Queen Bee@KingBobIIV
It’s times like this I’m particularly grateful for the utter incompetence of the British political class over the last thirty years, who decided that running a serious country with its own industry, energy supply, food production and strategic infrastructure was all rather old-fashioned and a bit vulgar in the modern globalised age.
Steel, which we once made in enormous quantities and exported around the world, largely gone so we can import it from China.
Oil refineries steadily shut down because apparently an island nation of seventy million people has no real need to refine its own fuel anymore.
Gas storage scrapped because planning for winter is clearly a paranoid hangover from the twentieth century.
Domestic farming buried under tax, regulation and land policy so that we now import a huge proportion of the food we eat while congratulating ourselves on the virtue of stopping cow farts.
Our nuclear industry, which Britain pioneered, hollowed out and then effectively handed to the French state through EDF Energy, who now run most of the remaining reactors and are building Hinkley Point C, meaning the lights in Britain are increasingly dependent on the industrial policy of Paris.
Large parts of the water system sold off to foreign investors through companies like Thames Water, who have somehow managed to extract billions in debt and dividends while simultaneously turning Britain’s rivers and coastline into an open sewer.
At one point we even invited the Chinese state into the middle of our nuclear power programme through China General Nuclear, because when you are building critical national infrastructure the obvious partner is a strategic rival with very different interests.
Meanwhile enormous chunks of London property, infrastructure and utilities sit in the portfolios of overseas sovereign wealth funds such as the Qatar Investment Authority, while large volumes of the gas keeping the country running now arrive from the Norwegian state energy company Equinor, because clearly a country sitting on the North Sea has no need to worry too much about controlling its own energy supply.
Having spent decades dismantling domestic industry, closing refineries, weakening food production, selling strategic infrastructure and outsourcing energy, we now borrow vast amounts of money, send billions abroad in aid and development projects, and appear genuinely confused when countries that still make steel, refine fuel, control their utilities and guard their national industries suddenly seem to have a great deal of leverage over us.
Still, I’m sure it will all be fine. History is full of examples of great powers becoming stronger by dismantling their own industrial base and outsourcing the basics of national survival to whoever happens to be selling them that week.
But its ok because they're doing ballroom dancing.