2026年5月2日 星期六

扳手的逆襲:當水喉匠成為新貴族



扳手的逆襲:當水喉匠成為新貴族

在人類文明的等級制度中,我們長期護著一個文雅的幻覺:牆上的那張學位證書,決定了一個人的價值。幾十年來,我們不斷告訴孩子,護理、警務、教育這些「乾淨」的職業才是通往穩定的高尚之路。然而,當我們忙著吹捧公共部門的名望時,供需法則的生物本能早已悄悄拿起了扳手,準備給社會一個教訓。

2026 年的英國,一個擁有五年經驗的自僱水喉匠年收 42,000 英鎊,輕易超越了六級護士、警員,甚至是初級醫生。在那些自詡精英的中產階級眼中,這簡直是系統出錯。憑什麼修理 U 型管的人比救人一命的人賺得多?答案藏在人性中那個更陰暗、更務實的一面:我們沒了哲學家能活一個禮拜,但如果廚房的污水管爆裂,我們連 48 小時都撐不下去。

人類是一種依賴「巢穴」生存的物種,而我們的巢穴正變得越來越複雜且脆弱。自 2010 年以來,英國的學徒人數下降了 60%。我們培養了一整代只會寫精闢推文、卻分不清球閥與水掣的「知識勞工」。與此同時,35% 的水喉匠已年過五十,正帶著壟斷者的疲憊與滿足感盯著退休計畫。這是技職界的「大萎縮」。

公共部門當然會高喊「薪酬重整」,強調他們的崇高犧牲與優渥退休金。但市場是一個冷酷、憤世嫉俗的怪獸,它根本不在乎你的道德高地。自僱的水喉匠沒有僱主退休金,沒有帶薪年假,他的身體很可能在六十歲前就宣告報廢。他是高需求叢林裡的孤獨掠食者,獨自承擔貨車、工具的成本以及體力勞動的代價。

我們正目睹「名望溢價」的消亡。隨著體力技能的短缺加劇,差距只會越來越大。政府可以用那並不存在的稅收來給護士加薪,或者你可以承認真相:在一個基礎設施日漸崩壞的時代,那個真正能動手修好東西的人,才是真正的貴族。在爭奪荷包的戰鬥中,扳手已經正式取代了聽診器。


The Revenge of the Leaking Pipe: Why the Plumber is King

 

The Revenge of the Leaking Pipe: Why the Plumber is King

In the grand hierarchy of human civilization, we have long nurtured a polite delusion: that the degree on the wall determines the value of the man. We spent decades telling our children that the "clean" professions—the nursing, the policing, the teaching—were the noble path to stability. But while we were busy inflating the prestige of the public sector, the biological reality of supply and demand was quietly sharpening its wrench.

In 2026, a self-employed UK plumber with five years under his belt takes home £42,000, comfortably out-earning the Band 6 nurse, the police constable, and even the junior doctor. To the middle-class sensibility, this feels like a glitch in the Matrix. How can the man who fixes a u-bend earn more than the woman who saves a life? The answer lies in the darker, more practical side of human nature: we can survive a week without a philosopher, but we won't last forty-eight hours with a burst sewage pipe in the kitchen.

Humanity is a nesting species, and our "nests" are becoming increasingly complex and fragile. Since 2010, the UK has seen a 60% drop in trade apprenticeships. We raised a generation of "knowledge workers" who can craft a brilliant tweet but don't know the difference between a ball valve and a stopcock. Meanwhile, 35% of the plumbing workforce is over fifty, eyeing retirement with the weary satisfaction of a monopoly holder. This is the "Great Thinning" of the trades.

Of course, the public sector screams for a "rebalancing" of pay. They point to their noble sacrifice and their valuable pensions. But the market is a cold, cynical beast that doesn't care about your moral high ground. The plumber has no employer pension, no paid holidays, and a body that will likely give out by the time he’s sixty. He is a lone predator in a high-demand jungle, bearing all the risks of his own van, tools, and the physical toll of his labor.

We are witnessing the death of the "Prestige Premium." As the shortage of manual skill grows, the gap will only widen. You can pay your nurse more with tax money you don't have, or you can admit the truth: in a crumbling infrastructure, the man who can actually fix something is the true aristocrat. The wrench has officially replaced the stethoscope in the battle for the wallet.



炸魚塊裡的「進化論」



炸魚塊裡的「進化論」

在生物生存的劇場裡,有一條古老而憤世嫉俗的法則:如果一個生物能透過欺騙同類,以最小的代價換取最大的資源,牠絕對不會手軟。在利物浦與曼徹斯特陰雨綿綿的街道上,這種原始本能正寄宿在平民美食「炸魚薯條」之中。BBC 最近的調查發現,不少食肆販售所謂的「普通魚」——這真是一個模糊得近乎藝術的詞彙——經 DNA 鑑定後,全是偽裝成大西洋鱈魚的越南巴沙魚。

從經濟角度看,這動機比山泉水還要透明。巴沙魚是一種產自東南亞池塘、生命力極強的淡水鯰魚,每公斤成本僅約 3.4 英鎊;而英國傳統口味的支柱——鱈魚或黑線鱈,身價則高達 15 英鎊。對店主來說,這不只是「替代」,而是一場利潤的神蹟。用池塘裡的清道夫賣出深海貴族的價格,這種商業上的「擬態」,足以讓任何自然界的掠食性昆蟲感到自豪。

這種騙局完全建立在消費者的生物局限性上。一旦魚塊被裹上麵糊、高溫油炸,再淋上重口味的鹽與醋,所有關於出身的視覺與口感線索都會消失。人類的眼睛儘管進化了數萬年,也無法透過那層金黃色的脆皮進行 DNA 測試。店主在賭:城市叢林裡的「掠食者」們太累、太餓、或者太過信任,以至於分不清河裡的食腐魚與冷水海域的獵手。

回顧歷史,這並非新鮮事。從古羅馬商人往酒裡加鉛加甜,到維多利亞時代的麵包師往麵粉裡摻明礬,貿易史本質上就是一場為了錢袋而「拉伸真相」的歷史。我們總以為自己生活在一個透明、法治的時代,但人性卻始終如一。當「誠實」的食材成本上升,標籤造假的誘因便隨之暴漲。我們吞下的不只是魚,還有一堂關於社會契約陰暗面的課。說到底,如果它看起來像鱈魚,聞起來也像鱈魚,那它很可能只是來自五千英里外、某個泥濘池塘裡的利潤謊言。


The Great British Bait and Switch

 

The Great British Bait and Switch

There is an old, cynical rule in the biological theater of survival: if a creature can deceive its neighbor to secure a surplus of resources with minimal effort, it will. In the rainy streets of Liverpool and Manchester, this primal urge has manifested in the humble form of the "Fish and Chips" shop. A recent BBC investigation discovered that several establishments have been serving "normal fish"—a linguistic masterpiece of vagueness—that turned out to be Vietnamese pangasius posing as noble Atlantic Cod.

Economically, the motivation is as clear as a mountain stream. Pangasius, a hardy freshwater catfish raised in Southeast Asian ponds, costs about £3.40 per kilogram. Cod and Haddock, the traditional pillars of the British palate, command a princely £15. For a business owner, this isn't just a substitution; it’s a profit margin miracle. By selling the cheap pond-dweller at the price of the deep-sea aristocrat, they are engaging in a form of commercial mimicry that would make any predatory insect proud.

This deception relies entirely on the biological limitations of the consumer. Once a fish is battered, deep-fried, and doused in salt and vinegar, the visual and textural cues of its origin vanish. The human eye, despite millennia of evolution, cannot perform a DNA test through a layer of golden crumbs. The shopkeeper gambles on the fact that most "predators" in the urban jungle are too tired, too hungry, or too trusting to distinguish between a river scavenger and a cold-water predator.

Historically, this is nothing new. From the Roman merchants stretching wine with lead to Victorian bakers adding alum to bread, the history of trade is a history of "stretching the truth" to fit the purse. We like to believe we live in an era of transparency and regulation, but human nature remains stubbornly consistent. When the price of "honest" food rises, the incentive for "creative" labeling rises with it. We are not just eating fish; we are consuming a lesson in the darker side of the social contract. In the end, if it looks like cod and smells like cod, it’s probably a profitable lie from a muddy pond five thousand miles away.



鑲金的廁紙架:一場公帑的進化鬧劇



鑲金的廁紙架:一場公帑的進化鬧劇

在人類行為的特殊動物園裡,「官僚採購員」是一個極其有趣的物種。這個物種遵循一個簡單的演化原則:當你拿著別人的錢(公帑)去為第三者辦事時,追求「物有所值」的生存本能就會徹底消失。最近香港審計署對青年宿舍項目的「解剖」,讓我們得以一窺這種奇觀。

請試著想像:一個廁紙架要價3,390港元。以這個價格,你可能會期待它在遞出廁紙時還能順便唸一段哲學語錄,或者它是用隕石鑄造的。然而,現實是它設計得極其笨拙,連更換廁紙都成了結構性挑戰。與此配套的還有2,390元的梘液架和1,890元的毛巾杆——這些東西不是有安全隱患,就是根本裝不下。

歷史告訴我們,只要中間人經手「公共黃金」,一根釘子的價格就能瞬間與皇冠比肩。這不僅僅是買錯了東西,而是一種古老的資源滲漏儀式。從羅馬帝國的免費糧食發放,到現代的資助房屋,資金從源頭(納稅人)流向終端用戶(公民)的路徑越長,就越容易在途中「蒸發」,流進那些精通抬價藝術的承包商口袋裡。

政府回應稱「正追討退款」,這不過是聚光燈打到台上時的標準台詞。但真正的教訓不在於那個三千元的廁紙架,而在於我們「看不見」的部分。如果一個小小的青年宿舍項目都能出現如此荒謬的採購,那麼在那些動輒耗資千億的「北部都會區」或產業園發展項目中,暗處又藏著什麼?

當籌碼從毛巾杆變成填海工程與基建,那種「滲漏」買下的就不只是豪華浴室,而是供養了一整套低效的生態系統。審計與監督的價值,不在於抓到幾個貴得離譜的肥皂盒,而在於它是唯一能防止掠食者把整棟房子吃乾抹淨的圍欄。如果連廁紙架都能「鑲金」,我們更該問:那些看不見的大工程,到底鑲了什麼?


The Golden Throne of Public Procurement

 

The Golden Throne of Public Procurement

In the specialized zoo of human behavior, the "Bureaucratic Collector" is a fascinating species. This creature operates on a simple evolutionary principle: when spending someone else's resources on a third party, the survival instinct for "value" completely evaporates. The recent Hong Kong Audit Report provided a delightful biopsy of this phenomenon at a youth hostel project.

Imagine, if you will, a toilet roll holder costing $3,390. For that price, one might expect it to dispense wisdom along with the tissue, or perhaps be forged from a fallen meteorite. Instead, it was so poorly designed that it made changing the paper a structural challenge. Alongside these golden thrones were $2,390 soap dispensers and $1,890 towel rails—items that were either unsafe or physically impossible to install as planned.

History teaches us that whenever a middleman handles "public gold," the price of a nail can suddenly rival the price of a crown. This isn't just bad shopping; it’s an ancient ritual of resource leakage. From the Roman grain doles to modern subsidized housing, the farther the money travels from the source (the taxpayer) to the end-user (the citizen), the more it "evaporates" into the pockets of contractors and suppliers who have mastered the art of the inflated invoice.

The government’s response—that they are "pursuing a refund"—is the standard script for when the spotlight hits the stage. But the real lesson here isn't the three-thousand-dollar toilet paper holder; it’s the sheer scale of what we don't see. If a small-scale youth hostel can facilitate such absurd procurement, what happens in the vast, misty landscapes of multi-billion dollar industrial parks and "Northern Metropolis" development projects? When the stakes move from towel rails to land reclamation and infrastructure, the "leakage" doesn't just buy a fancy bathroom—it funds an entire ecosystem of inefficiency. Transparency isn't just about catching a overpriced soap dish; it’s the only thing keeping the predators from eating the house itself.



官場魔術:當「大嘥鬼」遇上審計署



官場魔術:當「大嘥鬼」遇上審計署

在城市管理的宏大劇場裡,官員們總像是在表演魔術,試圖把一頭大象塞進一頂明明只能裝下兔子的禮帽。2024年,為了推銷阻力重重的垃圾徵費,政府出動了「大嘥鬼」,在社交媒體上眉飛色舞地宣布:廚餘機不再「偏食」了!管它是大豬骨、蜆殼,還是連同膠袋一起丟進去,通通沒問題。那一副「技術勝過一切」的藍圖,描繪得極其美好。

然而,物理定律與生物邏輯從來不聽政府的公關指令。人性趨利避害、好逸惡勞,既然官方說可以省事,市民自然照單全收。政府為了衝高回收率,不惜放寬標準,卻在無意間「毒害」了自己的處理系統。老牌設施 O·PARK1 原本是為了處理經過分類、相對乾淨的商界廚餘而設計的;當全港的煲湯大骨與塑膠雜質排山倒海而來,這台機器開始「消化不良」。

最新一份審計報告揭開了這場公關派對後的宿醉。2025年頭三個月,O·PARK1 接收的「惰性物料」(即無法分解的垃圾)佔比高達 29%,遠超 20% 的設計上限。結果不難預見:設備頻繁故障、堆肥品質不合格、發電量嚴重達不到標。環保署對審計署的解釋充滿了官僚式幽默:為了「正面回應社會需求」並「鼓勵習慣」,明知硬體吃不消,還是硬著頭皮放寬了軟體要求。

更令人冷笑的是公帑的計算。合約規定,營運費應按「除去雜質後」的淨重量計算,環保署匯報時卻是連雜質重量一起計入。審計署一查,這豈不是多付了兩成多的冤枉錢?環保署的回覆則是一段讓人讀了幾遍都看不懂的文字遊戲,大意是「既然收進來了就得計」。

這就是典型的「願景式治理」:推銷大計時講得天花亂墜,質疑技術細節的聲音被當成雜音。一兩年後,苗頭演變成數據,問題浮出水面,審計署查到了,官員便行禮如儀地表示「同意建議」。然後,他們會轉身去描繪下一幅美好的願景,推出下一個宏大計劃。大象依然塞不進帽子,而納稅人依然在為這場拙劣的魔術買單。