Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
BBC’s ‘Years and Years’: Economic progress causes the apocalypse
BBC’s ‘Years and Years’: Economic progress causes the apocalypse
Nov 4, 2025 1:17 PM

Scanning bookshelves crammed with titles like Divergent,The Hunger Games, and countless imitators, this is the literary era of dystopian fiction. BBC One entered the genre with its “woke” TV series “Years and Years,” which offered UK viewers the unique analysis that technological progress and economic freedom triggered the apocalypse.

This synopsis includes spoilers.

“Years and Years” follows a family from the year 2019 until 2034, tracing world events along the way – and the political message could scarcely be less subtle. One family member has her life shortened when the newly re-elected President Donald Trump drops a nuclear weapon on China. Unbridled capitalism wipes out another couple’s savings.

The key villain is Viv Rook (Emma Thompson), a celebrity businesswoman turned populist politician who rises to prominence by proclaiming she does not “give a [expletive]” about the Middle Eastern conflict. She starts the Four Star Party, with a neo-fascist style insignia reminiscent of the National Alliance’s symbol. Rook holds the balance of power in a hung parliament until she can topple the government, seize power, and erect concentration camps. Innocent homosexual migrants are shipped to certain death in backward, Orthodox Christian nations in Eastern Europe for violating irrational immigration regulations. Perhaps most egregiously, she closes the beacon of truth, the taxpayer-funded BBC.

In the final episode this season (season one, episode six), matriarch Muriel Deacon tells her family they are responsible for “everything … the banks, the recession, America, Mrs. Rook, everything single thing that’s gone wrong – it’s your fault.” She explains:

We blame these vast, sweeping tides of history, you know, like they’re out of our control, like we’re so helpless and little and small. But it’s still our fault.

You know why? It’s that £1 t-shirt. A t-shirt that cost £1. We can’t resist it, every single one of us. We see a t-shirt that costs £1 and we think, “Ooh, that’s a bargain. I’ll have that,” and we buy it. … And the shopkeeper gets five miserable pence for that t-shirt, and some little peasant in a field gets paid 0.01 pence, and we think that’s fine – all of us. And we hand over our quid and we buy into that system for life.

I saw it all going wrong when it began in the supermarkets, when they replaced all the women on the till with those automated checkouts. … [Y]ou didn’t do anything, did you? Twenty years ago, when they first popped up, did you walk out? Did you write letters plaint? Did you shop elsewhere? No! You huffed, and you puffed, and you put up with it. And now, all those women are gone. And we let it happen.

And I think we do like them, those checkouts. We want them. Because it means we can stroll through, pick up our shopping, and we don’t have to look that woman in the eye – the woman who’s paid less than us. She’s gone, got rid of her, sacked. Well done.

So, yes, it’s our fault. This is the world we built. Congratulations. Cheers, all.

A video of the scene is embedded in this tweet.

“It’s our fault. This is the world we built. Congratulations, cheers all.” #YearsAndYears /rCfqGq93sl

— BBC One (@BBCOne) June 18, 2019

The story is less Orwellian than Julian, as in the end all is well and will be well. Ultimately, Rook’s camps are exposed, and she’s condemned by the world. The BBC opens anew. And cinema’s approved form of technological progress – transhumanism – mimics eternal life.

Thanks to its bringing received opinion to life, “Years and Years” currently enjoys an 88 percent rating on Rotten Tomatoes. Critics singled out Deacon’s diatribe for plaudits, with Michael Hogan of The Telegraph calling it “one hell of a speech.”

Many scripts tell us more about how cultural elites see the majority of their country than anything about the nation or its citizens themselves. Collette Wolfe’s speech to Charlize Theron in Young Adult (language warning) set the standard here. “Years and Years” joins “The Newsroom” in this category.

But Muriel Deacon’s speech amounts to little more than demanding her benighted viewers share the writers’ Luddite aversion to technological progress.Applying the underlying principle to real history shows its ings.

Blacksmiths, whose contributions to village life were once so significant they passed into verse, are no more; they have been sacked.

Wheelwrights, the gentle yeomen shaping wood strong enough to hold a covered wagon and stand the pull of four horses, have closed up shop.

“Ah,” the other side may say, “but those were skilledprofessions. Skilled people have the ability to learn a new expertise. But what about the unskilled laborers?”

Certain unskilled professions have winnowed down over the decades, even during my own (relatively) brief lifetime.

Just a decade ago, 71 percent more phone operators waited at the other end of the dial tone.

Not so long before ago, a full-time attendant greeted everyone who pulled into a gas station, filled your tank (with regular gasoline), washed your windshield, and offered to check your oil. Today, this persists only in New Jersey and more populated areas of Oregon – and only due to special interest legislation enacted to shield existing stations from petition.

Windows full of bank tellers who stamped your bank book with each transaction gave way to automated teller machines.

Loggers are following Paul Bunyan into the sunset, replaced by harvesters and forwarders.

Paperhangers see their work permanently erased puterized billboards that make their contributions redundant.

Movie theater projectionists will see their numbers shrink over the next 10 years, as on-demand streaming services allow people to watch the movie of their choice at home.

All of these jobs, while socially important, required only a rudimentary set of skills and are gradually disappearing.

The waning of these occupations has not created a long-term economic wasteland. Quite the contrary.

When employers no longer have to pay people to perform a given task, they can reinvest the savings into more productive lines of work. Machines often serve us infinitely faster, better, and more accurately than human beings. They yield greater abundance. More goods are produced, and innovation creates new professions, sometimes whole new industries. The resulting surge of creativity introduces new job opportunities for those left behind to make a longer lasting contribution.

And these technological improvements fuel research for the next breakthrough. The closing of lower skilled positions frees more human energies to participate in higher order jobs.

This not only benefits consumers and technological progress in general, but it has a greater significance. According to one of the writings of the Second Vatican Council, Gaudium et Spes, it helps the human race and the individual affected participate pletely in his divine calling.

The human intellect “shares in the light of the divine mind,” it teaches. “When man develops the earth by the work of his hands or with the aid of technology, in order that it might bear fruit and e a dwelling worthy of the whole human family … he carries out the design of God manifested at the beginning of time, that he should subdue the earth, perfect creation, and develop himself.” The added efficiency generated by new technology multiplies his “service of his brethren.”

That leads to a destination far different than the one mapped out by the BBC’s writers. Economic history indicates which set of prophecies we should believe.

Makarenko/. Editorial use only.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Cuba’s pioneers of capitalism: Marcus Lemonis goes to Havana
Although theCuban people continue tosuffer and struggle under the weight munist rule, many have been encouraged by even the slightest of Raul Castro’s incremental changes toward private businesses. Out of a total population of roughly 11 million, the number of self-employed Cubans rose from 150,000 to 500,000 between 2010 and 2015. The state still controls the press, the internet, and most of the “formal” economy, but a small portion of the Cuban population is finally gaining the freedom to innovate...
ATMs, bank tellers, and the automation paradox
In September 1969 the Chemical Bank branch in Rockville Center, New York opened the first automatic teller machines. The first ATM was only able to give out cash, but by 1971 the machine could handle multiple functions, including providing customers’ account balances. The machine could do the job that was once reserved for human tellers. Over the next three decades, the number of ATMs increased exponentially. Today there are about 400,000 ATMs across America. You can probably imagine what happened...
All is gift: Embracing the divine generosity of Christmas
Throughout the Christmas season, we are routinely reminded of our “gift nature,” whether through the transfer of presents, the confluence of family gatherings, the creative flurryof plays and performances, or, most importantly, the central story of the One who gives it all meaning in the first place. Christmas is the story of the ultimate gift and gift-giver. As we embrace and receive and celebrate what that all means, we should be careful to remember that the corresponding Christmas traditions are...
A ‘Pinocchio’ Rating for Pope Francis
Sandro Magister, Vatican correspondent for L’Espresso, notes in his Italian blog a recent TV program that “fact checks” the pope’s economics. Here’s a translation of the blog post: In his speeches Pope Francis often puts forth original theories of dubious foundations but that, for him, are of unshakable certainty and explain everything. Take, for example, this from an interview a few days ago with the Belgian Catholic weekly “Tertio”: “There is an economic theory that I have not verified, but...
5 Facts about the Bill of Rights
Today is Bill of Rights Day, memoration first established byPresident Franklin D. Rooseveltto cherish the ‘immeasurable privileges which the charter guaranteed’ and to rededicate its principles and practice.” Here are five facts you should know about the Bill of Rights: 1. At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, George Mason of Virginia said that he “wished the plan had been prefaced by a Bill of Rights,” because it would “give great quiet” to the people. A motion was made that mittee...
Martin Scorsese’s Silence: Christianity’s crucible in Japan
In ing weeks, a film speculated by many to be Martin Scorsese’s most personal and poignant project to date will release throughout the United States. “While Silence depicts a Japan deeply resistant to Christian influence,” says Ken Marotte in this week’s Acton Commentary, “the story actually begins approximately 100 years earlier, when Christianity was not only tolerated, but encouraged.” The Christian faith reached Japan’s shores in 1549, when Francis Xavier, co-founder of the Jesuit order and one of the church’s...
Trump nominee Betsy DeVos makes Interfaith Alliance naughty list
Your writer hates to be the one to do this, but sometimes it’s necessary to bring a necessary understanding of religion to those who deliberately misunderstand and mischaracterize it. In this specific instance, it’s the Interfaith Alliance, a group more intent on spreading progressive ideology than religious faith. How else to explain a consortium that declares education vouchers anathema and clutches its respective pearls at the nomination of Betsy De Vos for U.S. Education Secretary? Here’s IA on vouchers, for...
Deck the halls with macro follies
During the holiday shopping season the media inevitably talks about consumer spending, and how it is vital to economic growth and job creation. But if people are buying more that means that are saving less. Does that mean saving is bad for the economy? Can we really spend our way to prosperity? ...
The value of trust—and how to create it
Trusting strangers not only makes our lives easier, it makes our country more prosperous. As economist Tim Hartford says, “One of the underrated achievements of the modern world has been to develop ways to extend the circle of trust by depersonalising it.” How do we create and extend these “circles of trust”? In this video,Dan Ariely, aprofessor of psychology and behavioral economics at Duke University, talks about the basic elements of trust and how to build trust. ...
The economics of Bedford Falls (Part 1 of 3)
Upon it’s initial release in 1946, Frank Capra’s It’s a Wonderful Life was something of a financial flop,failing to reach the break-even point of $6.3 million. Although it was nominated for Best Picture at the Academy Awards, it wasn’t until subsequent decades that it became recognized as one of the greatest Christmas films ever made.* The movie is long overdue for another reappraisal, for it’s also one of the best films ever created about economics and financial services. In a...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved