Comment by connorgurney

8 hours ago

I think this is one of the few things as late that makes me feel genuinely proud to be British, because, beneath the hostility that feels so rife across our country recently, we’ve so many good people making things like this happen. Bravo.

The hostility is rife across social media. I don't see much of it day to day.

I know exactly what you mean. But for me there's an even greater emotion here... relief. At a time when everything feels so utterly divided, it's such a relief to see a positive story that everyone can celebrate and feel proud of, regardless of their stance. Better, it's a story that can't be politicised one way or the other, it has a purity about it. I think if we had more positive stories like this, our political & ideological differences wouldn't seem so all consuming.

It certainly involved a lot of skill and expense, but how many more lives could be saved if the same money had been spent on improved traffic safety or NHS in general?

  • Probably not that many. You underestimate how expensive either of those things are.

    We have obligations to provide services like this to the people living in our overseas territories, and you won’t find many people who’ll oppose that.

  • This is a classic. It occurs in two forms:

    Wow, logistics to <remote place> are very expensive! We could spend that money better in the cities!

    Wow, logistics in <city> is expensive! We could spend that money better in rural areas!

    I read about a new road tunnel in London last year, a ten-digit price tag for about 1km of road IIRC. I'm 100% sure some people suggested that that money could have been better spent in rural areas.

  • People respond to inspiring stories that show what is possible. Inevitably that means choices that might not match what a perfect allocation looks like.

    Quiet, bland execution in government will get you voted out. Technocrats tend to come in after corruption, but they don’t usually last.

  • It's a small price to pay to keep political control. Probably not the entire motivation here, but generally countries like keeping their remote islands and settlements lived in because it represents a claim of the land by proxy.