. Refuse the intent trap (claims, not soul-reading).

If they can engage those terms, you might actually have a discussion. If they can’t, you’ve learned something useful. You learned it without flailing, apologizing for existing, or agreeing to a vocabulary designed to make debate impossible.

And that, in 2026, is already a small victory.

Stabat mater dolorósa
juxta Crucem lacrimósa,
dum pendébat Fílius.

At the Cross her station keeping,
stood the mournful Mother weeping,
close to her Son to the last.

 

Giovanni Battista Pergolesi’s “Stabat Mater dolorosa” is the opening movement of his Stabat Mater (1736), a sacred composition setting the 13th-century Latin hymn depicting Mary’s sorrow at the Crucifixion. This duet for soprano and alto voices, accompanied by strings (two violins, viola) and basso continuo, is in F minor and common time, with a Grave tempo marking that establishes a slow, solemn pace.

Stylistically, it blends operatic expressiveness—drawing from Pergolesi’s background in opera buffa—with sacred restraint, featuring intimate vocal interplay through imitation and intertwining lines that convey deep pathos.

Notable features include its simple yet poignant melodies, chromatic harmonies for emotional tension, and a lamenting quality that sets the tone for the entire 12-movement work.

   A University of Toronto Scarborough posting for an Assistant Professor in Computational Biology and Data Science looks like a standard academic hire. It isn’t. It is a restricted competition tied to a Canada Research Chair (CRC) nomination.

The posting requires applicants to self-identify as a member of one or more “designated groups” in their cover letter, namely women or gender minorities, racialized persons, Indigenous Peoples, or persons with disabilities. If you do not fit one of those categories, you are not eligible to apply. That is not an inference. It is in the posting.

That one detail captures the reality of modern equity administration in Canadian universities: what is framed as “removing barriers” often functions, in practice, as category-based exclusion.

This is not a rogue department. It is a federal program mechanism.

The university did not invent this framework on its own. The hiring restriction is attached to the Canada Research Chairs program, a federal initiative that allocates prestige and funding to institutions under defined rules. One major rule-set is the CRC equity framework, which includes population-based targets for the four designated groups. The program’s stated targets to be reached by the end of 2029 are: 50.9% women and gender equity-seeking groups, 22% racialized persons, 4.9% Indigenous Peoples, and 7.5% persons with disabilities.

Again, these are not vibes. They are published benchmarks tied to institutional plans and program governance.

The key point is the enforcement logic. Under the CRC’s settlement and enforcement framework, institutions that miss interim targets can face consequences that shape nominations and recruitment practices. In plain terms: the program can push institutions toward restricted competitions where eligibility is limited to designated groups.

So when you see a posting that excludes broad classes of Canadians from applying, it is not a one-off. It is a downstream product of rules that tie federal research prestige to demographic targets.

The problem is the normalization of identity gates

Defenders will say this is equity. They will argue that special measures are justified to counter historical bias and structural disadvantage. That is the argument, and it deserves to be stated fairly.

But there is a moral and civic cost to the method. When eligibility is restricted by identity categories, the institution is no longer selecting among all qualified candidates. It is selecting among those who clear an identity threshold first. That is not “equal opportunity.” It is a gate that sorts people before their work is even evaluated.

If you want a simple test for whether this is principled, reverse the identity labels. A posting that said “whites only” or “men only” would be condemned instantly, for good reason. You do not escape discrimination by flipping who benefits. You normalize discrimination by making it administratively routine.

A better standard

If Canada wants fairness in academic hiring, the standard should be straightforward: open eligibility, transparent criteria, and selection based on demonstrated excellence. If there are pipeline problems, fix the pipeline. Broaden recruitment, strengthen mentorship, reduce opaque networking advantages, and enforce accountable evaluation.

Do not solve bias by writing exclusions into job postings, then congratulating yourself for it. That approach trains young researchers to see institutions as political allocation machines rather than merit-seeking communities. And once that belief sets in, you do not get trust back easily.

References

1) U of T Scarborough job posting (Assistant Professor – Computational Biology and Data Science)
https://jobs.utoronto.ca/job/Scarborough-Assistant-Professor-Computational-Biology-and-Data-Science-ON/599939517/

2) Canada Research Chairs: “Establishing equity targets for 2021 to 2029”
https://www.chairs-chaires.gc.ca/program-programme/equity-equite/targets-cibles-eng.aspx

3) CRC Program representation statistics (lists the population-based targets and deadline)
https://www.chairs-chaires.gc.ca/about_us-a_notre_sujet/statistics-statistiques-eng.aspx

4) CRC: Equity, Diversity and Inclusion requirements and practices (overview, settlement context)
https://www.chairs-chaires.gc.ca/program-programme/equity-equite/index-eng.aspx

5) CRC: 2021 Canadian Human Rights Settlement Agreement page (program framing and enforcement context)
https://www.chairs-chaires.gc.ca/program-programme/equity-equite/2021_settlement-reglement-eng.aspx

6) House of Commons Standing Committee on Science and Research, Meeting No. 2 (witness panel includes Steven Pinker and Azim Shariff)
https://www.ourcommons.ca/documentviewer/en/45-1/SRSR/meeting-2/evidence

A divorce lawyer is a relationship mechanic.

Wedding planners see shiny new cars. Divorce lawyers see the breakdowns—where things start to strain, where small ignored problems become system failures, where “it happened so suddenly” is almost never true.

In a recent conversation, divorce lawyer James Sexton (25+ years in the trenches) kept returning to one blunt idea:

Most marriages don’t end in a single explosion. They end by dehydration.
People stop paying attention. They stop doing what made their partner feel seen. Resentment piles up quietly. Then one day it looks “sudden,” but it wasn’t. It was slow… then all at once.

So the goal isn’t grand romance. It’s maintenance. And maintenance is unsexy—right up until it saves you.

Here are ten lessons worth stealing.


1) Pay attention like it’s alive

The fastest route to divorce isn’t one dramatic betrayal. It’s the belief that “we’re married now, so we’re good.”

Marriage isn’t a trophy you put on a shelf. It’s a living thing. If you stop tending it, it doesn’t stay “fine.” It withers.

Try this: do one small “I see you” action every day—thank you, a compliment, a quick note, a small touch, a check-in.


2) Keep doing the “dating behaviors”

Early on, you pursued. You were curious. You made effort. You were interested—and interesting.

Then life arrives: work, kids, exhaustion, routines. Couples treat courtship like a one-time entrance fee instead of the ongoing engine of closeness.

The boring truth is also the saving truth:
the behaviors that “won” your partner are the behaviors that keep your partner.

Try this: once a week, do something you would’ve done when you were trying to impress them—plan something, initiate, make it clear they’re still chosen.


3) Break the spiral before it becomes your normal

A lot of unhappy marriages get stuck in loops that feel logical from the inside:

  • “You don’t want me.”
  • “I don’t want you because you don’t seem to like me.”
  • “I don’t seem to like you because we’re never close.”
  • “We’re never close because life is chaos.”

Eventually you land in the worst place: both people feel justified, and both feel lonely.

The key insight: spirals can be reversed with the same simplicity that created them.
Not by “winning” an argument, but by shifting the emotional direction.

Try this: be the first person to do the generous thing—kindness, help, warmth—before you feel like you’ve “earned” it.


4) Talk when it’s smoke, not fire (“hit send now”)

A common divorce pattern is small grievances saved up until they become ammunition. Then one day you’re fighting about something ridiculous… and suddenly it’s about ten years of unresolved hurt.

Sexton’s advice is to speak early—before the issue becomes a story you tell yourself.

It doesn’t have to be a confrontation. It can be a calm check-in.

Try this:
“Small thing: when you said X, it sat weird with me. I might be misreading it, but I wanted to check.”


5) Frame complaints as longing, not prosecution

The same concern can either invite closeness or trigger defense.

  • “We never have sex.”
    vs
  • “I miss feeling close to you.”

One is a charge sheet. The other is a bid for connection.

People can fight accusations. It’s harder to fight honest longing.

Try this: translate “you never” into “I miss…” and “I want…”


6) Praise isn’t fluff—it’s preventative medicine

Many people treat compliments as optional. Then they wonder why warmth dries up.

Appreciation is not a “nice extra.” It’s lubrication for the whole machine. It’s how you stay emotionally fed in the middle of real life.

Try this: one specific compliment per day. Not “you’re great,” but:
“I loved how you handled that.”
“You looked amazing today.”
“I felt proud standing beside you.”


7) Treat money secrecy as a real betrayal

Sexton emphasizes that “financial betrayal” ends a lot of marriages: hidden debt, secret spending, stability that turns out to be a house of cards.

It’s not the dollars that destroy trust. It’s the deception—the feeling that you were not a teammate.

Try this: make money boring and routine: a monthly check-in on spending, debts, goals, and anxieties. No drama. Just truth.


8) Expect stress gates—and navigate them together

Relationships strain at predictable transition points:

  • a new baby
  • kids becoming less dependent
  • career shifts
  • bodies aging
  • midlife “is this it?” questions
  • empty nest

The failure mode is drift: two people building separate lives under one roof.

Try this: name the transition out loud:
“We’re entering a new phase. How do we protect us inside it?”


9) Social media can quietly poison gratitude

Sexton’s line is memorable: social media is often “everyone’s greatest hits while you live your gag reel.”

If you scroll passively, you absorb the message that everyone else’s life is easier, sexier, more exciting—and that your relationship is uniquely flawed.

This isn’t moral panic. It’s attention economics: what you stare at trains your desires and your dissatisfaction.

Try this: curate aggressively. Feed the content that strengthens your bond. Starve the content that erodes it. If you can’t do that, limit the exposure.


10) The hard thing and the right thing are usually the same

When people drift toward cheating or quitting, the clean move is not secrecy. It’s honesty while there’s still time.

Something like:
“We’re far apart. I’m lonely. I’m tempted. Can we fix this—together?”

That conversation is terrifying. It is also the one that keeps your integrity intact—and often saves the marriage before it crosses lines you can’t uncross.

Try this: don’t romanticize “the drift.” Name it early.


A simple weekly ritual (10 minutes)

If you want one habit instead of ten ideas, steal this:

  1. One appreciation: “This week I felt loved when you…”
  2. One repair: “This week I felt a sting when…”
  3. One desire: “This week I’d love more…”
  4. One plan: “This week, let’s protect time for us on…”

Short. Regular. Honest.


The quiet thesis

Most marriages don’t die from one villainous act. They die from inattention + unspoken resentment + unmanaged transition—and then, eventually, the predictable betrayals that follow disconnection.

The fix is not constant fireworks.

It’s steady proof—small, consistent proof—that your partner is still chosen.

Water the plant. Before it looks dead.

 

The UK’s immigration argument increasingly sounds like destiny rather than policy. People don’t just disagree about numbers; they disagree about whether the state can still enforce boundaries, integrate newcomers into a shared civic order, and speak plainly about what’s happening. When those basic functions look weak or evasive, the vacuum gets filled with bigger stories—decline, betrayal, “takeover,” inevitability.

A sober view starts with what can be verified quickly.

What the numbers say

Recent UK migration trends are not a one-way escalator. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) estimates long-term net migration at 204,000 in the year ending June 2025, down from 649,000 the year before. In the same release, ONS estimates long-term immigration at 898,000 and emigration at 693,000.

That decline doesn’t instantly relieve pressure on housing, schools, or services—those systems lag. But it does mean any serious argument has to acknowledge that inflows can change materially under policy and economic conditions.

At the same time, irregular Channel crossings remain the public symbol of “rules don’t work,” regardless of their share of total immigration. Home Office statistics report 46,000 detected arrivals via illegal routes in the year ending December 2025, including 41,000 small-boat arrivals. Politics runs on salience: one visible failure can outweigh many invisible successes.

The asylum system itself is measurable. In the year ending December 2025 the Home Office reports 101,000 asylum claims, 135,000 initial decisions, a 42% grant rate, and 64,000 people awaiting an initial decision at end-December—along with large numbers receiving asylum support, including hotel use. Whatever your values, those are not vibes; they are levers.

Why the argument stays hot even when net migration falls

The debate persists because it is not only about totals. It is about legitimacy: can the state say, credibly, we know who is coming, under what rules, and we can enforce outcomes?

Legitimacy gets harder when estimates change and messaging sounds like PR. The House of Commons Library notes revisions that lowered the estimated net migration figure for the year ending December 2024 (revised to 345,000 from a previously published 431,000). Revisions happen in good faith in statistical work. The political problem is how they land: when people already suspect evasiveness, revisions are read as concealment.

A skeptic will object that “competence” isn’t merely a technical problem; it’s a political one. The worry is not that the state lacks spreadsheets, but that it lacks will: that enforcement is endlessly promised and rarely delivered, and that the system is managed as public relations rather than rule-of-law administration. That objection can’t be waved away. It’s precisely why visible targets, transparent reporting, and demonstrable closure matter: they are the only antidote to the suspicion that the system is performative.

In that atmosphere, administrative failure is quickly translated into moral narrative: the public stops arguing about systems and starts arguing about betrayal.

A necessary constraint: Britain is not a “monolith” story

If you want a steelmanable argument, you have to keep two truths in view.

First, the UK has genuine capacity and integration questions. Second, collective suspicion is both wrong and self-defeating.

A useful demographic anchor: in the 2021 Census for England and Wales, 6.5% of the population (3.9 million) identified as Muslim, up from 4.9% in 2011. That is a significant minority, not a majority—nor a single political bloc. Treating millions of people as a unified will is rhetorical convenience, not analysis.

And the cost of careless rhetoric is not theoretical. A Commons committee report cites 4,478 hate crimes against Muslims in England and Wales in the year ending March 2025. When systems feel out of control, scapegoating rises. Competence is therefore not just technocratic; it’s preventative.

None of this requires pretending integration is automatic. Some communities integrate faster than others; neighbourhood concentration, school pressures, and public-order flashpoints are real issues in parts of the country. The serious question is not whether problems exist, but whether the UK can measure them honestly—language attainment, employment, educational outcomes, and crime (victimization and offending) by clear categories—and then enforce civic norms consistently without collapsing into group blame.

The real lesson: competence drains the market for fate stories

The UK does not need prophecy. It needs closure—visible, lawful closure.

That means:

  • Fast, transparent processing of asylum claims and appeals, with published targets and plain reporting. (Throughput has already moved; durability is the test.)
  • A credible “no” alongside a humane “yes”—because if failed claims rarely produce timely outcomes, the public stops distinguishing between migration streams and everything becomes one undifferentiated panic.
  • Clear public separation of migration categories (work, study, family, humanitarian, irregular entry), so “migration” stops being a fog-word that guarantees misunderstanding. Oxford’s Migration Observatory is a model of that clarity.
  • An integration bargain that isn’t embarrassed of itself: language acquisition, equal protection under law, and consistent enforcement against coercive practices—paired with a refusal to treat entire communities as enemies.

When the state can do those things, public debate becomes governable again. When it cannot, the loudest narratives will always be the simplest: destiny, decline, takeover. Not because they are the best explanations, but because they match what people feel.

References

 

1) Office for National Statistics (ONS) — Long-term international migration, provisional: year ending June 2025
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/internationalmigration/bulletins/longterminternationalmigrationprovisional/yearendingjune2025

2) UK Home Office — Immigration system statistics, year ending December 2025: Summary of latest statistics
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-system-statistics-year-ending-december-2025/summary-of-latest-statistics

3) UK Home Office — Immigration system statistics, year ending December 2025: Illegal entry routes (detail page)
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-system-statistics-year-ending-december-2025/how-many-people-come-to-the-uk-via-illegal-entry-routes

4) UK Parliament — House of Commons Library: Recent updates to UK migration estimates (CBP-10446)
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10446/

5) Office for National Statistics (ONS) — Religion, England and Wales: Census 2021
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/culturalidentity/religion/bulletins/religionenglandandwales/census2021

6) UK Parliament — Women and Equalities Committee report (PDF): Discrimination, harassment and abuse against Muslim women
https://committees.parliament.uk/publications/51305/documents/285022/default/

7) Oxford Migration Observatory — Who migrates to the UK and why?
https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/who-migrates-to-the-uk-and-why/

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Life After an Emotionally Abusive Relationship

Unpolished XX

No product, no face paint. I am enough.

Volunteer petunia

Observations and analysis on survival, love and struggle

femlab

the feminist exhibition space at the university of alberta

Raising Orlando

About gender, identity, parenting and containing multitudes

The Feminist Kitanu

Spreading the dangerous disease of radical feminism

trionascully.com

Not Afraid Of Virginia Woolf

Double Plus Good

The Evolution Will Not BeTelevised

la scapigliata

writer, doctor, wearer of many hats

Teach The Change

Teaching Artist/ Progressive Educator

Female Personhood

Identifying as female since the dawn of time.

Not The News in Briefs

A blog by Helen Saxby

SOLIDARITY WITH HELEN STEEL

A blog in support of Helen Steel

thenationalsentinel.wordpress.com/

Where media credibility has been reborn.

BigBooButch

Memoirs of a Butch Lesbian

RadFemSpiraling

Radical Feminism Discourse

a sledge and crowbar

deconstructing identity and culture

The Radical Pen

Fighting For Female Liberation from Patriarchy

Emma

Politics, things that make you think, and recreational breaks

Easilyriled's Blog

cranky. joyful. radical. funny. feminist.

Nordic Model Now!

Movement for the Abolition of Prostitution

The WordPress C(h)ronicle

These are the best links shared by people working with WordPress

HANDS ACROSS THE AISLE

Gender is the Problem, Not the Solution

fmnst

Peak Trans and other feminist topics

There Are So Many Things Wrong With This

if you don't like the news, make some of your own

Gentle Curiosity

Musing over important things. More questions than answers.

violetwisp

short commentaries, pretty pictures and strong opinions

Revive the Second Wave

gender-critical sex-negative intersectional radical feminism