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6. When the golden boy fell from the sky. I served with Andrew Mountbatten Windsor aboard the fleet flagship - I was a navigator, he was a pilot - confident, capable, occasionally cocky. Watching his fall has been painful, but also necessary. His behaviour over Epstein was indefensible, and the consequences are his alone to bear. The King’s decision to strip him of his titles and honours marks a seismic moment in the relationship between Crown and Parliament - accountability reaching even the most protected ranks. Leadership is not a shield against error, nor should it be. Yet amid the outrage, it’s worth remembering that public disgrace is its own life sentence. The former Prince's story is a cautionary one: that privilege without humility ends in ruin, and that leadership - royal or otherwise - demands judgment above all.
7. Reform’s biggest problem. Nigel Farage’s biggest obstacle may not be his opponents, but his own supporters. Many Reform voters rely on the very state he vows to shrink. To fix Britain’s finances, he must make deep cuts – yet wherever the axe falls, his base will feel the pain. It’s a leadership dilemma as old as politics itself: can you persuade people to endure short-term hardship for long-term gain? Farage is banking on the familiar culture and migration narratives to carry the day, but reform, by its nature, requires sacrifice. True leadership lies in honesty, not slogans – in explaining the why, not just the what. That’s the test facing Reform: not how loudly it shouts, but how courageously it leads.
8. When the missiles wait for meetings. House of Dynamite unfolds in real time, replaying one 18-minute segment from multiple standpoints and locations - the time estimated between a sudden Pacific launch and a nuclear strike on Chicago. It’s a gripping concept, yet implausible in execution: a world hurtling toward annihilation, but somehow everyone still has time for debate, doubt and coffee. In truth, hesitation is the deadliest weapon of all. The film’s real explosion isn’t nuclear but organisational - a chain of command paralysed by ego and fear. House of Dynamite reminds us that leadership under pressure means acting before the countdown ends, not after the dust settles. When the missiles wait for meetings, leadership’s already gone nuclear.
9. How the Danes beat the clock. Denmark has officially become the world’s slowest-ageing nation, and not because they’ve discovered a new cream. A Nature Medicine study found that Danes are, on average, 2.35 years biologically younger than their age. Their secret? Hygge, trust, and perspective. They cycle, eat sanely, and take holidays without guilt. They also trust their leaders, which, funnily enough, keeps them younger. Perhaps there’s a lesson here: leadership isn’t about working faster, but ageing slower. Stress corrodes; balance restores. Even in command, as a Royal Navy captain once told me, “Monty, even a frigate needs a quiet watch.” Maybe we all do.
10. The bottom line. Meanwhile, the amount of taxpayers’ money being “squandered” on asylum accommodation stands at £15 billion, according to a new report from MPs. The Home Affairs Committee said the expected cost for the ten years to 2029 had more than tripled from £4.5 billion amid “flawed contracts”, “incompetent delivery” and the reliance on hotels in the “failed, chaotic and expensive” system.
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