Steps to National Recovery: A Civic Journey from Managed Decline to Moral Renewal
Introduction to the Series
Britain is in trouble. Not just economically, though try buying a house or affording a pint without needing a spreadsheet and a therapist. The real crisis is deeper cultural, institutional, and spiritual. We are not a nation in motion. We are a nation being managed like a failing branch of a once-great business, overseen by middle managers fluent in jargon, allergic to responsibility, and somehow always up for a promotion.
This series is not another policy pitch. It’s not a consultation exercise or a glossy PDF blessed by a focus group. It is a reckoning.
And frankly, it’s long overdue.
Inspired by the Twelve Steps, not the cliché-ridden pop therapy version, but the raw, principled framework that has helped broken people rebuild real lives Steps to National Recovery asks: what if we treated our civic collapse the way recovery communities treat addiction? With honesty. With humility. And with zero tolerance for the self pitying, self-justifying, blame game rubbish that got us here.
Not because Britain is addicted in the clinical sense, though you could argue we’re hooked on crisis management and moral relativism but because the parallels are too stark to ignore:
Denial paraded as virtue.
Dysfunction framed as compassion.
Powerlessness masked by empty platitudes.
Institutions so hollowed out they echo when spoken into.
Each of the twelve essays in this series is a step toward truth painful, yes, but necessary. We’ll call things by their real names. We’ll trace rot to its source, not its symptoms. And we’ll do it in the one tone the modern state fears most: Plain English.
This is not a programme of government. It is a programme of recovery. For a country that once shaped civilisation and now struggles to define a woman without calling a consultant.
We will begin, as all recoveries do, by telling the truth:
That we are in decline not misunderstood, not talking down, not adjusting, not becoming more inclusive. Decline.
That our institutions are not merely under strain they are compromised.
That we’ve harmed whole communities through policy masquerading as progress.
And that if we do not change course, we will not survive this century with anything worth calling a country.
Each essay is a scalpel. Each step, a turning point. Taken together, they form a civic and moral roadmap out of the wilderness we’ve wandered into not through revolution or nostalgia, but through repentance, restoration, and grown-up realism.
Expect strong words, uncomfortable truths, and the occasional Hitchensian jab at the cowards running this great island into the ground. But also hope. Not in the syrupy, abstract way our leaders use it, but in the concrete way recovery offers it .. as the reward for honesty, work, and belief that we are not too far gone.
This is not a series for those who think Westminster will save us. It’s for the citizen who knows no one is coming and chooses to stand anyway.
So let’s begin. Step One: stop lying.
Coming next: Essay 1 – "Admit We Are in Decline: The First Step in Public for the Public
(Wish me luck)
Completely agree Annemarie. Have some ideas on building from the base. I fear politics at WM and HR are beyond the reach of the ordinary population now. Change can only come from local council level and probably with an organised group of independent candidates so as to escape the party system. Obviously not easy but nothing worth doing ever is. I look forward to the series of essays.
Speaking for many of us concerned about the race to the bottom. Written with such clarity, and lacking the BS of modern day management spin. Keep writing, we need this kind of moral courage if we are to reverse the brain rot of our times.