Reports have slithered in from the bowels of corporate Brussels that the Great Semiconductor Swindle, a cartel so secretive it makes the Freemasons look like a village fete committee, is finally facing the music. Antitrust investigators, armed with magnifying glasses and a vague sense of purpose, are poking at the silicon behemoths with the enthusiasm of a man trying to dislodge a piece of gristle from a particularly tough steak.
Let us, for a moment, ponder the sheer audacity of these chip barons. They control the very brains of our digital existence, the tiny slivers of sand that run our toasters, our phones, and our nuclear submarines. And what do they do with this power? They form a cartel. They sit in darkened rooms, sipping overpriced mineral water, and decide that the rest of us shall pay through the nose for the privilege of scrolling through cat videos.
The investigation, spearheaded by some earnest fellow in a polyester tie, alleges that these companies colluded to fix prices, rig bids, and generally behave like a bunch of city traders on bonus day. The evidence, we are told, includes emails, phone records, and a suspicious number of golfing weekends in the Algarve. I for one am shocked. Shocked to discover that wealthy executives might engage in a bit of light skulduggery to boost their quarterly returns.
But let us not get too bogged down in the details. The real story here is the sheer theatre of it all. Watch as the lawyers descend, each one billing enough to feed a small African nation. Watch as the CEOs, with faces like slapped bottoms, deny everything while their PR teams frantically scrub the internet for incriminating photos of them lording it over yachts. It is a pantomime, a glorious, expensive pantomime, and we are all paying for the tickets.
What will come of it? A fine, probably. A slap on the wrist. A sternly worded letter. And then, like the tide, the cartel will recede, only to regroup under a different name, in a different tax haven, continuing its quiet war on the consumer. But for now, let us enjoy the show. Let us raise a glass of gin, preferably one purchased before the price-fixing kicked in, and toast the sheer, magnificent absurdity of it all.
The chips are down, the dice are rolling, and the only thing we can be sure of is that the real winners will be the lawyers. As always.






