Tag Archives: inequality

Time, Teeth, and the Price of Authority

Modern professional life increasingly blurs the line between care and commerce. When expertise is entangled with financial incentive, need gives way to expectation, and responsibility quietly shifts from system to individual. This essay reflects on dentistry, healthcare, and wider professional culture to ask how trust erodes when money, authority, and guilt replace honesty, restraint, and proportionality.

Why Jesus Always Feels Modern

Jesus feels modern not because of theology, but because of his fearless moral clarity. Once we strip away the metaphysical layers, the radical teacher of the Synoptics emerges: a compassionate social philosopher who confronted wealth, hierarchy, exclusion, and fear. This article explores how the historical Jesus differs from the later “metaphysical Christ,” and why his vision still exposes the moral fault-lines of our own age.

Pensions, Debt, Housing, and the Fragile Future

The UK’s “triple lock” on pensions, introduced in 2010 as political bait for older voters, guarantees rising payments but leaves governments exposed when inflation or wages surge. Beneath this promise lies a deeper financial story: the end of the Gold Standard, which acted as a catalyst for freer credit and speculation, paving the way for inequality as elites exploited new opportunities while ordinary wages stagnated. With debt now around 100% of GDP and house prices four times what they were in the 1990s, Britain faces a fragile future where pensions, savings, and housing are all bound together in a system “too big to fail.”