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Anglofuturism Podcast
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Content provided by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale, Tom Ough, and Calum Drysdale. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale, Tom Ough, and Calum Drysdale or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Reimagining Britain's future. Hosted by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale.
anglofuturism.substack.com
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anglofuturism.substack.com
14 episodes
Mark all (un)played …
Manage series 3619578
Content provided by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale, Tom Ough, and Calum Drysdale. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale, Tom Ough, and Calum Drysdale or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Reimagining Britain's future. Hosted by Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale.
anglofuturism.substack.com
…
continue reading
anglofuturism.substack.com
14 episodes
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Anglofuturism Podcast

1 Automating the restaurant industry, with Josef Chen (KAIKAKU) 1:01:29
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Josef Chen is the founder of KAIKAKU, a London-based company developing automation technology for restaurants. A former Imperial College student, Chen created his first Bitcoin faucet at age 13 and previously worked as the first intern at Bitpanda (Austria's first unicorn startup). After growing up working in his parents' Chinese restaurant from age six, Chen has now returned to the industry with a mission to transform it through robotics and technology. Calum and Tom talk to Josef Chen about: Josef's remarkable journey from peeling potatoes in his parents' Austrian restaurant at age six to founding a cutting-edge robotics company How KAIKAKU's "living laboratory" approach enables rapid hardware development and real-world testing of restaurant automation Why specialised robots designed for specific tasks will outperform humanoid robots in practical applications The widespread misallocation of engineering talent in Britain, with top graduates being lured into finance instead of building tangible solutions How restaurant automation can free staff from mundane tasks to focus on genuine hospitality and customer experience Josef's vision for rebuilding Britain's engineering culture through initiatives like London Micro Grants Listen on Apple Podcasts , Spotify , and Substack . Produced by Aeron Laffere. Further reading Sweetgreen’s S-1 Filing - Deep dive into a US tech-forward restaurant chain’s unit economics, vision, and automation strategy Ocado’s AI-powered robotic arms: levelling up efficiency in online grocery and logistics - Case study of one of the few globally competitive UK hardware automation efforts Neko Health - Example of vertically integrated tech x real-world experience design, referenced by Joseph London Micro Grants - A live initiative for empowering grassroots builders in the UK with small-scale funding Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Restoration and radical reform, with Douglas Carswell (Mississippi Center for Public Policy) 1:48:40
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Douglas Carswell is a British politician who served as a Member of Parliament from 2005 to 2017, first as a Conservative before defecting to UKIP in 2014. A prominent Brexit campaigner and co-founder of Vote Leave, he now runs the Mississippi Center for Public Policy , a free-market think tank in the United States. Carswell is known for his advocacy of democratic reform, limited government, and economic freedom. Calum and Tom talk to Douglas Carswell about: Douglas's experience in Mississippi where free-market reforms have accelerated economic growth beyond the UK's How Britain's "Blairite Ascendancy" of 30 years has empowered unaccountable experts and regulatory bodies that block elected officials from governing effectively A detailed blueprint to restore executive power through orders in council, civil service reform, and judicial restraint Proposals for public spending cuts of £170 billion and tax reductions including abolishing tariffs, lowering VAT, and reducing income taxes Addressing immigration through tighter controls and a voluntary "re-migration" program for non-contributors The cultural dimensions of Britain's troubles and the need to reassert Anglo-American values against cultural relativism How these reforms could unlock British innovation and prosperity if leaders have the courage to endure short-term pain Listen on Apple Music , Spotify , and Substack . Produced by Aeron Laffere. Further reading Milestones: Nine steps to restore Britain - the essay outlining Douglas Carswell's detailed proposals Dominion: How the Christian Revolution Remade the World by Tom Holland - Mentioned by Carswell as influential to his understanding of Western values Looking for Growth campaign - A UK initiative advocating for policies to boost British economic growth Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson - Explores how political institutions impact economic success The Sovereign Individual by James Dale Davidson and William Rees-Mogg - Examines the changing relationship between individuals and the state Economics in One Lesson by Henry Hazlitt - A classic text on free-market economics State Capacity Libertarianism by Tyler Cowen - A blog post that reimagines libertarianism with a focus on effective government Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Sort out the Boriswave, embrace automation, with Cllr Tom Jones (Scotton & Lower Wensleydale) 1:26:42
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We welcome Cllr Tom Jones to the KCIII. Tom serves as the Councillor for Scotton & Lower Wensleydale on North Yorkshire Council and is also an accomplished essayist . Cllr Jones joins Calum and Tom to discuss Anglofuturism, immigration reform, and how Britain can build a more productive, high-wage future: The origins and appeal of Anglofuturism as both an aesthetic and political movement responding to economic stagnation and declining living standards for young Britons Tom Jones' immigration paper "Selecting the Best" which argues Britain's reliance on mass immigration has created a low-wage, low-productivity economy How "human quantitative easing"—importing cheap labor rather than investing in automation—has damaged British productivity and wages The car wash industry as a case study where cheap migrant labor replaced automated systems, creating exploitation and environmental problems The need to redirect state capacity toward strategic priorities like energy, manufacturing, and defence instead of dispersing resources How greater automation and selective high-skill immigration could transform Britain into a high-wage economy capable of meaningful global influence Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Produced by Aeron Laffere. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 The last hope for the Chagos Islands: Calum Drysdale 1:04:43
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The government is attempting to seal its giveaway of the Chagos Islands: a crucial archipelago in the Indian Ocean that was uninhabited when the Portuguese found them, but to which Mauritius – thousands of miles away – has made a specious claim. Extraordinarily, the British government is trying to indulge that claim – and to pay billions to continue to use the island that hosts a military base. The public has still not been given a satisfactory explanation for the giveaway, but the prime minister and the attorney general are thought to be of the view that Britain should obey a non-binding judgment by a partisan international court. That court is stacked with enemies of Britain... but the wallet inspector must be obeyed! Starmer and co are inches away from sealing the giveaway. But they reckoned without a ruddy young Anglofurist... Our very own Calum Drysdale! Calum and Lord Kempsell are together launching a judicial review into the putative giveaway. As news breaks of the judicial review, Tom and Calum discuss: The history of the Chagos Islands The bizarre logic of the government Britain's slender hopes of keeping the islands HMG now has 14 days to respond to Calum and Lord Kempsell. Co-presenters: Tom Ough and Calum Drysdale Producer: Æron Laffere Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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Calum and Tom on: - The history of British Antarctic exploration, from Captain Cook's mission to find Terra Australis to Shackleton's heroic survival after the Endurance was trapped in ice, - The geopolitical status of Antarctica, including Britain's territorial claims, the 1959 Antarctic Treaty that prohibits mining and militarisation, and how this could change after 2048, - The potential economic value of the British Antarctic Territory with its vast untapped resources (oil, gas, gold, and other minerals) and whether Britain should develop these resources before other nations claim them, Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Timestamps (00:00:00) - Introduction (00:01:30) - Antarctic Overview (00:04:16) - Historical Expeditions (00:12:50) - Heroic Age (00:31:19) - Sovereignty Issues (00:34:58) - Antarctic Treaty (00:36:49) - Resource Potential (00:54:25) - Future Prospects Transcript 00:00:00 - Introduction Tom Ough Welcome back to the King Charles III Space Station. I'm Tom Ough. Calum Drysdale And I'm Calum Drysdale. And if you, our listeners, have a telescope handy, you might be able to see our orbital space pub speeding southwards. Tom's behind the bar with one hand on our ship's wheels and the other one clutching a pint of gin. Tom Ough Listeners, you can't see the wheel but let me assure you that it's fashioned of beautiful English oak. A perfect replica of the wheel on HMS Victory. Calum Drysdale Tom, tell me where you're taking us. Tom Ough Well, take a look through that Mullions porthole we put in the floor. Calum Drysdale Yep, taking a look. Tom Ough What do you see? Calum Drysdale I see the Falklands to the west. South Georgia… and I think that must be the South Sandwich Islands to the east. And now it's a long rocky peninsula. Tom Ough Yeah, an enormous apparently inhospitable peninsula. Calum Drysdale And yet, something about it feels like home. Tom Ough Correct. As we sweep over this frozen continent, you will need no reminding that we are looking over the British Antarctic Territory. I will stop the ship here. 00:01:30 - Antarctic Overview Calum Drysdale Listeners, the view is stunning. Mile upon mile of white wilderness with the southern lights dancing above it. But Tom, maybe you can tell the listeners why you've brought us here. Tom Ough Well, in short, what we're looking at is Britain's most valuable overseas possession. It could be the ticket to a new age of British prosperity, but it's under threat. And I think it's high time the country pay the matter some attention. Calum Drysdale Well, I think it's something that we often forget. In that it's notable when, well or maybe not so notable to some people, when we try to rid ourselves of a few tiny atolls in the Indian Ocean. But actually the idea that we own a whole sort of section of a slice of a continent is maybe even less well known. Tom Ough Yeah and let's put this in perspective because the Chagos Islands, important as they are, are pretty minuscule in terms of land mass. Whereas the British Antarctic Territory is about eight times the size of Great Britain. It's insane, it's absolutely enormous and I think it's high time the country paid the matter some attention. Calum Drysdale I think it's a bit risky Tom, isn’t it? Because the more attention we draw to our overseas territories the greater risk that the FCDO tries to find someone to foist them off on. Tom Ough Yeah I do worry about this because I think our claim to the Antarctic territory is in fact weaker than our claim to the Chagos Islands. So if you are listening and you are a senior civil servant at the FCDO then please, please avert your ears. But we are going to do an episode on the British Antarctic Territory nevertheless. Calum Drysdale And our first one without a guest as seemingly Tom you are appointing yourself as our resident expert in the field . Tom Ough Well there is a there is a criminal dearth of enthusiasts about the British Antarctic territory and I hope listeners will over the next half hour or so come to understand why I think there's a dearth. Calum Drysdale Whilst most people are going out to the pub and talking to women, what on earth have you done spending your time worrying about the British Antarctic territory? Tom Ough I for one got nerd sniped by the BAT as they call it last year when a big oil and gas discovery was made in the waters surrounding it and that led me to look into the BAT to which I had not given much thought prior to that. I discovered that it's enormous. It could be very lucrative. It's very exciting. It's a frontier. There's an amazing British history there as well. Perhaps we can get into all of those over this conversation. Calum Drysdale Absolutely. Do you want to start us off, Tom? Why on earth do we own a slice of this icy pie? 00:04:16 - Historical Expeditions Tom Ough There's a story to this which explains why we make the claim and I think we can get into that very soon. But I think it's worth winding back a little further because Antarctica has a fascinating recent history. Ancient and medieval cartographers hadn't been there. They nevertheless assumed that because of all the land mass that they're aware of north of the equator that there would be a continent in the far south to counterbalance that land in the north . So that's not really evidence in favour of Antarctica existing but nevertheless a picture began to build and we had 17th century sailors coming home with stories of islands of ice trailing through empty seas. Calum Drysdale I mean the counterweight stuff is funny right because actually there isn't really a continent down there. Most of the land on the globe is concentrated to the north, there isn't reason really to go. I suppose the southern ocean around Antarctica is so empty that actually it's quite an inhospitable place for a wooden hulled ship to go. Tom Ough The seas around there are full of ice. They're very stormy. There's a prevailing west wind that rushes clockwise around the continent, dragging this very strong current along beneath. So not only is it freezing, it's also a very difficult place to navigate. So you can sort of understand why nobody went, why nobody discovered Antarctica sooner than they did. But nevertheless, people were interested. Calum Drysdale And there was a sense that there had to be something there, right? Like you weren't just venturing out into open ocean. Tom Ough Well, it's almost a little spooky because if you look at some of the old maps, they will even insert a large southern continent called Terra Australis Nondum Cognita , which means the southern land not yet known. And so we had French sailors, Dutch sailors, English sailors, including Francis Drake, who all went on a hunt for this continent. Didn't find anything. Calum Drysdale Yeah, and I think it's interesting you talk about this unknown southern and counterweight continent as I think Terry Pratchett put it . When I’ve heard that term, it's always been in reference to Australia, right? And Cook's expeditions down south. Tom Ough Yeah, well, Cook's a very important figure here. And the background is that in 1768, he was chosen to lead an expedition, chosen by the Royal Society, and its putative purpose was to observe the transit of Venus . And the idea was that if the transit of Venus were monitored from various points on the surface of the globe, the Astronomer Royal could accurately determine the distance between the planets. So that, as I say, was a putative purpose of that mission in 1768. And they do it, Cook’s in Tahiti, and then in June 1769, still in Tahiti, he opens an envelope which he carried with him on the ship all the way from London and it contains secret instructions from King George III . Calum Drysdale I mean this is the sort of thing that you really you read about in kind of Cold War spy thrillers. The dour Soviet commander get into the northwest passage, opens the letters and ‘Bomb Vancouver immediately, Comrade Captain.’ Tom Ough But it is in fact even better instructions for a second mission and the mission was to find this mysterious southern continent Terra Australis and claim it for Britain. Calum Drysdale Which we love to hear. Tom Ough We love it. Aso he sets out to find to find Terra Australis. He finds New Zealand, he finds Australia, and fabulously none of his crew dies of scurvy because he's a wonderful captain, but no Terra Australis. And so Cook returns home. Calum Drysdale Really, so he was actually was always looking for Antarctica? Tom Ough He was looking for Antarctica, yeah. He was looking for an even more southerly continent. I’d say he did pretty well, I’d say he discovered a continent it just happened to be the wrong continent. I'm not saying we should tear down all the statues and burn all the stamps bearing his face. Calum Drysdale So Australia found, still impressive. We're not cancelling Cook yet. Tom Ough Yeah, I think we can give him a pass. But he does not give himself a pass. He goes on another expedition. And so this is in 1774 and his ships entered the Antarctic Circle several times and it was, as I say, incredibly cold there and this means that they had to turn back when they were merely a hundred and twenty one kilometres from Antarctica's coast. Calum Drysdale And is this because it's so cold that the sailors can't survive or is it because almost like stepping onto a conveyor belt that they start just being whizzed around the globe sort of sent sent careening off westwards that they have to withdraw? Tom Ough Well I think we can we can turn to his own diary entry, ‘I who had ambitions not only to go farther than anyone had done before but as far as it was possible for man to go was not sorry at meeting with this interruption.’ So I think we can infer from that that none of the crew wanted to be there. Even Cook, one of the most adventurous seafarers in British history was like, oh my God, I really want to warm my hands on a fire somewhere. Calum Drysdale Well, it's like that, the clip of Fernando Alonso coming up behind Schumacher. I can't remember which Grand Prix it was. And he's racing at his back end. And he says famously in the post-race interview , “I knew he was going to move. He's got a wife and children waiting for him at home.” Tom Ough Okay, I'm going to give you a fun fact about Cook. He was married at 34. He was at sea for more than half his married life, yet he still had six children. Calum Drysdale It's good going. Tom Ough Get a move on, Calum. Calum Drysdale Okay so, Cook can't cut it. Our great explorer yet defeated by a bit of wind and a bit of a nip in the air. Tom Ough Yeah so Cook scuttles home with his tail between his legs and it's such difficulty to navigate that it's another 40 years till something really significant happens in this endeavour to find this mystery continent and what happens is that the commander of the first Russian Antarctic expedition, whose name is Fabian Bellingshausen… Calum Drysdale Which doesn't strike me as a particularly Russian name. Tom O No, nor me. It’s all very suspect. What is more suspect is that his manuscript charts shows a patch of blue at the lower edge. And that is said to be the first departure from blank space on those maps near the pole , because that could very well be a sign of a continent. Calum Drysdale And are we sure that he didn't just spot a significantly sized ice floe or, you know, a particularly large seal or something like that? Tom Ough Well, we will get to that. But not two days after Bellingshausen's sighting of that little patch of blue, an officer in the British Royal Navy, Edward Bransfield, saw something else . I’ll give you a bit of background on the great Edward Bransfield. He was born in Cork, he was press ganged at the age of 18 into joining the Navy. He went through the ranks and at 34 or so he was posted to the Navy's new Pacific squadron off Valparaiso… Calum Drysdale Is that how you pronounce it? Tom Ough …in Chile. Yeah, I believe so. Our Chilean listeners, who will be very angry about this episode as it is because of the contested claim in the Antarctic, can correct me. But Bransfield on 30th of January 1820, which as I say was two days after Bellingshausen sighting, saw Trinity Peninsula which is the northernmost point of the Antarctic mainland. Calum Drysdale Which we are now hovering above. Tom Ough Which we are hovering above right now. And so the Russians have this claim to have seen it first, but from the 1960s there is some Cold War revisionism in which I think it was British scientists who said, well actually Fabian Bellingshausen did not see the continent. He just saw some sea ice. Calum Drysdale I'm glad that my sort of inherent chauvinism lines up with 1960s British scientific attitudes. Tom Ough So Edward Bransfield is a hero and we saw it first. But sadly people did not realize the significance of this at the time. It would seem in 2000 the Royal Mail wanted to issue a commemorative stamp in Bransfield's honor but nobody knew what his face looked like. Nobody had painted a portrait of this guy. So unfortunately the stamp depicted instead RRS Bransfield, which was a surveying vessel named after him. Calum Drysdale I had an English teacher at school who was called Ben Bransfield. I wonder if he was any relative thereof. I remember him being particularly rosy-cheeked, a sort of a man who I think would do well in cold weather. Tom Ough I guess we'll never know because this age of exploration is over, or is it? Calum Drysdale Beautifully teed up there, Tom. 00:12:50 - Heroic Age Tom Ough Well, before we get on to present-day Antarctica, I do want to talk about what is called the heroic era. And this is an amazing era in British exploration. And it's roughly the first few decades of the 19th century. And at this point, people in lots of the sort of advanced countries at that time were getting interested in this continent which, as I say, was seen first by a Briton. And so people were scrambling expeditions and it was a very exciting time. Calum Drysdale I think what's notable as well, I mean, I have to say I was struck when I was reading your notes of this, is this is happening at the beginning of the 20th century. So there have been ships rounding the Cape to India for centuries at this point, and yet that barrier of these cold and windy seas south of the Cape was so, so great that even the sort of great tea clippers of the time... when you go and see the Cutty Sark, which is this astonishingly beautiful and seemingly very high-tech ship, that even those were not enough to brave these terrifying seas. Tom Ough Yeah, well let me give you an example of this. There was a Belgian ship, the imaginatively named Belgica, which was sent forth in 1897 or so and it accidentally became the first vessel to winter in Antarctic waters just because it got trapped in pack ice . Calum Drysdale Which won't be the last to do so. Tom Ough No, the first in a long line of vessels to be trapped in pack ice. There's a new body set up in Britain, the British National Antarctic Expedition , and there's this guy called Robert Falcon Scott, friend of the show, who on board the Discovery sets a new record for reaching the farthest point south . People are now exploring the landmass, which is very exciting. Calum Drysdale So this is further south than the Belgica gets? Tom Ough Well, they didn't land, they didn't land. Calum Drysdale Oh, but he does, but he does actually? Calum Drysdale Yeah. They didn't land, Scott and others are now actually on the landmass. Calum Drysdale And he's the first… Tom Ough Well, in fact, he wasn't only on the landmass, he also hovered above it in a tethered balloon for air reconnaissance , which is tragically missing from the accounts of Scott’s derring-do. Calum Drysdale A predecessor of our own then as we too hover above the Antarctic. Tom Ough Yeah, we're not tethered but it was a view not unlike ours. Calum Drysdale So he was the first man or his crew were the first people to land on the Antarctic? Tom Ough They were early, there were other expeditions coming from places like France, Germany, and Sweden and the race at this point is not so much to get on the continent as to get to the South Pole itself. Calum Drysdale I fear I know the answer to this Tom but was it a Brit, was it a Briton who reached the South Pole first? Tom Ough Well it seemed well it seemed like it might be for a while. Robert Falcon Scott led this expedition with a five-man party, and they were racing for the South Pole, they were racing the Norwegian crew led by Roald Amundsen. And after this incredibly arduous journey, the Englishmen thought they'd got there or they thought they'd won. And the South Pole itself was hoving into view and then they saw the fluttering flag of Norway and a tent and that had been left by Amundsen's crew and he'd left a letter for Scott saying, well done, better like next time basically and please pass on this letter to the King of Norway — which I think Scott found quite patronising . And so they had their little squares of chocolate they'd apportioned for what they hoped would be this momentous point, and they had to set off, they had to start setting off home and this was an 800 mile journey and it was torturous and very sadly all five of Scott's party died from cold and hunger. Calum Drysdale This is the famous Captain Oates , ‘I'm stepping out and I may be sometime.’ Tom Ough Sacrificing himself for the sake of the other men, knowing there was not enough food to sustain them all. There were three men left and they continued for another 20 miles in what must have been horrible conditions and unfortunately they didn't make it either and the really sad thing is that they were just 11 miles from the next food and fuel depot. There was a search party sent out and they found the bodies of Scott and two other men on the expedition, Dr. Wilson and Birdie Bowers, and they were just in their sleeping bags inside a tent covered with snow. Journals and papers were recovered, but the bodies were left in Antarctica. Captain Oates’ body is still there, I suppose, because it was never found. And because of that recovery mission, as I say, we have the journals left by Scott and his men, and that means we have Scott's final diary entry . He knows that the depot is 11 miles away. He says, 'But outside the door of the tent it remains a scene of whirling drift. I do not think we can hope for any better things now. We shall stick it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and the end cannot be far. It seems a pity, but I do not think I can write more. R. Scott. For God's sake, look after our people.' Calum Drysdale Both awful but heroic as well. Tom Ough Yeah, awful and heroic. And so the torch of great British Antarctic exploration passes on to a man called Ernest Shackleton, and Ernest Shackleton is an enormous personal hero of Calum’s. Calum Drysdale Yes, Shackleton is often accused because, of course, his mission was a failure, but they managed to get back alive. And I think his combination of derring-do and, frankly, horrendous and even dangerous amateurism, appeals to me. Tom Ough We can fill this out a bit. Tell the listeners about the Weddell Sea. Calum Drysdale Well, Shackleton, after the victory of Amundsen, Shackleton goes forward and tries to carry the torch of British Antarctic exploration. And so he sets out in the Endurance in early 1915. And his aim is to not only reach the South Pole but then go across it, and this is obviously more difficult because you can't retreat to the caches and the storage depots that you've left along the way. Instead, you're always crossing unknown terrain. And I think if you imagine Antarctica as one of the horseshoe crabs whose blood is harvested en masse for pharmaceutical products, with a tail. And it is into this tail that he comes in, the Weddell Sea . And in 1915, they arrive and wend their way inbetween floes and icebergs. But in January 1915, the ship is stuck and is stuck fast. First, spirits seem high and they attempt to, after a month, manually cut their way out. So they're cutting holes in the ice with big saws and picks, trying to create a space. And they move the ship back and then try to effectively ram their way back out to open water so they can continue their journey. They get within 400 feet of open water before they realise that some of this ice is 18 feet thick. And there is no way that they can reach water. So they have to settle in and accept that this is going to be their winter station. And they are going to, like the Belgica before them, winter in the pack ice. And I think that when people talk about this, it's difficult to grasp the sheer scale of the time periods that we're talking about here. That first, these men are just in the ship. They’re bored, there’s nothing to do, they have to just survive over the winter. And they play football, they put on cabarets and variety shows, they name the lower berth the Ritz and put on variety shows and dressing up. Scott actually wins an award for worst singer. Tom Ough It sounds a lot like lockdown. My housemates and I were in a 5 bedroom house at that point and we did a bar crawl. All the guys turned their room into a themed bar and it was fantastic. Calum Drysdale And I think doing things like this is really important because the men are bored. But he's an absolutely ferocious disciplinarian, so he maintains the spirits of the crew by keeping to a really rigorous routine of scrubbing the ships. They have more than 50 dogs on board which are meant to act as pack dogs. The mess and the smell must have been awful. Calum Drysdale And what’s astonishing as well is they had a photographer with them, they had Frank Hurley, who is capturing video and photographs of these early games of football on the ice, of variety shows, of singing that are astonishing watching given how distant these people are and actually yet how close they become through the footage. Tom Ough Yeah, I really recommend looking up this footage . This is incredible that they captured it at that early stage. Calum Drysdale And then, so we're three months in, they've been stuck in the ice for three months, and now the ice starts buckling. So the pressure starts building up and starts buckling around them. So the hull of the ship is three feet thick, but the fears start to mount that even this powerful ship is not going to be able to manage. And their original idea at this point is that they're going to sit in the ice, and the pack ice is always moving, it's floating, and they want to get to a supply depot that was being left from a previous expedition on Paulet Island. And they've originally made an effort to get there with dogs on sleds moving through the ice. But it's just impossible. The ice is forming mountains and ridges that are impassable. And so they just have to wait. Six months in, the hull starts really giving way and the rudder is broken. So there's no way now that the ship will work. And they take their supplies off the ship. Nine months in, the ship keels over 30 degrees. And the ship is now tilting. There's a fear that it's going to give way. Nine and a half months in, the order is given to abandon ship . Shackleton tells his men, ships and stores are gone, we will go home. So the mission is now impossible, there's no attempt going to be made. And now they're hoping that, as I said, that they will drift close enough to Paulet Island to be able to find these stores and survive and then an attempt to rescue. But unfortunately the ice floe is unpredictable and they move too far to the northeast and they watch Paulet Island pass in front of them. Inaccessible but the opportunity of survival is there. And so now we're 14 months in and Shackleton abandons the Paulet Island. And he says to the men the only thing we can do now is go for this different place, Elephant Island. There are no supplies on Elephant Island but at least it's out of the ice. You'd be out and you could actually attempt to connect to South Georgia which is the closest human and occupied territory. And the conditions at this point are awful. We're 14 months in and the men have been eating largely meat, so anything they can scavenge. So they're down to a biscuit for lunch and three sugar cubes a day and they're eating seal steaks. Tom Ough Keto. Calum Drysdale I mean their breath must have stunk, just disgusting. Although, although the men talk very highly apparently of penguin livers as a real delicacy. Tom Ough I can see that becoming very popular on Instagram. Calum Drysdale And at this point they have to kill the dogs. So these dogs who have become like pets and really close companions are killed 14 and a half months in. And then soon after the ice floe breaks apart and suddenly their camp is splitting in two. And the crew, all 27 of them, take to the sea in these three tiny lifeboats. These are 23 foot long open boats. And after six days at sea, I mean, storms the whole way through, as you said, these are not hospitable waters, they land on Elephant Island. And this is the first time in 15 months, since, well, 15 months they got stuck, that they have been on solid land. And now the question is, how can they reconnect with humanity. And so Shackleton and five men set off in one of these lifeboats, leaving behind the rest of his crew. And they have a journey of 800 miles to cross. They set out and immediately gales start up again. The navigator Frank Worsley has a single opportunity to take a reading off the sun, because the rest of the time it's so overcast. And by some miracle, he is able to guide the crew to South Georgia. And as they come into the bay on the wrong side, the opposite side of the island to the whaling station, the main pin holding the rudder in falls out, rendering the boat useless. They wouldn't be able to use it. Had they been at sea, they wouldn't have been able to direct themselves. And now they've got the problem that three of the men are too sick to travel any further. So Shackleton in, again, what is an astonishing act of amateurism, he's not a mountaineer, attempts to cross these glaciers and mountains to the whaling station. Tom Ough He's a gentleman mountaineer. Calum Drysdale He is from the finest tradition of enthusiastic amateurism. So the men, they twist screws into the bottom of their shoes, they have a bit of rope, a carpenter's adze, and they set off on this journey. And there's one particularly notable story where they're up at the top of a mountain and night is closing in. They know that if they don't get down this mountain, they will die of exposure. And what they do is they coil the rope up into a rudimentary toboggan, wrap their arms around each other, and just launch themselves off into the void. Tom Ough It must have been very dark. Calum Drysdale Right, they can't see any sign. And if there is a cliff, they're dead. And yet, Shackleton has the most astonishing luck. There's a very good line written by a man who wasn't actually on the expedition with them, but writes afterwards about these three characters, Scott, Amundsen, and Shackleton. And he says, ‘for scientific discovery, give me Scott. For speed and efficiency of travel, give me Armisen. But when disaster strikes and all hope is gone, get down on your knees and pray for Shackleton.’ Tom Ough I like it. Calum Drysdale And in this vein, he walks into the whaling station. Tom Ough Strides into the whaling station. Calum Drysdale Strides into the whaling station. It’s 16 months after they've got stuck. And there's a man there to whom he says, “I'm Shackleton, don't you know me?” And the man replies, “I know your voice, but I don't recognise you.” He's so changed by these experiences. And after that, it is then three more months before they're able to return on a ship of the Chilean navy’s to go down to Elephant Island and rescue their crew. And when Elephant Island hoves into view they see a weak signal fire. And there is a question, how many of these men have survived? And the answer is all of them. All 22 men left behind have survived this wait, and they are all rescued from Elephant Island. And in that way, it is a disaster. The expedition is a disaster. But I think for me, it is the most astonishing example of pluck and courage. Tom Ough It is. And the International Court of Justice has a few criteria it looks at when it's apportioning sovereignty. And unfortunately, pluck isn't on that list. But the contention of the Anglofuturism Podcast is that it should be taken into account. And we're going to return to this issue of sovereignty. But all this is to say that there is a magnificent history of British adventuring and pioneering in Antarctica. And so Shackleton's death in 1922, when he's, by kind of popular account, a broken man, does mark the end of the heroic age, but it does not mark the end of the exploration of Antartica. From the 20s and 30s, you've got American explorers in early planes flying over parts of Antarctica. You've got a race to name different parts of the continent because that's kind of the equivalent of putting your flag in the ground. It's the next best thing. Note that there's a bit of it now called Queen Elizabeth Land for similar reasons. So there's a German Antarctic expedition of 1939 and that drops, I'm sorry to say, metal swastikas over what is now Queen Maud Land [to claim it] for Nazi Germany, though listeners will be reassured to know that the area is now claimed by Norway. 00:31:19 - Sovereignty Issues Calum Drysdale That I have to say is not an example of pluck. Tom Ough No. I think it's kind of cheeky if you're just dropping swastikas on it from above. Anyway, there's not much economic utility on Antarctica itself at this point [in the early 20th century]. Calum Drysdale What's the skiing like? Tom Ough I think it was Shackleton who climbed Mount Erebus, which is a live volcano. I don't think it was like throwing out magma at that point. But theoretically, theoretically, there could be very, very nippy skiing. But at that point, people don't care about skiing. They're more interested in whaling and the sovereignty issue is a little more of an abstract thing because there's no real reason for it. Nevertheless, the US, which is becoming the most powerful country in the world, wants to retain the right to a slice and in 1924 the Secretary of State says , ‘It is the opinion of this department that the discovery of lands unknown to civilisation even when coupled with a formal taking of possession does not support a valid claim of sovereignty unless the discovery is followed by an actual settlement of the discovered country.’ Calum Drysdale Sounds like something someone late to the party would say. Tom Ough It does, it does, someone late to the party and without a national history of pluck. Calum Drysdale And what they then attempt to impose a settlement on Antarctica? Tom Ough Well not quite yet, there's still this chaotic state of proto-colonialism. In World War II for instance, oh but by the way like very minor historical footnote which is that this country called Argentina has been founded and so the Argentinians and the Chileans also want a slice of Antarctica and Argentina is allied with the Germans in World War II. And so Deception Island, which is this volcanic island just to the north of the peninsula … Calum Drysdale That's the end of the horseshoe crab's tail for those still keeping to our vertebrate-based metaphor. Tom Ough And it's this incredible sort of black, grey, very dark island with basically no life on it at all. Nevertheless in World War 2 it is the subject of a game of capture the flag basically between the Brits and the Argentinians and so nobody wants to actually leave troops stationed on it, but they both want it as guarding Drake's passage, which is between the Antarctic and South America. And so the Argentinians turn up and they put their flag in it, the Brits turn up and they remove the flag and place it their own. This happens, I think this happens a few times over. The war eventually ends and still nobody really owns the Antarctic but everyone kind of wants at least a right to own some of it and things hot up a little bit in 1952 and that's the point where there's a British meteorological party that lands at Hope Bay which is on the northern end of this peninsula and then the Argentine navy turns up and they use small arms fire to chase this meteorological party back to its ship . Calum Drysdale Not the last time that the Argentinains would intrude on peaceful British activity in this part of the world. Fortunately, the Argentinian government agreed not to interfere with the British scientists but nevertheless there is a growing international sense that order must be brought to the Antarctic at some point. The Soviets are interested, the Americans are interested, I think there's more of a sense at this point that there might be oil, gas, coal, good mining, all that kind of thing. And so a program of geophysical research is set up jointly by various countries in the late 50s and then when that ends in 1958 that leaves a bit of a legislative vacancy and President Eisenhower fills that vacancy by brokering a treaty and this is a very important treaty in the history of the Antarctic. 00:34:58 - Antarctic Treaty Calum Drysdale This is the Antarctic Treaty that still binds us today isn't it? Tom Ough Yeah it was an agreement between all the countries that were active on Antarctica at the time so that's the Argentinians, Australia, Belgium who we've mentioned. Calum Drysdale Belgium is still relevant in this? Tom Ough Yeah, I mean preposterously yes they are one of the 12 parties to this treaty. There's also Chile, France, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, South Africa, the Soviet Union and then of course us and the US. It was signed on December 1st 1959 and enacted in 1961 and its objectives are to keep Antarctica demilitarised, to prevent these countries from using it as a place to test nukes and to ensure that it is used for peaceful and scientific purposes only. And a few countries have been added so if you have a long-term scientific commitment to Antarctica you can be a consultant party and so we've got China and Iran involved, I think, for instance. But that's where we are now, we still have this treaty which prevents countries from militarising Antarctica to doing anything really economic with it. But what's interesting, Calum, is that this treaty can be revised from 2048 onwards. Calum Drysdale Right, so we're now staring down the end of what is potentially the sort of halcyon period of Antarctic quietude and peace, and now people are waking up to actually the resources and what this area has to offer. 00:36:49 - Resource Potential Tom Ough Well, I think it's certainly fair to say that people are waking up to the potential wealth of the other polar region. I'm thinking of course of Greenland which the Trump administration has shown a lot of interest in buying . Trump wants to drill in Greenland, he wants to use it for strategic purposes, he sent his son Donald Trump Jr to Greenland recently and he's trying to get them to vote for independence from Denmark. And so the Trump team sees a landmass rich in gas, oil, gold and rare earth minerals and as ice begins to melt this stuff becomes more accessible. Calum Drysdale Well and it's not just the Americans who are looking, right? The Russians as well are searching under the Arctic for oil. I think there was a finding of these vast oil fields up in sort of underneath the ice and the Chinese as well, I think are excited by the opening of trade routes that emerge as the Arctic ice opens up, that you can start moving containers across the world without necessarily having to go through Suez or around the Cape. Tom Ough Yeah. And I think Donald Trump has said that he wants to order 40 icebreakers and the US Navy doesn't have any. We have one. Calum Drysdale That's almost the two power standard. But I think yeah, I think you're right that we are now emerging back into a time of territorial expansion of where these the borders and the assumptions that what was once fixed on a map is now open to reevaluation. And it might be time to act on our own behalf. Tom Ough I spoke to a professor of geopolitics about this, a guy called Klaus Dodds. And I'll tell you what he said to me, which is that ‘the Greenland saga is just a reminder that both the Arctic and Antarctic are no longer protected by what was until quite recently termed exceptionalism’ and he said of Trump that ‘he has not discovered Antarctica yet but he might do so in his second term, and if he does he will be briefed on the arrival of several more countries to Antarctica.’ So it's not just the Brits and all those other countries like the Norwegians who maintain bases there, there's also an Indian base, a Turkish base, Chinese bases, even Iran has said that it wants an Antarctic base. And like I say in 2048, any of the original 12 signatories to the treaty may request a conference to review the existing terms. So given the changing attitudes towards the polar regions, given this point at which the treaty can be re-evaluated and given some quite exciting evidence of mineral wealth which we'll get to, this could be a very important era for the Antarctic and we might find ourselves in a situation where we are looking back through history at the basis of our claim, and looking at stories like Scott’s and Shackleton’s and thanking our lucky stars that they actually did do this exploration because everyone's going to want a slice of the Antarctic. Calum Drysdale You mention the mineral wealth. Our claim, and you should talk more about it, is particularly vulnerable, because the Chileans and the Argentinians claims overlap our own, in that our claim, which is this end of this peninsula, the rocky and exposed bits are actually in many ways, quite an advantageous area to claim, because you don't have to dig through thick, thick ice sheets. But it also is the area, unfortunately, that is closest to Argentina and Chile. And being willing to forcefully push our claim might be quite critical. Tom Ough Listeners, we're going to leave you with that bombshell, but we'll be back after a break. [Message from sponsor] Hi, I'm Dr. Lawrence Spaceport. You might have heard of the Looking for Growth campaign, sometimes known as LFG. Well, I'm doing something even better. I present to you the LFT bill. That's right, I'm looking for terraforming. Because in space, nobody can hear the NIMBYs scream. We will carpet Mars in power lines and Victorian mansion blocks, turning that rusty wilderness into a proper cosmic Kensington, complete with gas-lit craters and Butler-operated elevators to Olympus Mons. It's already a planet free of XL bullies and excess zoning laws, but with your support, we can make it even better. Red planet today, red tape never. Calum Drysdale Welcome back, listeners. Tom is polishing off his third pint of gin and has spotted through the porthole a collection of three buildings that have got him rather excited. What are those Tom? Tom Ough Yeah, so what we've got below us Calum, come have a look. It's Port Lockroy and listeners, Port Lockroy is the main British outpost at the moment in Antarctica and it's three buildings, the largest of which is Bransfield House, and that houses a post office among other thing. This is the UK’s most southerly public post office, and it is also known as the Penguin Post Office . Calum Drysdale Do you think it also stocks sort of crass birthday cards that you can send to your stepdad? Tom Ough Yeah, I'm sure you can get your holiday travel insurance. Probably a bit expensive down there. Port Lockroy is largely occupied by the British Antarctic Survey and this is the organisation that conducts scientific work on behalf of the country in conjunction with other countries' polar operations. And I have an exciting update for listeners to the Anglofuturism Podcast, which is that the British Antarctic Survey is hiring . Calum Drysdale Exactly. So if you have always thought of yourself as a doer of derring-do, and think that actually what Shackleton did sounds quite exciting, this is your chance. Tom Ough Well, you can be an agricultural plant operator, or an agricultural plant mechanic, a glacier geophysicist, or more excitingly, unfortunately, this is a remote position, but you can currently apply to be an Antarctic Place Names Committee ad hoc member. Calum Drysdale And what would this involve? Tom Ough Well, you join a committee and then you just make up names for bits of the Antarctic. So we have a few suggestions. We propose the Duchy of Antarctica Mining Territory for forbidden reasons that we'll refer to shortly, Snow-on-the-Wold, New New South Wales, and perhaps HMP Shackleton. Calum Drysdale Where we send everyone who plays TikToks on the bus. Tom Ough They're all getting rounded up and they're all getting sent HMP Shackleton. They will regret every decibel of tube music they inflict on us. Calum Drysdale So Tom, other than the ability to send postcards home to your loved ones, what else is there in Antarctica? And what are these people actually doing other than looking at plants? Tom Ough Well a lot of their work is to do with the climate. But as regards your first question, not only can you send a smutty postcard from the Antarctic, you might also be able to get filthy rich. Calum Drysdale And what would this involve? Tom Ough Because this is a geologically very interesting part of the world. And so as listeners will remember, this is a peninsula. And it's a peninsula that is rocky. It's got exposed rock. So it's not covered by like a kilometre of ice as most of the continent is. And because you're not allowed to mine there we don't know a ton about what's going on geologically in Antarctica but there are some clues. And one of the clues comes from the geological composition of other continents which used to be part of this huge continental landmass called Gondwana that Antarctica was once a part of as well. Calum Drysdale Gondwana? I hardly know her. Tom Ough Brilliant, thank you Calum. The peninsula seems to have some shared history with South America and the kind of rock it is suggests that there might be quite significant gold deposits which is very exciting . There's copper, there's visible copper staining on these rocks that's definitely not worth going all the way to the Antarctic to mine for but the gold might be. Right so we've got copper which is not very exciting, gold which could definitely be exciting and incidentally in New Zealand's part of Antarctica there is a volcano that spews gold . I'm not making this up. It's just obviously very expensive to get to but it spews gold dust. Calum Drysdale I like the idea I like the idea of an Antarctic-based or localised gold rush, in which you swing open the saloon doors and you walk in with your 900... Tom Ough SHUT THE DOOR! SHUT THE DOOR! Calum Drysdale The wind whistling underneath the salons doors. Actually, you can't have any decent gunfights because you can't find your ammunition tucked in one of your pockets. Tom Ough But there'll be more than a gold rush. There could be a uranium rush . There could be a diamond-bearing rock rush . Because both of those have been found in Antarctica. So you've got potentially this colossal mineral wealth. Bear in mind that our slice is a as I said, and so your odds are pretty good of finding some good stuff, quite apart from these clues which we already have. One final clue is the presence of active volcanoes in the British Antarctica Territory. And they're exciting because they bring metals to the surface that are often very valuable. I remember a geologist at Oxford once telling me every volcano has underneath it tens of millions of pounds of precious metals and if they're active then so much the better. And crucially, the British territory has several of these. Calum Drysdale So like I say, it could make a diamonds are only the tip of the iceberg are they not? Tom Ough They are only the tip of the iceberg, thank you Calum. They are the tip of the iceberg because there's also a lot of fuel there and this Russian crew found huge reserves of oil and gas in I think the Weddell Sea just off the peninsula . Specifically what that crew found was apparently reserves of oil and gas that in total are ten times larger than our entire North Sea output over the past half-century. Calum Drysdale And I think Tom many a Green voting pensioner might at this point pop up and say ruin one of the last undamaged environments or habitats in the world, and would be frankly appalled by our glee at the thought of nodding donkeys studding the landscape. Is this a problem? Is there a risk of us damaging the environment by doing this? Tom Ough Well I think there's a lot you can say in response to that question and I think frankly some people are misguided in their views of the Antarctic. As we know, British energy is four times more expensive than American energy , for instance. We're still using gas. Calum Drysdale It forms the base of our power. And as we bring online more and more intermittent renewables, the vital necessity of having these oil and gas, and sometimes even coal, baseload power supplies is ever more clear. Tom Ough Well, I think it's important to make a distinction between coal, which is very dirty, and natural gas, which is less dirty. It's also important to remember that we really should be using nuclear as our baseload, but for various avoidable reasons, we're in a position where we just need a stopgap and we're buying this stopgap from other people anyway. So while I'm more excited about the mining, I think the oil and gas is potentially a pretty valuable resource as well. And when people talk about the pristineness of the Antarctic, I think that's true. But you've got to bear in mind that although there's lots of marine life at the bottom of the ocean, there is almost nothing that can live on Antarctica itself. And my view is that if we're going to be mining and extracting resources, this is the best place in the world. It's not the worst. It’s the best. The reason is that there's so little ecology to interfere with. Bear in mind that it's a totally inhospitable part of the world. It's dark for about six months and so you get very limited opportunity to photosynthesize. So there are hardly any plants. There are only about 800 species of Antarctic plants of which 350 are lichens. You're certainly not getting rid of all the lichens by doing a bit of mining in one part of this massive continent. And then maybe people are wondering about animals. Well it's mites, lites, midges, fleas, tardigrades. Calum Drysdale A species known for their ability to survive in outer space, so probably won't be bothered by a mine being built next to them. Tom Ough Yeah, I think they'll muddle through. And we've got the penguins, of course, and we should look after these penguins. But these are not the penguins of yore. In the good old days, 30 million years ago, the Antarctic penguins were two metres tall . They were two metres tall and they were not even the biggest animal on the Antarctic. This is a tangent now, but I think it's worth it because there was this flightless carnivorous bird that stood three and a half metres tall that could run through the forest on the hunt. And bear in mind it would have been dark for six months per year. Calum Drysdale So yeah, so probably had quite a strong forehead that able to resist bashing into things as it ran. Tom Ough Or like infrared vision or something, we don't know. Um so this stuff would have been like charging through these forests that would eventually become like British oil. It's just totally fantastic, but those days are long gone and none of it is left. Calum Drysdale So Tom, what you're saying is the degradation of the penguin species means they're deserving of extinction. Tom Ough That is not what I'm saying. I think in a nutshell my claim is that this is the least bad place in the world for certain forms industrial activity. So as we've explained, this part of the world could be this bonanza of resources. And it's worth recalling something that Cook wrote which is that, ‘should anyone possess the resolution and fortitude to elucidate this point by pushing yet further south than I have done, I shall not envy him the fame of his discovery but I make bold to declare that the world will derive no benefit from it.’ He could not have been more wrong and that's proven by the number of pairs of covetous eyes that are now falling on our British slice of Antarctica. And so you can put a research station wherever you like on the Antarctic. And that means that on the peninsula, there are several other bases. And these come from places like Argentina, of course, but also Brazil, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, blah, blah, blah, all these countries, even Peru, Poland, Spain. Calum Drysdale Spain. Not natural cold weather people. Tom Ough No, no, no. With none of this fantastic history of exploration. And as we were saying, times are changing. Countries are waking up to the potential of the polar regions. And again, I was speaking to Bob Seeley, who was formerly a member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee, about the British Antarctic Territory when I was writing about it for the Telegraph , and he told me ‘the weaker we look, the more we become a target. I think we are entering a period of world history whereby liberal internationalism is going to come under a lot of pressure from hard realist power.’ Calum Drysdale And I think this is why we drew the parallel to Czechoslovakia in that countries that are willing to pull whatever levers they can, be that anti-colonialism the Argentinians have done with regards to the Falkland Islands, nations that are willing to push will reap the rewards of their efforts. And it will require us being forceful in the defence of our possessions to maintain sort of the control, but also maintain the benefits of this land. Tom Ough Yeah, I think it might well be a use it or lose it situation, and it will almost certainly be a situation where those who benefit are those who are most entrepreneurial and assertive about it. 00:54:25 - Future Prospects Tom Ough Listeners might remember that we had Samo Burja on the podcast , and he's the geopolitical analyst from Bismarck , and he said that Antarctica is one of many unique opportunities left in the world, and a country like Britain should not be playing it safe. We should be taking advantage of amazing possessions like this. Calum Drysdale I think this brings us on quite nicely to the threats and the countries who might be willing to push their claims or a claim at the expense of Britain. You mentioned these other countries who maintain research stations. At the moment, the territories look a bit like a pie sliced up, right, with slices cut out reaching towards the South Pole. What would an effort to solidify and support our claim look like? Tom Ough It's very hard to predict what will become of the Antarctic. It might just be that the US and China carve it up somehow. There's this trans-Antarctic line of mountains that could package it. I think if we’re actually serious about making the most of it then we might need to be doing a little bit more. And in the course of this journalism I did on the BAT, for the Telegraph, I spoke to a guy called Dryden Brown, and he's an American who has 20 million dollars worth of Silicon Valley funding to build an independent libertarian city called Praxis . And he proposed that the government, the British government, work with him to develop Antarctica, and he wants to build geodesic domes, which are hemispherical structures that can house humans in harsh environments , on the British Antarctic territory. And what's cool about that it will be piloting technology that we would need to settle on the Moon and Mars. So it's a great scientific endeavour. And because it's scientific rather than militaristic or extractive, it could in theory be within the rules of the treaty. And I think if you start putting domes down and making a serious fist of settling it, then your claim becomes stronger. Your claim becomes stronger and you learn about the environment as well. You could start just finding out what resources there are such that you're in pole position to claim them when it becomes legal. And, perhaps more fundamentally than that, we could be continuing this noble history of exploring Antarctica and pushing the frontier as far as we can. Calum Drysdale The point there is people are already planning. There are already entrepreneurial efforts in mind, and as with Columbus, who was initially turned away by the King of Portugal and then went to Spain and then went and found the new world, there are enthusiastic, motivated, and driven individuals who are going to go and take advantage of this. And the question is, are we going to be the ones backing them, or are we going to be in 50 years’ time looking back and thinking, oh gosh, what a missed opportunity? Tom Ough Absolutely. And if you think that China hasn't got a plan for the Antarctic when they put all these bases down on it, you're a moron. Like, of course they have a plan. Other countries are thinking what they're going to do with the Antarctic. We should be thinking about it too. And the potential is immense. Calum Drysdale So Tom, as a man who has spent the last few weeks with his head in a freezer, trying to simulate the conditions or the experiences of a future British Antarctic territory colonist, what sort of things might a futuristic and patriotic British colony look like? Tom Ough Okay, let me paint you a picture, Calum. Close your eyes and imagine the gently nodding pumpjack of the Royal Antarctic oilfields. To their north, a busy new harbour straddled by the mighty granite figure of the Scott Colossus populated by humanoid mining robots. And finally, the King inspecting the first gold coin to emerge from the Antarctic mint, just before he visits a vast data centre that is cooled by the snow and supported against the Antarctic gales by cathedral-style flying buttresses. Calum Drysdale It would be quite a notable event because the gold, the gold in the royal jewellery has always come from Wales right? What a declaration of intent to take gold from Antarctica. Tom Ough Oh hugely and then as well as taking things to the Antarctic and bringing them home we could send some things there from here, so to make it truly British we would have the Port Lockroy Greggs, we could have like a Casper's Ice Cream in Port Lockroy as well, we could have Deliveroo dark kitchens and riders on skidoos and a statue of course of Edward Bransfield. Calum Drysdale Edward Bransfield with some face… Tom Ough The faceless statue. Calum Drysdale …reconstructed from his descendants as a sort of an e-fit. However, it seems to me that the FCDO is not thinking about this. As you say, China has a plan. We don't have a plan. Tom Ough Yeah, well, I think it's difficult for us to know what is going on inside the FCDO. It certainly seems that there's a relaxed attitude towards our continued possession of things we picked up in the 19th century and beyond. I did ask the FCDO and I’ll read you the statement, they said ‘the Antarctic Treaty which has been in place since 1959 strictly reserved the use of Antarctic territories for scientific use only. The UK remains staunchly committed to this and to the sovereignty of the British Antarctic Territory.’ And that statement is all very well but you've got to take it in context with the size of the Navy at the moment which seems no longer adequate to protect that passage between Scotland and Iceland into the Atlantic, which might be partly why Trump wants to buy Greenland. So unfortunately I don't think we're particularly well placed right now to defend our claim. Calum Drysdale And I think this is a particularly critical moment, right? Because we are moving now from a world where we could peacefully expect a US-backed Pax Americana and an American hegemon who would not use their power to extract, sort of, well, maybe not extract, but not extract too many concessions from its vassal powers. And we are now moving into a time when America wants to start throwing its weight around. And the question is, are we going to wait for things to happen to us and accept that America is no longer following the rules that it set up in the middle of the 20th century, and that China is growing ever more muscular in its attitudes? Are we going to accept the world coming to us? Or are we going to take active steps to make the world one that is favourable and friendly to the British people? Tom Ough On that note, Aris Roussinous who is an UnHerd writer who has been talking about Anglofuturism longer than we have, wrote recently about all these other possessions that Britain has scattered across the globe . So Chagos, but also Falklands, South Georgia. Roussinos compares Britain to this bedridden aunt who is sitting on this incredible property portfolio, also including these Caribbean islands as well, and not quite knowing what to do with it. The problem with being a vulnerable bedridden old aunt who doesn't know what to do with her property portfolio is that someone else might take it off you. Calum Drysdale A Chinese wolf in sheep's clothing. Tom Ough A Chinese wolf in sheep's clothing. We have the situation now where the Falklands government, which is somewhat autonomous from His Majesty's government, is authorising oil and gas drilling which we won't benefit from because Labour doesn't allow it. There's another world in which we're making the most of these resources rather than giving them away to someone. I mean, there's another world where instead of simply giving away this oil and gas, we use it productively, we encourage young Brits, as Roussinos suggests, to settle the Falklands, we make holiday resorts out of the Chagos Islands… Calum Drysdale And allow the Chagossians to benefit as a result. Tom Ough Yeah, yeah. And crucially, if we make the most of Antarctica, then we are giving ourselves the tools of the prosperity that we'll need to defend ourselves from these covetous other countries and to hold on to what we've got. Calum Drysdale Well, and also to push for net zero, right? That, I think, is an undervalued point that at the moment we cannot power the country purely on solar and wind power. At the moment, we are still using fossil fuels. We would like to move to a world of fusion, or more nuclear. At the moment, we can't do it because we're not rich enough. At the moment, we have the two most expensive nuclear power plants. If we want to keep building nuclear power plants at this extortionate cost and extortionate markup compared to the rest of the world, the money for it is going to have to come from somewhere. This seems as good a place as any to drive us forward into a new century of growth. Powered as the boom years after Thatcher, many would claim , were driven by the discovery of North Sea oil, we too could have this kind of economic growth. Tom Ough We started this episode by talking about Scott and Shackleton. And I think what's really noble about them is how they were pushing the frontier, pushing into the unknown. And that's something that we don't really do as a country anymore. But if we start settling the Antarctic and prospecting it, and finding incredible resources there, and developing technology that humans might one day use on the moon and Mars, then I think that will be a fitting tribute to them, rather than just letting someone else take all this land off us. Calum Drysdale And on that note, Tom, I suggest we return to sunnier climes as the portholes are starting to get a bit icy. Tom, where can listeners who are interested in this find out more information? Tom Ough Well, we'll put a link or two in the show notes. One final thing before we let you all go… Calum Drysdale For our solid salt of the earth yeoman listeners, we encourage you please to like, subscribe, and share the podcast with their friends. For our patrician listeners, on the other hand, we invite you to consider supporting us to help us produce these episodes at an even greater clip in order to bring about the next British century a little faster. With that, we'll sign off. Thank you very much for listening. Goodbye. Tom Ough We hope to see you at the Port Lockroy Greggs. Goodbye. --- Further reading The Antarctic oil bonanza that could save Britain – but we need to get there before Argentina Labour should look to the relics of empire for growth China-Russia cooperation blocks Antarctic conservation proposals China opens Antarctic station south of Australia, New Zealand Antarctic Monitoring Tools in Action Economic resources — Antarctica This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 First we came for the dogs – now the NIMBYs and criminals, with Lawrence Newport (Looking for Growth) 1:06:32
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Today we welcome Lawrence Newport, darling of the British progress movement and bane of vicious dogs. Lawrence discusses: - His successful campaign to ban XL Bully dogs after identifying their disproportionate role in fatal attacks and overcoming resistance from animal welfare organisations, - His Looking For Growth initiative to streamline infrastructure development through legislation that bypasses regulatory hurdles for nuclear power, electricity cables, and data centres, - His Crush Crime campaign focusing on career criminals, highlighting the need for longer sentences for repeat offenders and addressing the breakdown in policing that has made certain crimes effectively legal, Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Timestamps (00:00:00) - Introduction (00:01:30) - ‘XL Bully’ Campaign (00:06:31) - Government Inertia (00:22:26) - Infrastructure Challenges (00:41:09) - Crime and Policing (00:52:26) - Crime Wave Causes (01:02:29) - Future Vision This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Make Britain the compute capital of the world, with Samo Burja (Bismarck Analysis) 1:28:05
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Samo Burja is the founder and president of Bismarck Analysis , an industrial analysis and consulting firm studying failing organizations, and the author of "Great Founder Theory" which explores how exceptional individuals shape history by creating innovative institutions rather than merely steering events. He also chairs the editorial board of Palladium Magazine . Samo discusses: - How organisations decline when they shift goals to match diminished capabilities instead of pursuing bold visions, illustrated by NASA's evolution from space exploration to Earth observation - Why social technologies (like trust networks) are as crucial as material technologies in driving innovation and economic growth, with religious communities like Protestant merchants historically enabling trade through shared values - Britain's potential to regain global prominence through ambitious projects like nuclear energy, Antarctic resource development, and AI compute infrastructure, but only with live players who break from institutional scripts Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Timestamps (00:00:00) - Introduction (00:02:23) - Organisational Decline (00:07:29) - Energy Challenges (00:19:04) - NASA's Evolution (00:28:26) - AI and Society (00:37:29) - Social Technologies (00:56:19) - Britain's Status (01:05:45) - Political Opportunities (01:16:16) - Future Prospects This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Bring back the captains of industry, with Rian Chad Whitton (Bismarck Analysis) 1:00:32
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Rian Chad Whitton is a research analyst specialising in automation, industrial policy, and energy markets at Bismarck Analysis who writes on Substack under the name Doctor Syn and won the TXP Progress Prize for his essay on British energy policy . Rian discusses: How British industry declined from being the first Promethean nation to losing competitiveness due to loss of empire, high wages, and poor policy decisions like industrial deglomeration Why manufacturing remains crucial for national security, productivity growth, and regional equality despite the push toward services How Britain could revitalise industry through lower electricity costs, nuclear power expansion, and promoting large industrial conglomerates similar to South Korean chaebols Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Read the transcript . Timestamps (00:00:00) - Introduction (00:01:44) - British Industry History (00:06:50) - Current Industry Status (00:12:47) - R&D and Innovation (00:19:35) - Service Economy Debate (00:25:18) - Military and Manufacturing (00:32:23) - Industrial Policy Models (00:45:30) - Automation and Jobs (00:55:33) - Education and Skills (00:59:23) - Conclusion This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 How the Earth's superheated innards can transform Britain (and the world), with John Clegg (Hephae Energy Technology) 59:26
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You are currently directly above an energy source that is clean, available all day long, and – at least at our current Kardashev level – all but limitless. Naturally, the British government has approximately zero interest in it. But they will soon, because transformational geothermal energy is getting closer. The main obstacle, currently, is the difficulty of harnessing the extreme heat that one finds several miles below the Earth's surface. It melts electronics and resists the creation of pipework, meaning that it's very difficult to sustainably pump fluid in and out. Our latest guest is John Clegg, a technologist and geothermal expert who is making progress in developing high-heat electronics. John joins us in our orbital space pub to tell us about the new frontiers in geothermal, the best way of making it work for Britain, and the most mind-boggling engineering feat in the history of Dorset. Learn more about Hephae Energy Technology, of which John is CTO, via their website , or subscribe to their monthly newsletter here . https://www.linkedin.com/newsletters/hephae-energy-technology-7076836521588207616/ https://www.hephaeet.com/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 A million artificial wombs, with Aria Babu (Works in Progress) 1:14:18
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Aria Babu is a researcher who has turned her attention to falling birth rates and pronatalism, offering fresh perspectives on how technological innovations like artificial wombs might address demographic challenges facing developed nations. She is @Aria_Babu on X. Aria discusses: - Why falling birth rates threaten many developed nations (especially South Korea at 0.7 TFR) and how this creates demographic challenges with an aging population and diminishing workforce, - Cultural and economic factors behind declining birth rates, including intensive parenting norms, high childcare costs, changing gender roles, and the delay in family formation, - Potential solutions including artificial wombs (which could bypass pregnancy complications and help various groups have children), policy changes to support families, and shifts in cultural attitudes toward parenthood, Listen on Apple Podcasts or Spotify . Read the transcript . Timestamps (00:00:00) - Introduction (00:01:23) - Pronatalism Debate (00:04:28) - Global Birth Rates (00:09:31) - Cultural Influences (00:17:12) - Causes of Decline (00:32:04) - Solutions Discussion (00:53:21) - Artificial Wombs (01:06:29) - Future Speculations This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 The land that stopped building, with Sam Dumitriu (Britain Remade) 1:29:27
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The Victorians carpeted Britain in rail, went on majestic sprees of housebuilding, pioneered underground rail and coal power stations, and built magnificent subterranean sewerage. Their ancestors cancelled most of HS2, haven't built a reservoir for thirty years, lets Nimbyism run amok, and can't even electrify all our trains, let alone swap them for maglev. How can we redress this generational embarrassment? Sam Dumitriu, of the think-tank Britain Remade , believes it's possible to revive the Victorian spirit and turn Britain back into a nation of doers. He joins us in the King Charles III Space Station to discuss his ideas. Grab your trowels – we're going building. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Hobbiton, Númenor and the riddle of architectual aesthetics, with Samuel Hughes (Centre for Policy Studies) 1:07:00
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It's widely felt that the British buildings and townscapes have, since the Second World War, become uglier and of lower quality. From their tasteful half-timbered space station, Tom and Calum ask Samuel Hughes , an academic and aestheticist, about the causes of those complaints. We discuss the inherent characteristics of architectural beauty, the divergence of taste between architecture students and the rest of us, and the future of the British built environment. Are natural materials making a comeback? What about robotically-crafted ornament? And with what level of ferocity should we crush the Nimbys? We also prevail on Samuel to tell us what Britain can learn from arresting built enviroments of fiction. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Britain needs a super spaceport, with Dr. Peter Hague 52:33
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The cost of getting mass into space is tumbling. The economic opportunities of being in space are multiplying. Where does this leave Britain? Alas, our country holds the ignominious record of being the only country to get rid of a vertical-launch space programme. But we're turning the situation around – and could take advantage of the changing circumstance by embarking on an exciting megaproject. Our second guest, Peter Hague, is a leading space blogger. His idea? Building a super spaceport – one that's big enough to accommodate Starship, which is SpaceX's gamechanging flagship. We discuss the practicalities of the super spaceport, and what its construction could do for Britain. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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1 Why Britain should build a new island in the North Sea, with Duncan McClements (Adam Smith Institute) 33:13
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In this episode, we are visited in our thatched space station by a wunderkind economist who wants to turn a portion of the North Sea into a Wales-sized island. Duncan McClements is that economist, and you can find his blog, co-authored with Jason Hausenloy, below. https://modelthinking.substack.com/p/a-new-atlantis Editing by Calum Drysdale and Aeron Laffere. Our thanks to Cherie Chun for her help with the cover art. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit anglofuturism.substack.com…
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