As the Christmas break ends and reality intrudes, many people feel deeply uncomfortable with the world around them. The news feels alien. Politics feels broken. The economy feels cruel and irrational.
In this video, I explain why that discomfort is not a personal failing; it is a rational response to a world driven by neoliberal madness, authoritarian politics, and moral collapse.
If you think Trump is mad, Farage is dangerous, Labour has failed, financial capitalism is destructive, and empathy still matters — you're not alone.
Feeling out of step today often means you're seeing more clearly than those who've learned to accept the unacceptable. Change has always come from people prepared to be called “unreasonable”.
This video is about clarity, humanity, and why hope still matters as we move into 2026.
This is the audio version:
This is the transcript:
As we come to the end of the Christmas and New Year break, many people are being forced to face reality again. Monday morning is back to work for millions of people, and that means that we will all have to face the madness that appears to prevail within our world.
This video is about why you're not crazy to think that the world is mad, and why the discomfort you feel is totally rational. In a word, in a phrase, you're not crazy; they are.
Many feel the world no longer reflects who they are. The news feels alien. The opinions pushed at you feel wrong. The things being sold to you feel disconnected from what matters, and let me stress, you're not alone in feeling this. You're one of the many.
I know that lots of people watching this channel often ask, "Is it just me who feels like this? Am I the one who's out of step? Am I missing something that everybody else is seeing? Why am I alone?" And the answer is, "You're not."
You're not wrong to feel this way. The truth is, you're the one who's seeing the world clearly; it's the rest who are out of step by embracing the madness of the world around us.
You're not crazy if you think Donald Trump is mad; he is.
You're not crazy if you think Nigel Farage is bad; he is.
You're not crazy if you think Keir Starmer and the Labour Party have failed you; they have.
You're not crazy if you think the Conservatives have fallen off the edge of politics; they have, and there is no way back.
This is not extremism on your part. It's an observation of reality in all these cases; the world is crazy, you're not.
You're not crazy if you think Scotland and Wales should be independent; these are now very obvious rational choices.
You're not crazy if you're looking at the Greens for political leadership now; we need the sort of alternatives that they're talking about.
You're not crazy if you hate the consequences of financial capitalism.
You're not crazy to see that it has been let off its green obligations, and they're delighted about that fact.
You're not crazy to see that this threatens your wellbeing, that of your children and your grandchildren, and maybe those who come after them.
You're not crazy if you want to change all of this; you're sane.
You're not crazy if you think a better world is possible; you're right.
You're not crazy to have hope in a desperate world; hope is how change happens.
Some people will call you unreasonable, but that has always been how progress works. I'd remind you that George Bernard Shaw once said over a century ago, " Reasonable people adapt themselves to the world. Unreasonable people try to change it. All progress is therefore dependent upon the existence of unreasonable people."
And if that's what they call you, celebrate it. Your unreasonableness is precisely that: a cause for celebration because you're the change agent that might just make this world a better place.
The world we live in is crazy.
Many leaders are driven by the madness of neoliberalism.
Others have adopted policies that are racist, authoritarian, or just dangerously close to fascism.
Your unease about them is wholly justified.
You're not crazy to worry about Ukraine.
You're not crazy to think that what Benjamin Netanyahu has done is a war crime. It is, and that does not make you an anti-Semite. Whatever the opponents of your position say, it makes you human. And it makes you empathic, and empathy is what defines us as human. Elon Musk says otherwise. He says empathy is human failing, but he's wrong. He is utterly off the scale of humanity by making that claim. You're right, he's wrong. Caring is not failure; caring is clarity in a world gone mad.
Don't worry if you stand out as a result; we need people who do. I've lived for 20 years of being told:
- I should not hold the views that I talk about on this channel.
- That I'm professionally incompetent by the accounting profession.
- That I'm a dreamer.
- That there is nothing that I argue for that is possible, and that
- I am just plain, straightforwardly wrong on every occasion.
But by sticking to my guns:
- International tax law has been changed both for individuals and multinational corporations to the extent that much of the power of tax havens has been taken down.
- Jeremy Corbyn became leader of the Labour Party in part by using my ideas, because let's not beat around the bush, Corbynomics was my creation, and
- The Green New Deal, which I co-wrote and am the main author of since 2009, has entered the global debate.
The fact that things happen because people refuse to conform is my point. I'm not bragging, I'm just saying change is possible.
And the reality is that if you feel pain, it's because you see things clearly. Others may have knowledge, but you have something much more valuable. You have understanding, and that trumps knowledge every day, because knowledge without understanding is technocratically useless. Knowledge with understanding becomes what makes things possible, and you can see right from wrong, and that's not madness, that is humanity.
You matter, in other words, because you can influence change in your own way, at your own pace, in your own place. That's why I want to talk to you on this channel. That's why I'm talking to you now, I hope.
The world will still look mad in 2026. Nothing is going to change overnight, but trust me, I am certain that change is possible because I have effected change in this world, and you are as much an agent of change as I am.
You can make your own difference, that's the point I'm making. Whatever it is, however you choose to do it, whether it's just by sharing these videos or commenting, or talking to friends or neighbours, or people on the bus, it doesn't matter. You can be the point of difference. So let's get on with it. There is a difference to make. Let's make it in 2026.
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As radio 4 s morning service noted, William Tyndale’s translation of the bible 500 years ago was burnt if it was found. And Tyndale himself was regarded as crazy and burnt. A few years later his translation was placed in every church in England.
🙂
You lighten out darkness. Whether “mainstream” media and the following sheep are intrinsicly evil or not is hard to fathom. Hope is eternal but certainly now the forces of evil are on the match and to regain a world of sane, humane and ecological thinking is a mighty challenge.c
People are looking for hope. They have turned to Reform in desperation. Labour came to power promising change, but have delivered more of the same, and so many are now totally disillusioned with politics.
Zack is providing hope, but I spoke to a highly intelligent friend sceptical that he was promising left wing populism. I don’t believe he is. I don’t see any policy change, just better communication of what the party is about and encouragement that all are welcome not just educated middle class white people.
But so far protest has failed to stop the war in Ukraine, Gaza etc. and now we see Trump wading into Venezuela in a clear act of unprovoked war. Climate change is here whether we acknowledge it or not, although the snow and ice today are seasonally appropriate.
However whilst nothing has been stopped yet, people are starting to have enough and I believe the American people will eventually turn on Trump and in the UK we can stop the current inevitablity of a Reform government. It’s just likely to be messy, probably with a coalition of unlikely partners who have different ideas. But European countries deal with this all time and the Scottish government works having to build consensus. I guess we need to be patient and be prepared for a very bumpy ride.
Thanks for the support!
We’re not crazy for knowing the difference between right and wrong; for having a moral compass, and for calling out oppression.
Thanks Richard and the Team for all you do, Happy 2026.
Keep holding the light, all caves have an exit.
🙂
I’m in tears seeing this, Richard. You describe perfectly how I feel most days. On my own now with just the cat for comfort, it’s immensely reassuring to hear that I’m not going crazy.
We all need reassurance.
Thank you Richard for all your hard work to effect change, and particularly for today , for intellectually I know I am not mad for seeing a life beyond neoliberal crazy economics to a possible better future, but videos like this one make me feel emotionally better ! All the best for 2026
Thanks
We are not crazy.
The Chinese have a curse…’May you live in changing times…..’ and that is what we are going through right now. Adapt, hold on, stay focussed and alert. It’s happened before and will again. But we survive. Happy New Year!
And to you.
Richard, this is a powerful piece — and the emotional clarity you offer here matters. But if I may add one thought, it’s that many people feel this “madness” so sharply because they can see the failures you describe, yet they don’t see a route out. Naming the chaos is essential, but people are also hungry for the architecture of what comes next.
We know the world is off‑kilter. We know neoliberalism has hollowed out institutions. We know financial capitalism has been allowed to run without guardrails. And we know that political leadership across the spectrum has failed to offer anything resembling a coherent plan. That’s why so many feel unanchored.
What’s missing — and what your readers are desperate for — is a sense of the structures that could replace the broken ones. The institutions that could rebuild trust. The mechanisms that could reconnect savings to investment. The frameworks that could protect the real economy from predation. The long‑term architecture that makes hope more than an emotion.
You’re right that people aren’t crazy. They’re seeing the world clearly. But clarity also creates a responsibility: to sketch the outlines of the alternative. Not just the moral case for change, but the practical scaffolding that makes change possible.
If 2026 is going to be a year of sanity in a mad world, that’s the piece we need next.
Noted