ya daily cyberia
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Restoring me, to my rightful place
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
A Holiday For The Unemployed
Reform have a gone a bit Thatcherite. Well, they were always a bit Thatcherite, so I guess too Thatcherite would be more apt. When Robert Jenrick joined a few weeks back he was speaking about "scroungers" on benefits in his defection speech. It's not exactly loving language, is it. Now Farage is in similar mode. Though naturally his words come with an advertisement jingle charm. His latest line being that people are, "on the sick for mild anxiety." The word mild offering a nuance that Jenrick's cruder speech can't match.
I think this direction of travel is bad electorally, but more importantly, it's unfair on our population. We want a party (hopefully a government) that "looks after our people." We want a bit of care and attention. The pejorative language suggests otherwise.
It's understandable. Few, if any of these Reform politicians and ex-Tories have direct experience of being unemployed or of being on sickness benefit. They come from a different world. In short, they're not working class - and naturally it's hard to have a nuanced understanding of something without direct experience of it.
This brings us back to the mild in that 'mild anxiety' line. Someone off work for anxiety might garner some understanding and sympathy. The prefix mild renders any such sympathy unwarranted. There's nothing wrong with this person. They need to pull up their bootstraps. No sympathy required.
But this is the thing..
This is partly why the economy is so skewed in the first place. Over the last twenty-five years 'fit and healthy' unemployed people have been demonised and hounded. The endless hoop-jumping and cross-examinations. It's like army boot camp. Sure, some people survive the process, get motivated and get into work, but others end up a nervous wreck. Their sense of agency and self-value dwindling by the day or week.
Try to imagine being a long term unemployed person. When you apply for a job you're putting yourself out there to be judged. It's a lot like asking a girl out. It's easy said, but harder done. The potential rejection, embarrassment, sense of humiliation. Imagine you're applying for jobs every week and getting knocked back. At some point you're going to think, "I'm not good enough, no one needs me ..I'm never gonna get a girlfriend."
"What's the point in putting myself through this endless humiliation?"
That feeling of, "I can't face this."
Now yes, I know what you're thinking if you're reading this and you're in work, or you're one of those hyper confident go-getter type people:
"That's no excuse," you'll think, "They need to keep trying; they need to keep knocking on the door and applying for jobs ..I get out of bed every day."
However, we're human beings, we're flesh and blood, and the long term unemployed are in a weird purgatory. Endless applying for jobs and trips to the jobcentre, mixed with an endless apprehension about what the next job application will bring. An interview, be it online or in person is stressful. If you do get a job it's a complete step into the unknown, and you naturally worry about how you'll fit in or be able to cope. Along with more practical concerns, such as how you'll get there/is there public transport. Even as you're filling in the application form you'll have these concerns.
So again, imagine the unemployed person. They have a bit of anxiety or depression, or they're just going through a few bad weeks. But, as they're 'fit and healthy' it's deemed that they 'should be looking for work with go-getting vigour.' So they're given zero leeway. They have to apply for more jobs this week, and if they don't then their benefits may get sanctioned.
Obviously it's going to be very tempting for this person to go on the sick with that anxiety or depression. Or whatever other ailment it is. That way they'll get some space and some sympathy. That way their benefits won't get stopped.
So, in effect, we're pushing unemployed people onto the sick.
It's such a dumb thing to do as well, as sick people are so much more expensive to the state than your standard unemployed. The healthcare, the medications - that they have to take, as it justifies the sick status. (Again, if you have anxiety and you're on the sick you can't exactly turn down the tablets, as that's like admitting you're not sick enough to be on the sick. It's a vicious cycle: medication dependencies develop, when a bit of time off and space to breathe would've ameliorated the problem.)
Then once people go on the sick it becomes a lifestyle. It becomes habit. So it becomes even less likely the person will enter employment, as now they have two hurdles to jump. They first need to make the leap from being "On The Sick" to being "Unemployed," something that will naturally come with anxieties and apprehensions.
These problems could be avoided by simply giving regular unemployed people a bit more leeway.
Holiday Entitlement For Unemployed People
One of my ideas is to give holiday entitlement to unemployed people. Just as workers get approximately five weeks a year, so too should the unemployed.
I know, anyone one millimetre to the right of Jeremy Corbyn will be screaming right now.
"WHAT !! 😡 ..holidays for people who don't even work !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! "
I'm not here to appease an audience though, I'm here to solve problems. If someone spends three or four months solidly putting themselves out there and looking for work then a break at some point will be great for their headspace. Once more, it's the endless sense of purgatory that makes unemployed people seek refuge in sickness benefits. If you can avoid that by giving them a break and a sense that they can switch off at some point, why not do that?
UBI is a whole year of that, and that's in the political dialogue, so why can't my more practical option be considered?
[And no, before you ask, I'm not unemployed myself 😅 I'm not arguing for my own freebies ..though I have been unemployed in the past. In fact, I've been in my current normie job for about five years now, which is my all time record. So I'm worried by writing about it I'll jinx things. Hopefully I won't wilt like a delicate flower again and end up back in purgatory. I am writing from experience.]
Conclusion
I've went on a bit long now. [You can throw the label "scrounger" around all you like, but somehow I've ended up correcting Reform's homework, on my day off work, for free. Perhaps some of these politicians need to work a bit harder ;) ]
Anyway, the conclusion is: politicians need to stop seeing unemployment as a cancer that requires zero tolerance, and instead need to start seeing it as a natural part of the economic bodily system. Yes, ideally there'd be less of it, but life is messy. Modern economies are very complex and messy. So fitting every human into the perfect slot, for every single day of their lives isn't going to happen.
The incentives need to be right. People need to be financially better off in work. Likewise, we need to stop pushing the unemployed towards sickness benefits. I compared being unemployed to being in boot camp earlier. A healthier comparison would be army reservists. Politicians would fare better if they viewed unemployed people as a reservoir of potential workers that can be used when needed - that need looking after - rather than viewing them as a group of people to be despised and hated.
They need to stop trying to purge unemployment with fire; they need to start manging it with intelligence.
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
"I am ..these words"
Why There Are No New Music Subcultures in the 21st Century
In the 20th century there were countless well defined and easily recognisable subcultures:
Goth; Punk; Soul; Hip-Hop; Dance; Indie; Britpop; Emo; Grunge; Heavy Metal; Hippies; Jazz; Funk; Blues ..the list goes on.
In the 21st century, not so much. In fact, so far it seems people are happy to just rehash and pick 'n' mix the fashions of the 20th century.
Why is this? Why has the originality died?
I think the reason is the Internet.
Before the Internet people lived and met and signalled their "coolness" in public (sorry, a very 20th century word there - insert whatever the modern equivalent is young reader). Music was played "in the room" - in clubs and pubs, at parties and festivals. So fashion, appearance - how you looked - was important. You went to physical places where music was played, and appearance was the primary way in which you communicated your coolness, credibility, desirability. It was your billboard of communication.
However, after the advent of the Internet, people met more online - so the online billboard became much more important. Avatars, memes, selfies, values (i.e. politics, views, likes/dislikes). Of course, selfies somewhat blend the physical appearance with the online appearance. With filters and artistry being used to enhance the ever-more-important need for online appeal. The fact that reality often doesn't match the image almost fails to matter.
So subcultures have moved away from real world physical appearance and much more towards online imagery and ideas. Subcultures aren't "in the room" anymore. They're somewhat more aethereal. Things conveyed in the abstract, in online spaces. So Goth and Punk have been replaced by Gamer, Incel, Woke, Tradwife, Alt-Right, Truther, and so forth. All these online labels and scenes. Often centred not around fashion and music, but around political values, online aesthetics and lifestyle (albeit presented-lifestyle perhaps more so than actual lifestyle).
Conversely, music has became more private. With people listening through AirPods and headphones. In their own little world as they sit on the bus. No longer in the room, but in the private space. On top of this, as views/politics (your bio) has became more important, music has been forced to take second place, as the person who shares your political identity might not necessarily like the same music you like.
So we don't group around music as much. Meaning music and physical fashion simply aren't as central to social life as they were in the 20th century. It's not that the originality has died. It's just that it's moved into a different medium.
[Art expresses itself in the technology of the era. Just as portrait painting (the original selfies) and sculpture were once the epitome of high art, only to later take a backseat as photography, radio and movies came to the fore.
A person living in the 20th century might well have asked:
Where are all the Raphaels and Michelangelos?
But it wasn't that art and creativity had died, it was just that the modern Michelangelos were making Rock 'n' Roll records and Star Wars movies by that point.]
Online Music Scenes
People may argue that there have indeed been new music subcultures in the 21st century. Things like Vaporwave and Sea-Punk spring to mind. (No doubt more clued-up people will be able to name other genres.) I'm sure this is somewhat true. There's never a hard line in the sand where one era ends completely. However, these exceptions tend to prove the rule, as:
a) they're very online
..and b) they're very derivative of 20th century fashions
Sea-Punk obviously taking some of its elements from Punk, and Vaporwave harking back to 80s and 90s aesthetics.
In fact, it reminds me of something my friend told me that always makes me laugh. He was on a course and there was a young girl in her early 20s with dyed green hair. He asked her if she had green hair because she was into Sea-Punk 😅. Of course, the girl had no idea what he was talking about and just thought he was a weirdo.
It's so funny to me that he would even ask that. The online world and the real world are not the same place.
An even better example of a modern music genre could be Bardcore - where popular songs are remade in a medieval or renaissance style. Naturally it comes with medieval visual aesthetics and avatars. However, the people listening to and making this music aren't going out and dressing in medieval garb when they get on the bus (though it might be privately playing in their headphones). So, again, it's largely tailored for an online world.
It'll be interesting to see how things go as we move further into the digital world. A world where people often see your "bio" before they ever see you in person.
Friday, November 28, 2025
Beyond Risk
Monday, November 24, 2025
It takes a little time..
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
From the Back of Beyond
- Sales for meat substitute products like Beyond Meat have dropped in the last few years. (I already knew this, but seeing some ballpark figures for 2024 helped get a better sense of things.)
- Quorn, which is big in the UK, has a presence, albeit small, in the US Market.
- The general mycoprotein production patent for Quorn ran out about fifteen years ago (the main ingredient in Quorn products is mycoprotein, derived from a fungus). Meaning any company can now make a similar product.










