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Across England, an extraordinary movement has taken hold: the mass stapling of £2 polyester flags to any publicly funded vertical surface. Many lamp posts, traffic lights and bus stops are now tangled in sagging St George’s crosses. Forget cricket and warm beer - the true test of patriotism in 2025 is how many metres of fraying polyester you can cable-tie above a roundabout.


The England flag, once a symbol of jubilee celebrations and penalty shootouts, now finds itself pressed into the service of a culture war - like a middle-aged pub landlord forced into active combat because someone on Facebook dared to suggest hummus is nice.


Critics argue that the flags are provocative at a time when tensions around immigration are running high. St George’s crosses have become a fixture at anti-immigration protests, where they are held aloft by people who think 5G is a form of government mind control.


While groups behind the flag phenomenon say their aim is to spread ‘love, unity and patriotism’, some of them have been linked to far-right organisations. Supporters insist they’re just ‘ordinary people’ who enjoy crowdfunding for cable ties, and shouting at strangers outside hotels. “We want people to know that this is a country to be proud of. England still stands tall!” declared Dave Crump from Facebook group Walsall Warriors, as a flag slid slowly down a lamp post behind him, like a pole dancer who’s lost the will to live.

Meanwhile, online crowdfunders continue to raise thousands to buy more flags. Britain may not be able to fund the NHS, but by God we’ll never run out of cheap tat from Poundland.


The irony is that these flags - flimsy, dirt-streaked, and perpetually tangled around themselves - feel less like a proud declaration of national identity and more like a national metaphor. They hang at half mast, limp and rain-soaked, as if to say: this is Britain now. A once-proud island reduced to a damp bit of polyester flapping above a pothole. Much of England now resembles an end-of-empire clearance sale that went horribly wrong in a gale, with seagulls treating the whole enterprise as an avant-garde toilet. The spirit of the nation has been encapsulated by a scrap of cheap polyester, slowly decomposing above a Lidl car park.


The country doesn’t look like it’s flying high – it looks like it’s in tatters and stuck halfway up a lamp post, waiting for the council to take it down, probably sometime in 2031.


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Gary "Steve" Stevenson, 37 of Tipton, tragically lost his life when, at 2:30am on Tuesday, he was killed by a heavy goods lorry while he was painting an England flag on a mini roundabout on the B4517.


Mr Stevenson, who has a history of jumping on bandwagons, was a popular figure around the town. He was always the first in line to stand outside the local Travelodge, shouting at the residents in case one of them might be an immigrant. Friends remember him fondly, ripping the burqa off a young muslim women who offended him by playing with her children in the park during the half term holidays. They reminisce about the time he pushed a flaming wheelie bin towards a group of riot police, called upon after shots were fired at some brown children on their way home from school.


"He was a true patiot. A legend. A hero," said one friend. "If there would of been a war, or something like that, Stevo would have been the first to sign up. He loved are country and was not in any way a racist or a nazi. No. Not at all. No way. Not Steve. He always put England first, and he never hit his wife. Well, not so hard that it would mark her, anyways."


Friends family and assorted racists have called for the roundabout to be named "The Stevo Roundabout" in his honour. The local council has dismissed this suggestion as "totally bonkers".



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A family outing isn't cheap these days and keeping the kids amused during the school holidays is difficult. But there are things that you can do that won't break the bank.


Our top recommendation is to join a protest. There are plenty of disgruntled people out there so there are plenty of protests to choose from. You can usually join in for free, although you will need a budget for making placards. Take packed lunches to keep costs down.


Chanting outside hotels is pretty dull, but you could consider turning up with placards complaining about cold breakfasts, inadequate cleaning and uncomfortable beds. That should confuse the tattooed masses who are complaining about asylum seekers.


It's traditional on bank holidays to complain about traffic. Why not join a drivers' go slow on the M5, M1 or M4? To be fair, this won't be a top choice for your kids.


Why not start a protest outside a festival about the price of tickets? Maybe a famous band will take pity on you and pay for you to go in? If you can't get in, you will probably still hear most of the headline acts anyway. Let your kids choose the festival so that they can hear their favourite bands.


Student protests are a bust during summer as university campuses are empty. Save your ideas about protesting free speech or wokery or poor student support until the new term.


If you're in the country you should be able to join a protests about inheritance tax or electricity pylons or solar farms. It's always fun to watch farmers spraying council buildings with slurry, but remember to stand back. Maybe stay away from protests about too many Airbnb properties destroying rural life. Hunt saboteurs aren't so lively these days, but you might be able to join in with badger protection or burning down second homes.


Finally, we suggest avoiding anti-capitalist and extinction rebellion protests. And steer clear of Palestiny stuff too. No-one wants to wake up in a cell on Bank Holiday Tuesday.



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