THE STENCH OF COWARDICE

The British government is calling in army experts to handle Birmingham’s mounting rubbish crisis instead of declaring a health emergency or taking decisive action against striking workers, such as suspending them or privatizing the system.

THE STENCH OF COWARDICE AND GARBAGE

This is what passes for leadership now? A city festering in filth while ministers shuffle papers and call in the army, not to clean it up, but to consult on the best way to shovel rotting bags of failure? You don’t need military tacticians to solve Birmingham’s rubbish nightmare—you need a spine, a megaphone, and maybe a court order. If this were a cholera outbreak, would we wait for a focus group? No. But apparently, garbage is only a “crisis” when it blocks the view from Westminster.

Workers striking? Fine. That’s their right. But there’s a line—and when it’s crossed, when bins overflow into playgrounds and rats throw block parties, then the public interest takes precedent. You either get the strikers back on the job or you move them out of the way. Six-month suspensions? Privatization? Emergency powers? Absolutely. Because when garbage becomes political, the real trash isn’t just on the streets—it’s sitting in government offices, polishing their indecision while the city chokes on the consequences.

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Ian McEwan

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