When speaking to Tommy Robinson at the far right demonstration in London today, Elon Musk wore a t-shirt saying "What would Orwell think?"
So let's dive in - what would George Orwell think about Tommy Robinson and Elon Musk? 🧵
George Orwell went to Spain to fight fascism. Literally. Not to take holidays, but to stand against the likes of Robinson and Musk.
Orwell saw in Spain how fascist "leaders" turned resentment into organised cruelty. That is why he bled in the trenches there.
When Musk invokes Orwell at a far-right march, it’s more than ironic; it’s Orwellian: twisting language and truth so that oppression sounds like freedom and hate sounds like duty.
To give Musk credit, he must know this.
Orwell sought to expose propaganda and lies wherever they came from, whether from fascists or Stalinists.
He went to Spain because he was an internationalist. He believed fascism was a danger to all humanity and that solidarity must cross borders. No "Britain first" for him.
Orwell hated the theatre of moral absolutes that let people excuse cruelty as duty.
“They are only doing their duty” was his warning about bureaucratised violence of the kind being carried about by ICE in the USA and often cheered on by Musk.
Orwell despised grandstanding that masked real power.
He hoped to see “a world in which no one is rich, and no one is poor.” Whereas Musk aspires to be the first trillionaire.
In 1941, Orwell warned that Britain could not be both democratic and have extreme inequality - war and fascism would exploit those contradictions.
Still true in 2025.
Extreme wealth is dehumanising both for those who have it (isolating them, breeding cruelty, corrupting moral vision) and for those forced to serve it.
Socialism is needed not only to lift up the poor, but to liberate the wealthy from the moral prison of their own riches.
In "Keep the Aspidistra Flying", Orwell shows how obsession with money poisons relationships and drives people to cruelty. Wealth, or the pursuit of it, produces hierarchy, contempt and shallow values.
Sound familiar Elon?
Orwell was literally a peniless immigrant in France. It's all there in "Down and Out in Paris and London". It taught him empathy for the poor, who he wrote about as human beings. This is the antidote to the xenophobia that was being pedalled in London today.
Orwell loved English working-class culture, literature, and humour - but not Britain’s ruling class, nor its empire.
He saw English patriotism as a way of glossing over empire, inequality and decline.
He called for a “revolutionary patriotism” that would reject empire and class privilege, while preserving genuine affection for ordinary English life.
This is the opposite of Reform and their billionaire backers.
Orwell would also remind us: don’t let outrage be your only politics.
Go to hospitals, foodbanks, union meetings, refugee hostels.
Real solidarity is built in the ordinary places where people live and struggle.
Defend the small decencies that make life livable.
Tactical note: treat incendiary rhetoric from billionaires and provocateurs as political acts, not credible claims.
Counter their story by exposing the interests behind it and the people who pay the cost.
Who's funding Tommy Robinson and why?
Orwell insisted on two things - truth and the dignity of ordinary life.
So when Musk labels a whole movement “the party of death”, call it what it is: incitement, lies, propaganda.
And it's Orwellian as almost all the USA's political murders are commited by right-wingers.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Well, maybe they are now - because the one man who could prove you wrong just died.
As president of Uruguay 🇺🇾, José Mujica gave away 90% of his salary and lived in a shack. This is his extraordinary story. 🧵
Aged 31, Mujica joined the Tupamaros, a leftist guerrilla group. They once robbed a bank that had been involved in corrupt transactions, took the bank's records and handed them over to authorities and journalists.
But then things turned nasty and the regime cracked down.
Mujica
➡️ was captured by the authorities 4 times
➡️ shot 6 times while resisting arrest in a bar
➡️ spent a total of 14 years in prison, much of it in solitary
➡️ spent more than 2 years spent in the bottom of an old horse-watering trough
➡️ suffered paranoia and hallucinations
Keir Starmer and Wes Streeting have yet again caved to the interests of multinational corporations.
This time? It’s the ultra-processed food (UPF) industry.
Why can’t they follow countries putting citizens’ health and well-being before corporate profit?🧵
In Chile 🇨🇱, products high in sugar, salt, or fat must carry bold black warning labels and they’re changing people’s eating habits.
The policy has led to a 24% reduction in calories purchased from UPFs, 37% less salt, 27% less saturated fat, and 10% less sugar overall.
In Colombia 🇨🇴, a broad health tax on UPFs - which started at 10% in 2023 and increased to 20% by 2025 - has led to a 5% decrease in UPF consumption, even as UPF consumption continues to rise rapidly worldwide.
"It's easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism" - Fredric Jameson.
Now it’s time to choose. So how do we break out of our mental cage and start imagining a better world before it’s too late?
Star Trek.
Yes, Jameson’s answer is Star Trek. 🧵
Since Trump’s re-election, the world’s biggest companies have given up the pretence that they’re going to do the right thing.
They’re just going to maximize profits while civilization collapses around them. And no-one is surprised, because this is the logic of capitalism.
But capitalism is just one stage in history - a stage that can't last much longer. To move past it before it’s too late, we must imagine how it ends to break free from its mental grip.
Jameson says imagining better worlds - utopias - is the first step toward changing the system.