Guy Dampier

Guy Dampier is a senior researcher on nationhood at the Prosperity Institute.

How Britain can avoid becoming an island of strangers

From our UK edition

There's a street in Leicester where nearly half the residents don’t speak English to a decent level. Ben Leo of GB News recently went there to explore what that meant in practice. True to the statistics, almost nobody could speak English well enough to have a conversation, from a middle-aged Portuguese man to the Indian father who admitted to not being able to speak the language after a decade here. The only flag to be found flying there was Palestine's, whilst the local advertising billboards were for One Nation, an Islamic charity from Batley in West Yorkshire. In the end, Leo had to, in his words, 'scarper' after a local got upset with them filming.

Charities are swapping altruism for activism

From our UK edition

Charity no longer begins at home. It starts with a thunderous denunciation of western sins, promotes an excoriation of this country’s past and then advocates the dismantling of white privilege – all paid for by you. Welcome to the charity industrial complex, the money-guzzling, taxpayer-subsidised assault on common sense that has turned the impulse to generous altruism into a licence for radical activism. Just this week, Oxfam released a report damning poor governance in India. The guilty parties are not those in power today, but our imperial forebears: the report claims the British empire drained $64.82 trillion from India.