Let us pause, dear reader, to contemplate the latest absurdity from the great festival of virtue signalling that is the international prize circuit. A scheme to turn Gaza’s rubble into bricks, backed by British taxpayers’ money no less, has won a shiny award. How heartwarming.
How utterly predictable. The project, as reported, involves recycling the debris of Israeli bombardment into new building materials. This is presented as a triumph of ingenuity, of resilience.
Yet one cannot help but see it as a perfect metaphor for the intellectual decadence of our age: we are so keen to applaud the recycling of destruction that we forget to question the destruction itself. The rubble is not a natural disaster. It is the product of a war that the very backers of this scheme, the British government, have done precious little to stop.
Instead of demanding an end to the bombing, we offer Band-Aids. Instead of addressing the root cause, we celebrate the symptom. This is the hallmark of a civilisation in decline, much like the late Roman Empire, where bread and circuses replaced genuine political will.
The prize culture, with its endless grants and awards, has become a grotesque parody of moral purpose. It allows the wealthy and powerful to feel good while absolving them of any real responsibility. The Gaza rubble-to-bricks scheme is a brilliant idea if your goal is to manage poverty rather than end it.
It is a perfect example of what I call the ‘aestheticisation of suffering’: we make horror palatable by wrapping it in a story of hope. But hope without justice is a lie. The British government, ever eager to pat itself on the back for its ‘humanitarian’ efforts, simultaneously sells arms to Israel.
This is not hypocrisy; it is the logical outcome of a system that values image over substance. The Victorians at least had the decency to talk about the White Man’s Burden. Today, we pretend we are not civilising savages but empowering the oppressed.
The terminology changes; the condescension remains. So by all means, let us celebrate the brick-makers. But let us not mistake a grant for a policy, or a prize for a moral stance.
The rubble will continue to grow as long as the bombers keep flying. And the prizes? They will keep coming, a steady stream of self-congratulation from the comfortable to the damned.
That, dear reader, is the real lesson of Gaza.








