THE LAST DITCH

Ambush Predator: London Olympics; Outdoing Beijing In Every Sense Of The Word….

Arguably Britain's greatest contribution to human civilisation is the "Great Writ" of habeas corpus. In our time, it has been shamefully abrogated. Yet only a few "cranks," "swivel-eyed loons" and "libertarians" care. The free press doesn't give a damn, because its readers care even less. Even a highly-intelligent, legally-qualified university chum I lunched with this week was unaware that there are men in this country held without charge; denied not only the right to a trial, but the right to know why they are detained.

JuliaM's linked article highlights once again just how ignorant our people are of the most basic concepts of liberty. That security guards should take it on themselves to interfere with people photographing Olympic sites from public ground is depressing but unsurprising. That their management and the police should back them is infuriating. Yet are those idiots actually to blame? There was a time when guards, management and policemen would have been disgusted to hear themselves utter such twaddle. There was a time when Englishmen and women on the receiving end of such 'Little Hitler' tactics would have named them as such in robust Anglo-Saxon terms. That time has gone. The English are a dwindled, pale, sickly version of our historic selves. We inhabit the ruins of the people we once were.

I was discussing this over dinner this week with Suboptimal Planet. I found myself advancing this depressing notion in explaining why I don't blog so frequently these days. I used to write enthusiastically in the hope of turning opinion against the politicians attacking civil liberties. I thought they were the problem and could be influenced. My enthusiasm is gone because I no longer blame them. I came back to England to find the country I knew had died. An ignorant, infantilised electorate expects government to act whenever it feels threatened. In the wake of 9/11 and 7/7 the most dangerous mob cry of all went up; "do something!" For the politicans not to change the law would have been seen -stupidly – as siding with the terrorists. Politicians competently using the massive resources they already had to bring terrorists to justice would have been seen as inaction.

If a people can't clearly articulate what they want, politicians should probably ignore them. But for the greater part of the British electorate, thinking about what should be done is simply not their job. They cry like babies for the state to act and expect politicians to respond in some soothing way. The politicians who are to blame are those who created the Welfare State and raised this expectation of protection from cradle to grave. They are, sadly, beyond useful reproach. The current bunch are as helpless as they are hopeless. Perhaps a leader of Thatcher's charisma could turn the tide. But in all our centuries of history we have been blessed with only one of that calibre. We would be very lucky to get another in our lifetime.

In economics there is a doctrine of "moral jeopardy", whereby actors (such as banks) take too much risk precisely because they confidently anticipate being bailed out when things go wrong. Perhaps there is also a political moral jeopardy in the electorate's crazed but confident expectation that, whatever threats materialise, the state will avert them? Perhaps the growth of the welfare state in our country and elsewhere has made electorates themselves the problem?

If the people of a democracy are the issue, however, there can surely be little hope. There may be nothing for the wise to do but quietly stockpile resources useful in times of anarchy and wait for civilisation to collapse under the weight of insane expectation. That's not a cheerful prospect and I would love to hear a better. Tell me, please, how we get from from here to a new birth of freedom.

16 responses to “It’s our own fault, damn it.”

  1. MickC Avatar
    MickC

    You are wrong! We already have embarked on the road to a new freedom quite simply because you are talking about it, and others are talking about it-and they cannot stop us from doing so. The internet is the greatest promoter of freedom ever.
    We also do it by explaining every time some idiot says that burqas should be banned, that the state should have no say in what the citizen wears, every time they say that someone should be locked up that yes provided a crime is proved by the state they should be locked up-but not until, that someones sexuality is wrong, that it is nothing to do with anyone but that person, that the state will never provide security but only restrictions.
    Not everyone has been infantilised-the tide can be turned.

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  2. Andrew Duffin Avatar
    Andrew Duffin

    Tom, I sometimes feel glum and depressed for the very reasons you mention.
    All I can say to encourage you is that well-known bit of dog-latin: “Non illegitemati carborundum” which I’m sure needs no translation.
    For evil to triumph, it is necessary only for good men to do nothing: you are a good man, I hope I am too, we must never give up.

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  3. barnacle bill Avatar

    A very depressing but too true analysis of the situation.
    Whilst we have always had politicians and political parties who were corrupt and corrupting. I think nuLabor did it on such a wholescale, almost production line effort, that the very moral fibre of the nation has been weakened to such apathy.
    All we can be now is beacons in the darkness for those who seek the truth.

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  4. Devil's Kitchen Avatar

    LD,
    I told you. I was excoriated for the worst kind of cynic when I attacked the people of this country as bastards, idiots and scum who cared nothing for freedom.
    I tried to communicate their impotence and was told that it wasn’t true. I shared—share—your reason for blogging so little: only it came to me so much earlier.
    I am still optimistic—though I know not on what my faith is founded…
    DK

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  5. Tom Paine Avatar

    Forgive me for being slow on the uptake. I wasn’t living here for 20 years. It was only when I returned that I realised how out of step I was with most people here.

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  6. Tom Paine Avatar

    I hope you are right, but they are already turning their fire on the Internet. Given the quality of an electorate that hears the word ‘regulation’ and responds with thoughtless approval, who will stop them? I may live to regret having so thoroughly documented my anti-state views.

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  7. Tom Paine Avatar

    I am willing to do something. I don’t know what it should be. I am doing nothing by default.

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  8. Tom Paine Avatar

    Like my grandfather who forgave Labour for nationalising his business but resented the Conservatives for not sharing the proceeds when they privatised it, I am more angry with the Conservative traitors currently in power. Labour is openly statist. It campaigns openly on the basis that more government and less freedom is always the answer. The Conservatives claim to be different, but they lie.

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  9. MickC Avatar
    MickC

    Err-you don’t have to be in step with most people to make a difference. Your namesake wasn’t.
    Yes, most people do want nanny to look after them and make the nasty things go away-but many are waking up to the fact that nanny can’t-and more to the point is actually one of the nasty things herself. The elderly have most certainly woken up-pay into a system all your life but when you are due to get something back……
    Sorry, but we are actually winning-the realisation that our rulers are useless is growing. Once that becomes the majority, there will be change.

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  10. Peter Whale Avatar
    Peter Whale

    Tom you have had a hard couple of years and yet under all of that I still see in your writings steel and fortitude. You are still preparing for the future and what actions you can take, even if they are contingencies that you do not want. I think for know particular reason other than change always happens, that this shower in charge will fall and then change for the better will come. Maybe this will be caused by the demise of the EU and the loss of status by the western powers. Adversity is the mother of invention, so they say, maybe that’s what is needed.

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  11. Cascadian Avatar
    Cascadian

    I fear most of the population (including myself) have little comprehension of the law of the land, we were raised to show deference to the constabulary, that being part of the grand bargain that laws would not be discriminatory or onerous and we would therfore submit to them on the assumption that the justice system worked in the favour of the honest citizen. That bond has been broken, citizens daily feel put-upon by micro-managing, discriminatory law and poorly-trained and equipped law enforcers.
    I would hazard to guess that less than one-in-a-million is aware of their absolute rights in public places and are confident enough to assert the rights. There is nobody in the entire population who can even be vaguely aware of the entirety of current law, and local and administrative regulations, in this regard the law is long overdue a severe culling to return ancient rights back to the citizens.
    To expect that people should need to study the law to go about their daily business is farcical. I stated in an earlier posting that the war on terror had been lost by the general populace-we now submit to ever-more intrusive restrictions on our right to move freely.
    Sitting around talking or blogging will not change this situation, but people taking away the idea that you can ignore the bureaucrats petty tyrannies and if caught can overwhelm their courts with a multitude of petty offences would ensure that these idiotic restrictions would be relinquished. Further citizens should actively stop participating in the government economy, they should seek barter work and trade, starve the treasury. This is all about going Galt.
    One has only to look around Europe to recognize that the glorious democracy experiment has failed, Greece and Italy governments overthrown, Spain’s new government almost instantly disliked, Hollands government failing, Belgium without a government for many months, France about to embark on a socialist self-annihilation, GB coalition will fail in six months when its bond rating is reduced. Germany hanging by a thread. Across the ocean The US is headed for a long, hot summer of resentment and potential for race riots, dangerous days. Last summers riots were the warm-up, lessons were learned by the under-classes, when security and police forces are stretched to breaking point during the Olympics will they test the system? If you think the government has any answers you are mistaken, prepare for the worst, hope for the best.

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  12. Harbinger Avatar
    Harbinger

    Sadly liberty within the UK died the minute somebody decided to be governed by a group of upper class elites, whom purely by childbirth they felt they were far superior to the masses and should therefore control them.
    Sadly liberty continued to die when those same elites decided they needed protection from the masses and thus created policy enforcers to handcuff, kidnap and detain whomever applied to the rules their masters laid down.
    The UK is dead. The younger generations are globalists and fervently anti nationalist and therefore haters of the very own cultures and traditions they came from. They are ‘contaminated’ so to say.
    If I was a powerful man and wanted a way to get a shop to pay me protection money, I’d send some goons around to smash up his business. I’d then send some smartly dressed goons back later to tell the individual we can protect him for a price.
    The powerful man is the powers that be. The smashing up of the business and the goons are 9/11, 7/7 and the ‘terrorists’. The protection price is the removal of our liberties and freedoms.
    This is the reality Tom. We are all merely sitting in the audience watching a play. Of course the play has already been written but the majority are perplexed, believing it to all be happenchance.
    You cannot have a one world government, run by unelected bureaucrats if there is no terrorism and international warfare to bring them into power. You cannot control people unless you brainwash them into not taking personal responsibility for their actions and making them believe state nannying is the only option for their safety.
    The people are and always will be the problem. They’ve built, helped maintain, work for and help maintain the very system that is detrimental to their very existance. It is understandable why the elites are such misanthropes, because the public are pathetic when it comes to basic freedoms.

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  13. David Davis Avatar

    Old fellow, email me on ddaviseducation@aol.com … (It’s OK, it’s not secret: as the GeheimStatz-Polizei said that I should say…I have nothing to hide, so I have nothing to fear…!)
    AS to what we do, I just don’t know. Build a library, put in it the most precious things for later people to know, and hide it somewhere. It may have to remain hidden for some centuries, so protect it well.

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  14. Elizabeth Avatar

    Very interesting idea and really got me thinking. If the UK/West was going to fall in say, five years time, what book would any one put in this library?. Something to show how things used to be when fairly good. Or something to show why you believe it all went wrong.

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  15. Mogsy Avatar
    Mogsy

    Cascadian makes lots of sense.
    Harbinger, Did you study history? If you did why are you writing that random stuff?
    James, You do make a difference by blogging, but you are not the only one who worries the average citizen is blind to the chains, other bloggers I talk to feel the same, some hardly post at all now.
    I do think the internet is a force for liberty, tho I guess it can be bad also. It is a tool and the hand that wealds it turns it to good, or bad, ends. Many states seem really keen to regulate it and spy on it from China to the UK
    Don’t give up on it. We would have nothing intelligent to read here.

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  16. james higham Avatar

    The free press doesn’t give a damn, because its readers care even less.
    What free press would that be, Tom?

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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