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Thursday, November 13, 2025

Reginald Putterwick

There I was, Reginald Putterwick, comfortably ensconced in my favourite armchair, a chipped porcelain mug of Earl Grey steaming gently in my hand and the dulcet tones of Radio 4 murmuring in the background. Life, one might say, was ticking along with the predictable rhythm of a grandfather clock in a perpetually quiet library. Then, of course, the world decided to throw a spanner, not just into the works, but directly into the Earl Grey.

It all started with the news, naturally. Not the gentle, reassuring news about badger sets and slightly damp village fetes, but the shouty, headline-grabbing stuff about… well, him. The chap with the… distinctive hair. The chap bore a passing resemblance to a startled marmoset that had just won the lottery. Yes, that one. President… Trumpet? Trumpernickel? No, Trump. President Trump. The American fella. It was like a scene from a particularly bizarre sitcom, but unfortunately, it was all too real.

Now, Im not a political animal, not in the slavering, foaming-at-the-jowls sense. My politics usually extend to fretting mildly about the state of the garden and whether the local council will finally fix that pothole on Sycamore Lane. But even I, Reginald Putterwick, a man whose life’s most thrilling event last week was finding a perfectly formed Victoria plum in my greengrocer’s, started to notice things—worrying things.

It began with the little things, the sort of things youd usually dismiss as just… well, odd. Like that business with naming himself chair of the Kennedy Centre by a unanimous” vote. Unanimous? In politics? It sounded about as likely as finding a sensible hat at a flamingo convention. Then, the reporter was barred from the White House for failing to use the appellation “Gulf of America.” Gulf of America! It sounded like something a slightly tipsy geography teacher would invent on a dull Tuesday.

Initially, my reaction was mild amusement. Oh, those Americans,” I chuckled to Mrs. Higgins over the garden fence, always so… dramatic.” Mrs. Higgins, a woman whose dramatic moments usually involved discovering a rogue snail in her prize-winning petunias, nodded sagely and muttered something about modern youth,” which, I suspected, had very little to do with the actual topic.

But then the news got… less amusing. The pronouncements became bolder, the threats a bit less veiled, a touch more… unhinged, perhaps? It was all about peace” talks without the actual participants, countries being locked out of things indefinitely, and talk of letting certain… less than savoury nations do whatever the hell they want.” That phrase, whatever the hell they want,” stuck in my craw like a rogue plum stone. It lacked a certain… statesmanship.

And thats when it hit me. Sitting there, halfway through my second digestive biscuit, it all clicked. The grandstanding, the self-righteousness, the way he seemed to…  dislike people who disagreed with him. It was all terribly… familiar. And then, with a jolt that nearly sent my Earl Grey flying, I realized who he reminded me of.

Hitler.

Yes, Hitler. Dont get me wrong, I know it sounds ridiculous. Ones a tangerine-toned chap with a penchant for gold-plated things, and the other was… well, Hitler. But hear me out. It wasn’t the moustache. It was… the style of it all. The bluster, the sense of grievance, the way he seemed to believe he, and only he, possessed the absolute truth of the matter.

I even started seeing parallels where, perhaps, none truly existed. Trump was a colon artist,” I mused, staring blankly at the news report about his latest golf outing. Hitler was a con artist.” Both are self-righteous and are rather keen on getting rid of people, metaphorically or otherwise. It was all… a bit much, really, for a Tuesday afternoon.

And then the Canadians came into it. Canada! Nice chaps, the Canadians. Fond of ice hockey and maple syrup and generally quite polite. There was no talk of… well, Mr. Trump seemed to be looking at Canada like a hungry Labrador looks at a particularly juicy bone. The article I was reading, with growing unease and a sense of disbelief, suggested he might want to… annex them. Annex Canada! It sounded like something from a far-fetched spy novel, not the 6 o’clock news.

The article went on, painting a rather bleak picture of an America that had decided to, shall we say, go rogue. No longer the steady hand on the tiller, the reliable ally. It was more like… a runaway speedboat piloted by a chimpanzee whod just discovered the throttle. And the democratic world, we were told, would have to get along without it. Maybe even… defend itself from it. The gravity of the situation was sinking in, and it was not a pleasant realization.

Defend ourselves from America? It sounded utterly preposterous. America, the land of apple pie and Hollywood and… well, whatever else Americans were famous for. Defending ourselves from them? It was like being told you might have to protect your prize-winning roses from your neighbours prize-winning Labrador – unthinkable, yet suddenly, unsettlingly plausible in this topsy-turvy world.

The article suggested NATO was, to put it delicately, defunct. Dead as a dodo. Europe, it seemed, was now on its own. And Canada, poor Canada, wedged between this renegade America and… well, Russia, was in a particularly sticky wicket. “Get some allies, fast,” the article urged. Allies? Did they mean like… France? Germany? Perhaps the Danes? I wasnt entirely sure who one allied with when facing down… well, America. It felt like asking the local cricket team to take on a tank battalion.

That evening at the village pub, The Dog and Trumpet” (the irony was not lost on me), the usual convivial chatter was replaced by a somewhat subdued murmur. Old Mr. Grimshaw, who usually held court about the iniquities of modern parking regulations, was unusually silent, nursing his pint of mild and looking profoundly troubled. Even young Timmy, the usually irrepressible barman, seemed a bit downcast.

Bit gloomy tonight, Timmy,” I ventured, ordering my usual half of bitter.

Timmy sighed, polishing a glass with unnecessary vigour. You saw the news, Mr. Putterwick?”

Indeed,” I said, accepting my pint. Quite… concerning, wouldnt you say?”

Concerning?” Timmy snorted. Concerning is finding a worm in your apple, Mr. Putterwick. This is… this is the end of the world as we know it!” He punctuated this with a flourish of the glass cloth, nearly knocking over a tray of crisps.

Now, now, Timmy,” I said, trying to inject some of my usual calm into the situation. Lets not get ahead of ourselves. Its probably just… a phase. These things come and go, you know. Like flared trousers and avocado-coloured bathroom suites.”

Timmy gave me a look that suggested he thought I was either incredibly naive or utterly bonkers. Possibly both. Flared trousers and avocado bathrooms didnt threaten to start World War Three, Mr. Putterwick.”

Of course, he had a point. While aesthetically questionable, avocado bathrooms had never plunged the world into a geopolitical crisis.

Over the next few weeks, the situation, if anything, worsened. The international summits started resembling pantomimes. Trade wars became daily occurrences, and the threats, oh, the threats! They seemed to be aimed at everyone and no one in particular, like a toddler wielding a water pistol filled with vinegar. The democratic world, meanwhile, reacted with a mixture of bewilderment, indignation, and a rather frantic scrabbling for… well, for something, anything, to do.

There were hushed meetings in Brussels, urgent phone calls between London and Paris, and even, I heard, a somewhat clandestine gathering of Scandinavian leaders in a remote fjord. It was like watching a very slow-motion car crash, except the car was the entire international order, and the driver appeared to be arguing with the steering wheel.

And me? Reginald Putterwick, the quiet observer of village life? I was glued to the news, not with my usual gentle curiosity, but with a growing sense of… dread. The world, it seemed, had become a relatively less comfortable place. My Earl Grey tasted slightly more bitter, and my digestive was less satisfying. Even the garden seemed to have lost some of its cheerful luminescence.

One afternoon, while weeding the petunias (Mrs. Higgins, naturally, was winning the neighbourhood petunia competition again), it struck me. This wasnt a comedy anymore. It started as a slightly absurd farce, a political pantomime. But now… now it felt like something else entirely. Something darker, more dangerous.

Maybe I was wrong to see it all as just… funny. Maybe mistaking Trump for Hitler, even metaphorically, wasn’t so ridiculous after all. Perhaps we had all underestimated the gravity of the situation. The democratic world might indeed have to get along without America and defend itself from America.

The thought was as heavy and unsettling as the scent of impending rain on a summer afternoon. And Reginald Putterwick, retired librarian, quiet observer of life, and connoisseur of okay Victoria plums, suddenly felt a chill that had nothing to do with the weather. The spanner in the works had landed well, and it looked like the Earl Grey, and indeed, the entire world was about to get considerably more complicated.

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