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2026年7月4日 星期六

The Lost City of the Idle

 

The Lost City of the Idle


Britain is currently home to a phantom metropolis. It has no mayor, no council, and no industry, yet it is the third-largest city in the country. Its population? Over one million young people who are neither working, nor studying, nor training. They are the "NEETs"—the Not in Employment, Education, or Training generation. They are a demographic black hole, a million souls drifting in the static of a society that has forgotten how to give them a purpose.

Meanwhile, just a few blocks away in our metaphorical reality, the construction industry is screaming for help. They are begging for 206,000 workers to lay bricks, wire homes, and shape the infrastructure of a nation that everyone admits is desperate for housing. They are dangling premium pay, yet the jobs remain unfilled.

We have a collision between two incompatible worlds: one drowning in idle youth and another starving for skilled hands. Why the disconnect? It’s the triumph of the "frictionless" ideal. We have raised a generation that has been sold the dream of a frictionless life—a world where status is gained through screens, not sweat. To pick up a hammer or a trowel is to accept the "friction" of reality: the calluses, the early mornings, and the dirty hands.

In our modern psychological landscape, we have pathologized hard work. We have convinced the youth that "professionalism" is an office cubicle and that the trades are for the "lesser." It is a classic trap of human ego. We would rather sit in a bedroom, isolated and unemployed, than engage in the messy, essential labor that actually builds a civilization. We are witnessing the ultimate vanity: a generation that would rather let the country rot than do the work required to fix it. We are building a nation of spectators who are slowly starving because they have forgotten how to be makers.



2026年6月17日 星期三

The Dangerous Gamble: Spain’s Mass Regularization and the Future of European Borders

 

The Dangerous Gamble: Spain’s Mass Regularization and the Future of European Borders


The Spanish government, led by Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s left-wing minority administration, has launched an ambitious initiative to integrate long-term undocumented immigrants into the formal labor market. Sánchez contends that this move is essential to address the nation’s aging population and critical labor shortages by granting legal residence and work permits.

According to a Reuters report on June 15, the Spanish immigration office stated that it has already received approximately 900,000 applications for legal status. Under the program announced in early 2026, undocumented immigrants who can prove a specific period of residency in Spain and a clean criminal record are eligible to apply for a one-year legal residence and work permit, with options for further extensions.

The application window is open from early April 2026 to June 30, 2026. While the program initially projected 500,000 applications, non-profit refugee aid organization CEAR expects the total to exceed 1 million by the time the window closes in two weeks.

However, critics argue that the "end game" of this policy is a looming geopolitical crisis. There is significant concern that these newly legalized individuals will eventually spread across the EU, leading to secondary migration into the UK and potentially sparking a wave of social and security issues. This development may ultimately force the EU to abandon the "free movement" principles of the Schengen Area in favor of reinforced, hard internal borders.