Facebook Pixel Bread, circuses and Netflix subscriptions | The Light - news - इस कहानी को Magzter.com पर पढ़ें

कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त

Bread, circuses and Netflix subscriptions

The Light

|

Issue 64, December 2025

But keeping the masses distracted only works so long

- by NEIL BRYAN

Bread, circuses and Netflix subscriptions

ONCE upon a time, the Roman Empire kept the mob quiet with two things: bread and circuses. Feed the people, distract them with a bit of blood and spectacle, and you could get away with pretty much anything.

Fast-forward 2,000 years, and the recipe hasn't changed much. Only now, the bread costs £3.40 a loaf and the circus comes bundled with your monthly Netflix subscription.

We live in the most distracted age in human history. Every crisis, every injustice, every flicker of genuine outrage has to compete with the dopamine firehose of entertainment. The cost-of-living crisis? Sure, it hurts, but at least there's a new season of The Crown. Energy bills? Brutal, but did you catch Stranger Things? Your rent's gone up by 20 per cent? Painful, yes, but at least you can order a Deliveroo burger at 11pm and pretend it's cheaper than groceries.

The bread shrinks, the circus grows.

To be clear - ordinary people are getting poorer. That's not an opinion, it's the data. Since 2020, wages have flatlined in real terms while food and housing have skyrocketed. Inflation acts like a regressive tax, hitting the bottom 50 per cent hardest. In the UK, unsecured borrowing is at record highs. In the U.S., credit card debt has ballooned past $1.3 trillion.

Meanwhile, the asset-owning class (the one per cent, if you prefer blunt instruments) continues to soar. Stocks bounce back. Property values climb. Private equity firms buy up homes, hospitals, and water utilities, and then charge us rent to live, fees to drink, and surcharges for the privilege of existing.

The Light

यह कहानी The Light के Issue 64, December 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।

हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।

क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं?

The Light से और कहानियाँ

The Light

The Light

You can't handle the truth!

Met office caught deleting inconvenient data

time to read

2 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Privacy ends in name of protection

Proposed law invites future where every device is spied on

time to read

3 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Profiteers from genocide

Hunger strike exposes lack of due process in Britain

time to read

3 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

Involuntary slaughter?

Family-testimony book exposes 'silent killing'

time to read

2 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Sex, lies and videotape

Epstein blueprint for compromising political leaders

time to read

3 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Two deaths of Bin Laden

On May 2, 2011, the world was told that Osama bin Laden had been hunted down and killed in Pakistan by the elite U.S. Navy SEAL Team Six.

time to read

4 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Digital currency's silver lining

Precious metal could help spark a silent revolution

time to read

4 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Narcissism normalised in politics

Corporate control of party-based politics breeding creeping culture of self-entitlement

time to read

4 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Humans redundant in tech takeover

THE disruptions we have seen in recent years are frequently presented as a chaotic sequence of events: a 'pandemic', inflation, energy shortages and war.

time to read

4 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

The Light

The Light

Green energy bubble will pop

Taxpayers footing bill for speculation on renewables

time to read

3 mins

Issue 65, January/February 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size