These Fractured Isles: Britain's Slide into the Abyss, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)

Professors David Betz and Michael Rainsborough have penned a prophetic autopsy of the United Kingdom's soul in "These Fractured Isles," diagnosing a nation not merely fracturing but actively disintegrating under the weight of elite delusion, unchecked immigration, and a legitimacy crisis that history warns precedes catastrophe. Their essay isn't hyperbole, it's a mirror held up to a society that's endured betrayal after betrayal, from deindustrialised wastelands to borders treated as suggestions. As 2025's events unfold, from summer riots echoing 2024's carnage to fresh stabbings on trains in Huntingdon, their warnings feel less like speculation and more like a ticking countdown. Britain isn't on the brink of civil war; it's already in the early throes, with the powder keg primed and matches scattered everywhere.

Betz and Rainsborough are right: civil wars don't ignite with a bang but erode through a thousand quiet corrosions. The UK's story is one of stoic forbearance stretched to breaking. For decades, ordinary Britons have absorbed seismic shifts, factories shuttered, high streets gutted, communities reshaped without a vote, while being lectured on their supposed intolerance from ivory towers and BBC studios. This isn't tolerance; it's a national stiff upper lip clenched around gritted teeth. But endurance has limits. When Karl Popper's paradox bites, unlimited tolerance inviting its own demise, the backlash arrives not as reasoned debate but as raw, organic fury. The 2024 Southport riots weren't anomalies; they were harbingers, reignited in 2025 with protests at asylum hotels turning violent, rocks flying at police, and over 100 officers injured in Northern Ireland flare-ups. A year on, reports paint the UK as a "powder keg" of social tensions, where a third of people rarely mingle across backgrounds, and unrest simmers just below the surface.

At the essay's core is the collapse of institutional faith, a metric more predictive of strife than GDP or polls. The 2023 British Social Attitudes Survey clocked confidence in government at historic lows, a nadir reaffirmed in 2025 parliamentary reports. Ipsos finds only 9% trust politicians to tell the truth; 72% see them as self-serving. The Hansard Society's audit reveals over half believe voting changes nothing. This isn't apathy, it's empirical disillusionment, the kind Crane Brinton flagged as revolution's prelude in The Anatomy of Revolution. When Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page's elite capture thesis applies, where policy bends to the powerful, not the populace, deracination follows. People don't just disengage; they detach, seeking solace in grievance or conspiracy.

Betz and Rainsborough nail the existential chasm: two tribes, each viewing the other's victory as annihilation. The "Somewheres" crave belonging to a tangible nation; the "Anywheres" find redemption in rootlessness. Glastonbury's Bob Vylan snarls at "gammons" retreating, but the retort — "We want our country back!" — echoes from flag-waving suburbs to X threads decrying endless stabbings. X users from Huntingdon to London pulse with dread: "Civil war is coming," one declares after a train massacre leaves nine in life-threatening peril. Another warns, "I seriously don't know how much more this country can take." These aren't fringe rants; they're the barometer of a trust vacuum.

No fault line runs deeper than borders, or their absence. Betz and Rainsborough eviscerate the bipartisan charade: Labour's 1997 "firm control," Tories' 2010 "tens of thousands," both drowned in 200,000 annual net migrants, year after unrelenting year. This isn't mismanagement; it's deception by a class that views citizenship as a transaction, not a covenant. When UnHerd-Focaldata polls show 32% believing in the "Great Replacement," elites brand it "extremist" rather than probe why. Prevent reviews and counter-extremism commissions prioritise narrative policing over reality.

The fallout? Betrayal's bitter fruit. Angela Rayner admits immigration and deprivation fuel disenchantment and riots. Dame Sara Khan warns of inevitable repeats, lessons unlearned from 2024's inferno. In 2025, protests at Epping's Bell Hotel erupt into chaos, bricks and bottles raining on police, echoes of Southport, where false migrant rumours masked deeper grievances. Asylum seekers' mental health craters amid far-Right threats, per the Mental Health Foundation. Yet Nigel Farage's Reform UK stokes the flames with "Britain is lawless" lecterns, while police, thinned to 58,002 officers, brace for a summer siege.

Betz's "feral cities" loom: urban infernos where rural nativists might guerrilla-strike grids and transit, Latin America-style. X erupts: "Civil war in the United Kingdom is looking very, very close," one Australian observer notes, eyeing his own shores. The maths is merciless: Edelman 2025 finds over half of 18-34-year-olds backing "hostile activism," vandalism today, violence tomorrow. More in Common's "Shattered Britain" reveals 38% fine with letting it burn. Rebellion needs just 2% active, 10% sympathetic, proportions perilously near.

Keir Starmer's "patriotic renewal" rings hollow, a lawyer's quip amid managerial make-believe. Betz and Rainsborough skewer the theatre: "Levelling up," "Net Zero," slogans papering over potholes and decline. Soviet glasnost redux, rationing soap while preaching reform. The pandemic exposed it: elites partied, masses masked. Brexit? A roar ignored as misunderstanding. Immigration pledges? Vapour.

This exhaustion breeds danger. When actors doubt the script, the curtain falls. X seethes: "The country will come for the politicians who let this happen," an ex-RAF pilot vows post-Huntingdon. "Sanction the British government," pleads a survivor of violence. Even abroad, India buzzes with UK unrest chatter.

Betz's podcast detonation, 186,000 views, signals the Overton window's shatter. Critics like Tim Stanley concur: "Open sectarian conflict, possibly war." Rainsborough adds intent: a "dirty war" of division, two-tier justice fracturing society into rewarded in-groups.

Reckoning or Ruin: The Clock Ticks Louder

Betz and Rainsborough invoke Toynbee: civilisations crumble from uncreative responses. Britain's challenge is internal derangement, safety as religion, noticing as sin. Yet that "old moral reflex" lingers: fairness, decency, an island story craving coherence.

Civil war isn't fate; it's denial's wage. The 2025 riots' embers glow, from Frankfurt's gunfire panic to London's planned demos. ConflictMeter's gauge spikes: elevated unrest probability, no full war yet, but flashpoints abound. X's chorus swells: "End the illusion, before the illusion ends you."

Revival demands rupture, or honest reckoning. Secure borders, rebuild trust, honour the stoics who've endured too long. Ignore it, and farce yields to tragedy: riots to reprisals, de-bankings to dread. These isles, once empire's heart, risk becoming its cautionary epitaph. The stiff upper lip bares teeth; will leaders listen before the bite?

https://dailysceptic.org/2025/11/01/these-fractured-isles-britains-drift-towards-civil-war/

"The first shot of the American Civil War was the Confederate bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbour on April 12th 1861. Of course, no serious historian begins the tale there. Wars of brothers do not erupt in a single day. Beneath the first cannonade lay a generation of corrosion – of trust, wealth and truth. Civil wars begin not with gunpowder but with people ceasing to believe in the same story.

The United Kingdom, our confection of islands and illusions, now trembles on a similar fault line. The question that once belonged to the margins – could Britain experience civil war? – has migrated, awkwardly, to the mainstream.

For years the idea seemed too absurd for polite company, the sort of thing one might mutter over the third glass of claret before disclaiming, "But of course, not here." Yet the evidence has been accumulating like uncollected rubbish: civic disorder, collapsing legitimacy, an elite that rules but no longer persuades.

We have been writing about this gathering storm for the better part of a decade, publishing our first essay on Britain's prospects for internal strife in early 2019, amid the farce and constitutional confusion that followed the Brexit vote. The argument seemed improbable to many at the time, though the signs were already visible to anyone who cared to look. As we found out, even raising the question proved controversial in a university culture.

That changed this year when one of us, David Betz, discussed the subject on Louise Perry's Mother, Maiden, Matriarch podcast. The conversation detonated into public debate – a sign, perhaps, that the unease runs deeper than most care to admit. For the first time, the question was no longer whether civil conflict could happen but whether it might already have begun in slow motion.

Since then, the conversation has oscillated between denial and alarm, conviction and incredulity. On one side stand those who still trust that the democratic process can yet rescue the nation from itself – that we will muddle through as we always have, cups of tea in hand.

On the other are those who fear that even mentioning civil war risks conjuring it into existence, a kind of strategic blasphemy. Sir Keir Starmer, in his address to the Global Progress Action summit, warned of "poisonous" forces seeking to infect the public with the notion of an impending "violent struggle for the nation". The implication was that pessimism is treachery, and that the patriotic duty is to keep smiling.

Meanwhile, another camp suspects the entire argument is itself a regime distraction – bread-and-circuses by other means – designed to keep citizens quarrelling over identity while the truly powerful continue their work of asset-stripping what remains of the country.

Maybe there are fragments of truth in each. But the task of scholarship is to look beyond the slogans. Civil conflict is not willed into being by the act of conversation; it is revealed by evidence. Polling data, social trends and political behaviour now point not to a single spark but to a landscape thick with tinder. Britain, we deduce from the available data, increasingly resembles a multistorey car park of grievances with no exit ramp.

Our purpose here, then, is simple: to test the comforting claim that 'it can't happen here'. We offer, in evidence, the receipts.

The Dunkirk of Tolerance

For three decades the British people have performed a miracle of restraint. They have endured, without revolt, a sequence of humiliations that would have unhinged nations of fiercer temperament. They watched their industries dismantled, their high streets hollowed out, their borders treated as abstractions and their taxes spent on being told how awful they are. They have seen their cities remade without consent and their concerns rebuked as phobias. It is, in a bleak way, one of the great feats of collective stoicism in modern history, though perhaps its most dangerous.

The official mantra of modern Britain is that the people are not tolerant enough. On almost every Question Time panel or university seminar for the past quarter century, one hears the refrain that Britain is 'racist' and 'intolerant' – usually delivered by someone from a postcode where the only diversity is among the Labradors. Mention that your town has changed beyond recognition and up pops the virtue-signalling professional or some earnest woman from the Cotswolds to explain that the real problem is you. The applause follows on cue, like a ring on Pavlov's bell.

Yet the truth is the reverse. The real story of post-imperial Britain is not chronic intolerance but vast forbearance. For decades, the public has absorbed the largest social and cultural transformation in its history with scarcely more than a grumble. There are, however, only so many times one can smile politely and note how nice it is to have a new curry house, kebab shop, or – in our more enlightened age – vape emporium and Turkish barber occupying what used to be the Post Office, before wondering if 'diversity' has delivered quite the returns advertised. The cuisine may have improved marginally; the civic fabric, rather less so.

What masquerades as tolerance has in fact been endurance. But endurance, when endlessly exploited, hardens at last into bitterness. Ordinary people have borne with fortitude the dislocations of mass immigration, the contempt of the media class and the moral lectures of those least touched by the consequences. And still the hectoring continues: the same tirades about 'hate' and 'privilege', delivered from Georgian farmhouses and BBC green rooms. It is one of the great inversions of our time: a nation that has tolerated almost everything, accused relentlessly of tolerating nothing.

Karl Popper warned in The Open Society and Its Enemies that unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance itself. A society that endlessly absorbs aggression without reciprocation ceases to be virtuous. Britain has reached that point. The stiff upper lip has stopped quivering and has started baring its teeth.

The awakening is visible everywhere – in the riots that ignited Southport and other towns in the summer of 2024; in the 'Unite the Kingdom' marches; in the flag-raising campaigns in once-apathetic suburbs. These are not orchestrated conspiracies but organic expressions of belonging – the answer of a people long patronised, ignored and occasionally prosecuted for noticing its own decline.

One need not romanticise this fury to recognise its cause. It springs from decades of elite indifference to the working class, whose livelihoods were shattered by deindustrialisation, whose children were left defenceless against predation from Pakistani-origin rape gangs, and whose voices were drowned in the pieties of diversity. The result is the metamorphosis of patience into righteous anger.

Facing them stands the progressive phalanx, still demanding ever more 'tolerance' for a multicultural experiment whose failure requires only that we prove ourselves more tolerant of it. Bereft of persuasion, government now turns to coercion: thought-crime legislation, algorithmic censorship and the promise of a 'digital ID' that will protect us from everything except tyranny. It's now Big Brother in a barcode.

For generations, Britain's self-image rested on moderation – the comforting faith that civility could outlast conviction. But moderation, stretched past endurance, becomes complicity. A society that refuses to defend its own norms eventually ceases to have any.

The consequence is a quiet, dangerous shift in mood – from embarrassment to defiance. What began as an effort to 'keep the peace' has become a recognition that peace itself has been one-sided, sustained by the self-control of those with the least power to shape the peace they kept. The miracle of British restraint has begun to fray; and when patient people lose their patience, history suggests that events move quickly.

The Blob vs the Mob

Two sides now stare at each other across the widening chasm. One shouts, 'We want our country back!' The other replies, 'Why would anyone want such a thing?' Or, as the Bards of Glastonbury, Bob Vylan, discerned in their moving contribution to the national conversation: "I heard you want your country back? Shut the fuck up… We the people in the street, got the gammons on retreat, and their blood boils over when we speak."

At first glance, it seems another skirmish in the culture wars – Somewheres versus Anywheres, nostalgics versus progressives, the England that once was against the England it has become. But the quarrel runs deeper. It is not simply cultural, or even political, but existential – a struggle over who constitutes the nation at all: two political tribes each convinced that the other's triumph means its own extinction. One side clings to a sense of belonging; the other seeks absolution in belonging nowhere.

The statistics tell the story of a trust collapse without modern precedent. The 2023 British Social Attitudes Survey found that public faith and confidence in government and political institutions in the UK are "as low as they have ever been", a trend confirmed by a 2025 parliamentary report. Ipsos polling indicates only 9% of Britons trust politicians to tell the truth. 72% believe they are "in it for themselves". The Hansard Society's Audit of Political Engagement found that more than half the population agreed that "voting makes no difference to who is in power".

This is not cynicism; it is empiricism.

As the political scientist Crane Brinton noted in The Anatomy of Revolution, regimes begin to crumble when the public mood shifts from sullen loyalty to cynical detachment. The British have crossed that threshold. 'Democracy' has become an incantation rather than a mechanism: no matter how one votes, the same managerial caste remains in charge, rearranging the paperwork while the country declines.

The American scholars Martin Gilens and Benjamin Page demonstrated the pattern in their study of US policy decisions between 1981 and 2002: when average citizens' preferences diverged from those of elites, the former had "virtually no independent influence" on outcomes. The same dynamic now governs Britain. Policy is seldom created in public debate – it arrives as if pre-approved, dispatched from the top.

The consequence is deracination. When people no longer believe their voice counts, they cease to civically engage. Some withdraw into apathy; others seek meaning in grievance or conspiracy. From this mixture of disaffection and distrust, contempt grows – and in time, conflict follows.

The 'centre ground' politicians like to invoke has ceased to exist. What remains are two estranged factions glaring at each other across an empty field where the middle once stood.

A Grand Canyon

Nowhere is the gulf between governors and governed more visible than on immigration. Polite society insists the issue is settled. The evidence says otherwise.

Since 1945, both Labour and Conservative governments have pledged to manage immigration 'responsibly'. The words have barely changed: Labour in 1997 promised "firm control over immigration", the Conservatives in 2010 vowed to reduce net migration to "the tens of thousands". Both promptly presided over numbers that would make empire-era population shifts blush: roughly 200,000 net arrivals a year, every year, for nearly two decades apiece.

It is tempting to call this hypocrisy; in truth, it is policy by deception. A governing class that no longer believes in the nation as a moral unit cannot conceive of borders as anything more than administrative inconveniences. In their worldview, citizenship is not a bond but a transaction – something to be granted without loyalty.

Thus, when voices mutter darkly about 'replacement', the elites feign shock at the vulgarity of the term, even as official reports justify mass immigration as the necessary antidote to declining birth rates. If you declare that an ageing population must be replenished by importing younger workers, you have already accepted the principle of demographic substitution.

According to a 2023 UnHerd–Focaldata poll, 32% of Britons agree that the 'Great Replacement' is real. In recent years, official reviews of the Prevent programme and the Commission for Countering Extremism have identified the idea as an "extremist" and "hateful" narrative. Rather than ask why so many believe it, the emphasis falls instead on policing the discourse. Once again, policy yields to narrative control – suppressing arguments and evidence that make the state uneasy. Effort is directed to the administrative management of disbelief: to discipline perception rather than address reality.

The practical result is cynicism; the emotional result is betrayal. A polity that no longer controls its borders eventually loses control of its story – and that loss, history shows, is fatal.

Just Let Them All Burn

Legitimacy does not fail in theory; it fails in arithmetic. And the numbers tell the story. According to the 2025 Edelman Trust Barometer, more than half of Britons aged 18 to 34 say they would support "hostile activism" to bring about political change. In polite terms, this includes online abuse and vandalism; in impolite terms, it edges toward violence. The same survey found trust in government still languishing near historic lows.

The Office for National Statistics may not yet publish a Sedition Index, but the figures are suggestive enough. Even a small fraction of that disaffected cohort deciding to act rather than tweet would rival the active membership of every radical movement in modern British history – and with far better broadband.

During the three decades of the Troubles, the IRA drew between eight and ten thousand volunteers from a Catholic/Nationalist population of roughly half a million. Apply the same ratio to Britain's present youth and one begins to sense the scale of unrest that alienation, left to ferment, can produce.

A 2025 More in Common report, 'Shattered Britain', found that 38% of respondents – and 13% "very strongly" – agreed with the statement, "When I think about our political and social institutions, I cannot help thinking, just let them all burn."

Optimists will say that 62% of people do not wish to see the country burn. Pessimists – or rather realists – will note that this means two in five wouldn't much mind watching it smoulder.

Rebellion requires only a small fraction of the population to succeed: perhaps 2% active, 10% sympathetic and 80% passive. Britain is uncomfortably close to those proportions, if one translates 'burn it down' into political rather than literal fire.

A society does not slide into civil war when everyone wants to fight. It slides when too many stop caring who wins.

The Curtain Falls on Managerial Make-Believe

Sir Keir Starmer is not without self-awareness. Occasionally, it flickers through the fog of managerial monotony. Every so often, between the platitudes, he seems to glimpse the absurdity of his own position.

At the Global Progress Action Summit, he warned against "predatory grievance" and "populist fiction" threatening the nation's "soul" and called instead for a programme of "patriotic renewal". The irony was that here was the leader of a political class that has spent decades hollowing out the very loyalties on which patriotism depends, now urging the country to believe once more in what his own movement has undone. Gesturing to the audience, he added with a lawyer's grin, "That's us, by the way." It was meant as humour but sounded more like trench banter before a bombardment.

What Starmer revealed, unwittingly, is the dilemma of late-stage managerial politics, which mistakes administration for purpose. The governing instinct is not renewal but repetition – to meet every sign of disaffection with more of what caused it: more moralising in the name of unity, more bureaucracy in place of genuine reform, more central control in the name of empowerment. "Patriotic renewal" thus joins that long line of official slogans that confess the failure they're meant to disguise.

It is, in fact, a familiar historical pattern. Soviet leaders in the dying days of the USSR spoke earnestly of openness and reform while rationing soap. Glasnost and perestroika became punchlines whispered in queues at the butchers. Britain's equivalents – 'levelling up', 'building back better', 'Net Zero' – belong to the same lexicon of managed delusion: the corporate Esperanto of a country that can't fix a pothole but promises to remake the world.

The result is government by theatre. Nothing works, but the rituals must go on. Ministers condemned for hypocrisy pose with flags; quangos that despise meritocracy publish 'equality strategies'. The Civil Service leaks against the public; the police enforce hashtags. And when it all unravels, the same refrain follows: lessons have been learned.

What makes this moment dangerous is not merely the ineptitude but the exhaustion beneath it. Nobody believes the story anymore – not even those paid to tell it. Once the actors lose faith in the script, the play is already over.

The Fracture Line

If civil conflict is the destination, the route has been long and leisurely. The exits were well signposted, but each one was ignored.

There was the warning of 2016, when millions voted to leave the European Union – an act of democratic assertion against a class that had stopped listening, only to be told they had misunderstood the question.

There was the chance, during the pandemic, to recover a sense of common purpose. Instead, it laid bare the class divide – the rulers broke their own rules while the ruled kept the country running.

There was the opportunity, after years of performative pledges on immigration, to restore trust through action. Successive governments promised control and delivered record numbers. Every assurance that the system was 'under control' merely confirmed that it wasn't.

Each evasion deepened the fracture. A nation cannot live indefinitely on managed decline. When people no longer trust their rulers to protect their interests, rulers turn instead to managing dissent. The logic of avoidance becomes the logic of control – and control, sooner or later, ends in revolt.

If Britain's drift continues, civil conflict will not open with banners and bugles but with panic and denial. It will begin as farce and end as tragedy. The institutions that once absorbed discontent will become its battlegrounds; when politics ceases to settle grievances, they are settled by other means. What starts with reputational assassinations and de-bankings will not end there. The next phase will be physical — riot, reprisal and the re-emergence of fear as the final arbiter of belonging. When it comes, the "violent struggle for the nation" will not be an aberration but the conclusion of every cowardice that pretended decline could be managed.

History offers precedents for this illusion of permanence. Late-imperial Rome, convinced it could outsource its defence and import its future, discovered too late that no frontier survives the luxury of forgetting its necessity. The Habsburg monarchy, that other multi-ethnic experiment in managed harmony, learned that tolerance enforced from above eventually breeds rebellion from below. Britain, once the lecturer of nations, is now conducting its own final seminar in decline.

These Isles, This Reckoning

History, as Arnold Toynbee observed, is a long record of civilisations that failed to respond creatively to challenge. Britain's challenge is no longer foreign invasion but internal derangement – a collapse of meaning.

We remain a people of inherited courtesies and decayed institutions, still capable of irony but not of faith. We talk of 'community' while legalising isolation, of 'diversity' while practising conformity, of 'inclusion' while excommunicating dissent. The national religion is safety; the national sin is noticing.

And yet, somewhere beneath the exhaustion, the old moral reflex persists – the instinct for fairness, for decency, for the island story to make sense again. Whether it can be revived without rupture is the question that will define the coming decade.

Civil war is not destiny; it is the consequence of denial. If leaders continue to mistake managed decline for stability, the result will not be a sudden apocalypse but a slow unravelling – until one morning Britain wakes to find it has learned, the hard way, what it truly became.

The clock is still ticking, faintly – whispering its warning: end the illusion, before the illusion ends you.

David Betz is Professor of War in the Modern World at King's College London. Michael Rainsborough is Professor of Strategic Theory at the Centre for Future Defence and National Security, Canberra. 

 

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Tuesday, 04 November 2025

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