Enemies Among Us? Or Just a Nation That Forgot How to Have a Barbecue Without Shouting “Death to the West”? 🇬🇧🔥

Michael Deacon has rung the doorbell of national paranoia, and surprise—Britain answered in a balaclava. In his latest column, he paints a portrait of modern Britain where “weekly hate marches” double as weekend plans, and homegrown radicalism now sprouts faster than garden weeds. According to Deacon, we’re not facing a foreign invader—we’re hosting the ideological Airbnb from hell.

🧠 The Great British Breakdown: Extremism, Tea, and Denial

Deacon’s central thesis? The enemy within is no longer theoretical. It’s vocal, visible, and worryingly local—think less “foreign agent” and more “guy you went to secondary school with who now quotes Telegram channels like scripture.” And these aren’t just angry teens with a Wi-Fi connection; they’re adults, embedded in communities, chanting slogans on weekends and forwarding conspiracies like they’re discount codes for Just Eat.

He’s not wrong about the complacency. Politicians tiptoe around the subject like it’s a game of ideological hopscotch, while extremists turn every protest into a casting call for the next Orwellian sequel. The idea of “stronger policing” and “community resilience” sounds lovely—until you remember that most community centres are either closed, defunded, or now haunted by the ghosts of well-meaning initiatives.

What’s truly terrifying? This isn’t fringe anymore. It’s becoming brunch conversation. It’s radical chic meets kitchen-table terrorism. And we’re all so desperate to avoid “offence” that we’d rather let extremists conga down Whitehall than call out a slogan that ends with “All Cops Are…” anything.

So yes, Deacon’s waving the warning flag. But is anyone looking up from their self-checkout screen to notice?

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Challenges

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Have we become too polite to protect ourselves? Too tolerant of the intolerant? Or is this just more tabloid hysteria with a thesaurus? Sound off in the blog comments—are we enabling extremism with silence, or just buying too much into national panic? 🔥🗣️

👇 Slam that comment button, ignite the share link, and give us your hottest (or coldest) take.

The spiciest replies will make it into the next print issue. 🌶️🗞️

3 responses to “Enemies Among Us? Or Just a Nation That Forgot How to Have a Barbecue Without Shouting “Death to the West”? 🇬🇧🔥”

  1. johnnjdavies Avatar
    johnnjdavies
    • When we avoid offence, we invite extremism.
    • When we defund community, we weaken resilience.
    • When we normalize hate, we abandon truth.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. johnnjdavies Avatar
    johnnjdavies

    The Problem(s)

    1. Normalization of Extremism

    “This isn’t fringe anymore. It’s becoming brunch conversation.”

    • Problem: Ideas once considered extreme are now mainstreamed through social media, protests, and daily conversations.
    • Impact: Desensitization. What once shocked now blends in. It also emboldens people who previously stayed quiet.

    2. Radicalization Close to Home

    “Think less ‘foreign agent’ and more ‘guy you went to school with’…”

    • Problem: Radicalization isn’t a distant or foreign threat; it’s domestic, familiar, and woven into local communities.
    • Impact: Harder to detect, easier to ignore, and more emotionally dissonant when confronted.

    3. Complacent Institutions

    “Politicians tiptoe around the subject…”

    • Problem: Political and institutional hesitancy to address domestic extremism head-on—out of fear of offending, losing votes, or inflaming tensions.
    • Impact: Power vacuum filled by bad actors and conspiracy theorists.

    4. Defunded Community Infrastructure

    • Problem: Community services that once built resilience and cohesion are underfunded or gone entirely.
    • Impact: Fewer counterweights to isolation, misinformation, and radical narratives.

    What Can Be Done – a few (overly-optimistic) suggestions

    1. Reinvest in Local Civil Society

    • Rebuild and fund community centres, libraries, and grassroots initiatives—spaces where dialogue, support, and civic trust can flourish.
    • Support youth engagement and mentorship programmes that offer an alternative to online rabbit holes.

    2. Civic and Media Literacy Education

    • Integrate digital/media literacy into schools and adult education to help people spot misinformation, echo chambers, and manipulative narratives.
    • Support NGOs and educators that offer resources on disinformation and radicalization.

    3. Call Out, Don’t Call Off

    • Encourage civil courage: it must become normal to challenge extremist slogans or ideas respectfully but firmly—even among friends or relatives.
    • Use frameworks for productive confrontation, rather than defaulting to silence or conflict avoidance – e.g. the ‘2 truths’ approach works well: “[1] You’re right to be frustrated with today’s politicians but [2] the rest of what you said was complete bollocks” Not in those exact words obvs 😉

    4. Build Cross-Ideological Coalitions

    • Extremists thrive in a vacuum of nuance. Civil society must unite across political lines to uphold democratic values—free speech, rule of law, mutual respect—even when opinions diverge.

    5. Hold Politicians Accountable

    • Push elected leaders to stop “hopscotching” around the issue and fund early intervention strategies and community policing—not just surveillance and headlines.

    6. Platform Responsibility

    • Platforms like Telegram, X, and YouTube must be pushed harder (via regulation or pressure) to de-amplify radical content and protect users from algorithmic radicalization.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. chameleon15026052 Avatar

      This is a sharp and necessary breakdown — especially the point about radicalization being “the guy you went to school with.” That line hit hard.

      If I could add one thing, it would be this:

      We talk a lot about ideology, but not enough about emptiness. The kind that grows when people lose meaning, purpose, or connection. Extremism doesn’t just feed on hate — it feeds on voids. And right now, those voids are everywhere: in work that feels pointless, in social lives reduced to screens, in institutions that no longer feel human.

      If we want to counter radicalization, we don’t just need better education or stronger regulation — we need a society that helps people matter. Purpose is the best inoculation against extremism.

      Liked by 1 person

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Ian McEwan

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