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US capitalism casts millions of citizens aside, yet Badenoch and Farage still laud it | Phillip Inman

about 10 hours ago
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Next month, Donald Trump will welcome a poverty-stricken family to peruse his plans for a $300m glitzy state ballroom in the White House.The event will be staged as part of National Poverty in America Awareness Month, the time every year when charities document the number of US residents surviving on low incomes.Of course, the president will do no such thing, preferring to summon the press to watch him rub shoulders with the billionaire class as he did at last month’s black tie dinner for the Saudi ruler and his entourage.Trump can be expected to ignore calls for policies to reduce poverty and to dismiss the annual awareness campaign, leaving him unencumbered by any guilt that past presidents might have felt looking in the mirror and seeing Louis XIV starring back at them.US poverty levels matter in the UK and across continental Europe because the rising level of poverty in the States – a trend that dates back to the turn of the century – is the direct result of a particular form of capitalism that increasingly popular rightwing parties say should be adopted.

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK and Kemi Badenoch’s Conservatives laud the US, but seem to care little about how it promotes a style of capitalism that leaves millions of people on the side of the road, injured in one way or another, allowing the rest to work, spend and save without a thought for the less fortunate.You couldn’t have an opioid crisis in Europe in the way that has happened in the US.You couldn’t have the scale of mental health crisis, or high levels of obesity or poverty.Even after years of austerity across Europe, the level of government intervention in the US remains so much lower.And more cinematically, the US also exports its financial crashes around the world, knowing that the cost to itself is a fraction of the repair job faced by countries that care about their people.

If you feel any responsibility to the environment or to those who have fallen by the wayside, there is an easy path to lower taxes and low levels of regulation.It’s worth remembering this when you next read about how Europe’s economy only inches ahead each year, with the UK not far in front.A kinder nation, one that takes ordinary people’s views into account, is going to grow at a more measured pace, by definition.Regulation that prevents financial crashes might slow the adoption of whizzy new financial products, but pays dividends should the worst be prevented or the effect minimised.Again, it should be remembered that since 1929, it is reckless US governments that have exported financial chaos, not the more careful custodians of UK or European financial centres.

For those who think there must still be a way to grow at a faster pace, there are countless reports about how UK and European governments could do a better job.Mario Draghi, the former Italian prime minister and ex-head of the European Central Bank, provided a comprehensive critique of Europe’s lack of growth and provided remedies, most of them involving further integration.Draghi is no socialist, but his effort was socialistic.Taken in the round, his reforms were designed to pay for a large and munificent state.Farage and Badenoch are unsurprisingly resistant to the ideas that underpin Draghi’s report and the lesson from the US is that European markets are not integrated enough.

They prefer to take other lessons from the US.That financial markets should be set free, that monopolies are fine if it drives investment.And the poor and unhealthy should understand that it is most likely to be their own fault and for that reason can only expect the most rudimentary support from the state.It seems from studies of the modern electorate that older people are the most susceptible to the Farage/Badenoch argument.The only aspect of the state that is sacred is the health service – for obvious reasons.

Everything else can be sacrificed to prevent the state from demanding more in tax from its citizens,The AfD in Germany, the National Rally in France and Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party all subscribe to the same philosophy,In the UK, there is a clear correlation between those over 60 and those voting with frustration and anger to destroy the society created by older voters,Without acknowledging the link to far-right parties on the continent and Trump’s White House, it is baby boomers who are coming out in favour of low regulation, a finance industry free to do its worst and leaving charity to look after the least well-off,Those with more progressive views are in a minority in this age group.

The government should make the case for gradualism and how it protects most people.It guards against disaster and, when disaster strikes, has the capacity to offer support where it is needed.It builds resilience.The US casts its least fortunate aside in the most callous way.It’s true that it always has.

But these days, its colossal wealth and income make that unnecessary.
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US capitalism casts millions of citizens aside, yet Badenoch and Farage still laud it | Phillip Inman

Next month, Donald Trump will welcome a poverty-stricken family to peruse his plans for a $300m glitzy state ballroom in the White House. The event will be staged as part of National Poverty in America Awareness Month, the time every year when charities document the number of US residents surviving on low incomes.Of course, the president will do no such thing, preferring to summon the press to watch him rub shoulders with the billionaire class as he did at last month’s black tie dinner for the Saudi ruler and his entourage.Trump can be expected to ignore calls for policies to reduce poverty and to dismiss the annual awareness campaign, leaving him unencumbered by any guilt that past presidents might have felt looking in the mirror and seeing Louis XIV starring back at them.US poverty levels matter in the UK and across continental Europe because the rising level of poverty in the States – a trend that dates back to the turn of the century – is the direct result of a particular form of capitalism that increasingly popular rightwing parties say should be adopted

about 10 hours ago
A picture

No longer ‘unloved’: retailers investing more in physical stores, UK data shows

UK retailers are investing more in bricks and mortar, with shopping centres and food stores leading a revival, according to research.Retailers and property investors are reallocating capital back into physical stores, according to the property group Knight Frank.The switch represents a fillip for high streets and shopping centres after a difficult decade, which culminated in the shutdown of most stores during pandemic lockdowns and an accompanying surge in online shopping.The growth in online retail has fallen back and flatlined at between 26% and 28% of overall retail sales since a peak of 35% in mid-2020.Retail has outperformed all other types of commercial property this year, with 9

about 20 hours ago
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From shrimp Jesus to erotic tractors: how viral AI slop took over the internet

Flood of unreality is an endpoint of algorithm-driven internet and product of an economy dependent on a few top tech firms In the algorithm-driven economy of 2025, one man’s shrimp Jesus is another man’s side hustle.AI slop – the low-quality, surreal content flooding social media platforms, designed to farm views – is a phenomenon, some would say the phenomenon of the 2024 and 2025 internet. Merriam-Webster’s word of the year this year is “slop”, referring exclusively to the internet variety.It came about shortly after the advent of popular large language models, such as ChatGPT and Dall-E, which democratised content creation and enabled vast swathes of internet denizens to create images and videos that resembled – to varying degrees – the creations of professionals.In 2024, it began to achieve peak cultural moments

about 9 hours ago
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More than 20% of videos shown to new YouTube users are ‘AI slop’, study finds

More than 20% of the videos that YouTube’s algorithm shows to new users are “AI slop” – low-quality AI-generated content designed to farm views, research has found.The video-editing company Kapwing surveyed 15,000 of the world’s most popular YouTube channels – the top 100 in every country – and found that 278 of them contain only AI slop.Together, these AI slop channels have amassed more than 63bn views and 221 million subscribers, generating about $117m (£90m) in revenue each year, according to estimates.The researchers also made a new YouTube account and found that 104 of the first 500 videos recommended to its feed were AI slop. One-third of the 500 videos were “brainrot”, a category that includes AI slop and other low-quality content made to monetise attention

about 9 hours ago
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PDC world championship: James Hurrell stuns Stephen Bunting in thriller

By the end, the room had gone still and quiet. The air was warm and smelled faintly of spilled pints. The chants of “One Stephen Bunting” had long since died away, and all that was left was one Stephen Bunting: three darts in his hand and no more tricks up his sleeve. No place left to run.And so as James Hurrell pinned tops to win 4-3 and claim the biggest victory of his life, there was just the merest whiff of anticlimax to it all: a seismic shock that also somehow felt like the most natural thing in the world

about 3 hours ago
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Tommy Freeman hat-trick topples Bath and sends Northampton to Prem summit

The champions have been mugged at home by the team they deposed. Well, not quite the team. Northampton rung the changes for this match, but the understudies proved the stars of the show to terrorise their hosts. Six tries, a hat-trick for Tommy Freeman and the lead, no less, of the Prem for good measure.The bookies gave Northampton a 20-point head start for this one

about 6 hours ago
politicsSee all
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UK politics: Government says it is ‘fully committed to free speech’ after campaigners’ US visa ban – as it happened

3 days ago
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Welsh first minister vows to keep Labour ‘most successful democratic party on the planet’

4 days ago
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U-turn on inheritance tax for farmers ‘snuck out’ to avoid scrutiny, say Tories

4 days ago
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Keir Starmer encourages Britons to ‘reach out’ to others this Christmas

4 days ago
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Ministers raise inheritance tax threshold for farms after backlash

4 days ago
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Deputy leader Lucy Powell says Labour must ‘stick to manifesto’ over EU customs union, in implicit rebuke to Streeting – as it happened

4 days ago