Monday, June 15, 2009
The famous English legal charter known as the Magna Carta, issued in the year 1215 and written in Latin, limited kingly power in England and had major long-term political consequences when combined with later events. King John (1166-1216) had signed the Magna Carta unwillingly, and the heavy spending and foreign advisers of his son and successor Henry III (1207-1272) upset the nobles, who once again acted as a class under the leadership of the nobleman Simon de Montfort (1208-1265), Earl of Leicester. In 1258 they took over the government and elected a council of nobles which was called parliament or parlement, a French word meaning a “discussion meeting.”
This “parliament” took control of the treasury and forced Henry to get rid of his foreign advisers. Henry died in 1272 and his son Edward I (1239-1307) took the throne. He brought together the first real parliament. Simon de Montfort’s council included only nobles and had been able to make statues, written laws, and make political decisions, but the lords were less able to provide the king with money. Several kings had made arrangements for taxation before but, as David McDowall writes in An Illustrated History of Britain:
“Edward I was the first to create a ‘representative institution’ which could provide the money he needed. This institution became the House of Commons. Unlike the House of Lords it contained a mixture of ‘gentry’ (knights and other wealthy freemen from the shires) and merchants from the towns. These were the two broad classes of people who produced and controlled England’s wealth. In 1275 Edward I commanded each shire and each town (or borough) to send two representatives to his parliament.
These ‘commoners’ would have stayed away if they could, to avoid giving Edward money. But few dared risk Edward’s anger. They became unwilling representatives of their local community. This, rather than Magna Carta, was the beginning of the idea that there should be ‘no taxation without representation’, later claimed by the American colonists of the eighteenth century. In other parts of Europe, similar ‘parliaments’ kept all the gentry separate from the commoners. England was special because the House of Commons contained a mixture of gentry belonging to the feudal ruling class and merchants and freemen who did not. The co-operation of these groups, through the House of Commons, became important to Britain’s later political and social development.”
Merchants and country gentlemen were anxious to influence the king’s policies, as they wanted to protect their interests. When France threatened the important wool trade with Flanders they supported Edward III (1312-1377) in his war. During Edward III’s reign Parliament became organized in two parts: the Lords and the Commons, which represented the middle class; the really poor had no voice of their own in Parliament until the middle of the nineteenth century. Many European countries had similar kinds of parliaments in medieval times, but in most cases these institutions disappeared when feudalism died out. In England, however, the death of feudalism helped strengthen the House of Commons in Parliament.
Like the Civil War of 1642, the Glorious Revolution, as the political results of the events of 1688 were called, was completely unplanned. It was more a coup d’etat by the ruling elites than a revolution as such, but the fact that Parliament made William king, not by inheritance but by their choice, was indeed revolutionary. Parliament was clearly more powerful than the king and would remain so in the future. Its power over the monarch was written into the Bill of Rights in 1689. The king was from now on unable to raise taxes or keep an army without the agreement of Parliament, or to act against any MP for what he said in Parliament.
England was by the seventeenth century emerging as a great power whose influence increasingly stretched far beyond Europe. It was also one of the most intellectually creative regions in the world. After Isaac Newton had published his Principia in 1687, probably the single most influential text in the history of science, the English philosopher John Locke (1632-1704), a friend of Newton, in 1690 published his An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, proclaiming the doctrine eventually known as the tabula rasa, where humans come into the world as blank slates. This was perfect for a world in which reason ruled and everything was possible. Human nature itself could be improved by applying reason, and history could take the direction of eternal progress. Locke published his Second Treatise of Government, stating that government is the servant of men, not the other way around, and that men possess natural rights, expanding on Thomas Hobbes’ concept of the social contract.
In the early 1700s, England’s combination of economic prosperity, social stability and civil liberties had no equivalent anywhere in Continental Europe, at least not among the larger states; smaller states such as Switzerland is a different matter. The French philosopher Voltaire (1694-1778) lived in England for several years in the 1720s and knew the English language well. He preferred British constitutional monarchy to French absolute monarchy. Voltaire praised England’s virtues in Letters on the English from 1734 when he returned to Paris. This caused great excitement among French intellectuals for the ideas of Newton and Locke and the plays of Shakespeare, but their own philosophies went in a different direction.
That an important European city such as Paris was the home of a major intellectual movement is not too strange. It is more surprising that the smaller city of Edinburgh was so as well during the second half of the eighteenth century. What came to be known as the Scottish Enlightenment, whose effects were felt far beyond Scotland or Britain, produced a series of prominent intellectuals and scholars, including the pioneering modern geologist James Hutton (1726-1797), the philosopher David Hume (1711-1776), the brilliant, but famously eccentric economist Adam Smith (1723-1790) and the historian Adam Ferguson (1723-1816).
Adam Smith from the University of Glasgow in 1776 – at the dawn of the Industrial Revolution, although he did not realize this at the time – published his Wealth of Nations, widely considered the first modern work of economics. Smith stressed meritocracy and introduced the principle of competitive advantage and the metaphor of the Invisible Hand. Above all he championed the idea that trade is not a zero-sum game but a win-win situation; he challenged the ancient assumption that wealth is a pie of fixed size over which everybody has to fight to get their share by showing that the size of the pie itself can grow through trade.
Scotland at this time had a good education system and very high literacy rates, as did the emerging Scandinavian nations. The American polymath Benjamin Franklin, who visited Edinburgh in 1759, remembered his stay as “the densest happiness” he had ever experienced. By 1762 Voltaire was writing, with a touch of malice, that “today it is from Scotland that we get rules of taste in all the arts, from epic poetry to gardening.” In England and the Netherlands, where political power was already in the hands of the merchant middle class, intellectual activity was directed toward analyzing the practical significance of this change.
In contrast, according to scholar Bruce G. Trigger, “The continuing political weakness of the French middle class in the face of Bourbon autocracy stimulated French intellectuals to use the idea of progress to reify change as a basis for challenging the legitimacy of an absolute monarch, who claimed to rule by divine will and protected the feudal economic privileges enjoyed by a politically moribund nobility. By proclaiming change to be both desirable and inevitable, Enlightenment philosophers called into question the legitimacy of the existing political and religious order. Beginning as an intellectual expression of discontent, the French Enlightenment gradually developed into a movement with revolutionary potential….The Scottish interest in Enlightenment philosophy reflected the close cultural ties between Scotland and France but also was stimulated by the unprecedented power and prosperity acquired to the Scottish urban middle class as a result of Scotland’s union with England in 1707. Southern Scotland was experiencing rapid development but the highland areas to the north remained politically, economically, and culturally underdeveloped. This contrast aroused the interest of Scottish intellectuals in questions relating to the origin, development, and modernization of institutions.”
Scottish intellectuals made very important contributions to science and to our understanding of the modern world, but it was the more revolutionary version of Enlightenment philosophy which developed in France that would become popular among the middle classes seeking more political power for themselves in Europe and in North America.
The sad part when writing this is that while Britain was once admired for its political system and was rightfully hailed as a beacon of liberty, today Britain is one of the most politically repressive countries in the Western world, which is saying a lot given how bad Politically Correct censorship is in the entire Western world these days. Britain today is a Multicultural police state where sharia, Islamic law, is quite literally treated as the law of the land. I suppose there is a strange sort of symmetry in this: Britain was one of the first countries in the West to embrace political liberty and is now among the first to leave political liberty behind.
http://democracyreform.blogspot.com/2009/06/britain-from-parliament-to-police-state.html
Pretty massive piece here. I see a Greek piece below it and will come back later. This will take some digesting.
The ongoing unrest in Greece goes unreported in Britain, when one considers that earlier this year when the riots occured over the death of a young man, the BBC had journalist there attending a conference, yet the riots were left off the news.
The same happened when riots erupted in Brussels a while back, without receiving a reply, i sent a report to the BBC asking why were they not reporting this story.
Censorship has now become part of of our daily lives.
What’s the excuse the BBC make for their £3 billion plus costs, they have correspondants all over the world? Perhaps they don’t see Europe as part of the world anymore.
Haters of all things English/British.
Satanic Fabian Warmongers
Mike Robinson
Mar 24th 2009
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Tony Blair’s conversion to Catholicism is laughable. He and his witch of a wife profess to be Christians, supposedly qualified to comment on the religions future, and yet, have been known to enjoy howling at the moon from time to time.
As is well recognised, Blair is a genocidal war monger. So while much of his work may sit under the general public’s radar these days, it will come as no surprise that he is up to no good in the Middle East.
Having incited Israel’s recent insane attack on Gaza, he is now point man in the continuing drive to get Israel to attack Iran. Yes, that’s right, now that Cheney is gone, and the (at least financially) floundering Obama administration refuses to tow the Armageddonist foreign policy line, it is down to Blair to bring on the Third World War.
Blair typifies what is seriously ill with our nation. He is a real, hard core fascist, brought up on a diet of Fabianism. We have no chance of ever having a rational relationship with our government, nor an honest relationship with ourselves, until we crush this Fabian element within our country.
As an example of Fabian inspired policy and commentary, have a read at the Economist Intelligence Unit’s report, Manning The Barricades (pdf). There you will read the blatant promotion of the Policy that Blair is putting into practice. The Policy is of a world of total chaos and full scale war as a result of financial and economic collapse.
As Blair encourages the Israeli leadership to ever greater levels of self destructive insanity, other Fabian elements are behind most of the so-called activist movements which are inciting the “Summer of Rage” mentality in the general population, Europe wide.
Just look at the list of anti-G20 movements, and you will see mostly a list of subverted nutters; mostly also pushers of the Global Warming fraud, working as hard as they can to get people out on the streets to be cannon fodder for the riot police, and if the rumours are true, soon for the army as well.
Consider ATTAC – the French activist organisation. ATTAC was once seen by ordinary people in France as the great anti-establishment organisation to be involved with, originally existing as an anti-financial speculation group. It is now the perfect example of how BRITISH elements have been subverting such organisations Europe wide.
Fabians – wolves in sheeps clothing Two years ago, you see, Fabian Susan George, of George Soros’ Open Society Institutes’s Transnational Institute, staged a coup d-etat against the ATTAC leadership. ATTAC is now a wholly owned organ of the British Fabian agenda, and now exists in 40 countries or so, with a somewhat broader agenda. This weekend, ATTAC is planning big demos in Berlin and Frankfurt. Expect trouble.
You see how this works? At the top, George Soros. Then his Open Society Institute. Then the Transnational Institute. Then ATTAC. So, to the casual observer, the link from Soros to ATTAC is not clear. And controlling all, the British Fabian Society, or members thereof.
The values pushed on us through the Fabian Society’s prime movers – Blair, Brown and the rest, are taking the real humans of this world to hell on many fronts. Blair’s push for global war, Brown’s push for global financial dictatorship and the various Soros backed NGOs working as hard as they can to destroy the very concept of the sovereign nation state.
Blair’s conversion to Catholicism reflects the Fabian Society – a wolf in sheep’s clothing. Let’s get the fleece pulled off him, and that organisation. Lets expose the wolves among us for all to see.
This post is tagged fabian society
http://www.ukcolumn.org/2009/03/24/satanic-fabian-warmongers/
A factor in the rise of juries was the papacy’s refusal to further support trial by ordeal. Eitehr way, it’s a principle they’re trying to nibble away at.
Indeed James, without any fanfare yesterday the 18th of June saw the first trial in this country with no jury present, just a judge!
Whatever the excuse used, this will eventually become the norm.
A very frightening prospect.