THE LAST DITCH

You cannot, as the man said, step in the same river twice. I was away from Britain for 20 years. The Britain I returned to was not the Britain I left. Even though I had visited often, kept in touch with friends and family and followed political developments assiduously while living abroad, it had changed in ways I had not grasped. Perhaps, to be fair, I had changed too.

To me, it now seems a strange, immoral place. For example, I read articles in The Guardian and The Times this week about the abolition of inherited wealth. The Economist also recently wrote about it. It did not even occur to any of these columnists that they were talking about the property of others. They did not create it. They did not inherit it. They have no just claim to it. Yet they have no moral concerns about proposing its seizure.

The vast majority of my fellow-citizens now have no ethical qualms about seizing any property that takes their fancy, as long as (with the exception of a few open criminals whose courage seems almost noble by comparison) they don't have to be violent themselves. Unlike their braver brothers, these cowardly thieves have outsourced their envy, greed and lust for violence to a state now seen as moral no matter what it does.

Political parties have dwindled, churches have lost all significance, charities have been subverted and institutions of "learning" are devoted to distortion. From all sides lobbyists demand that others work to fund their desires (and pay their wages to express them). The arts suckle at the state's teat and express little beyond a desire for "free" milk.

State might is now the only definition of what is right in Britain and democracy has nothing much to do with it. If a government were elected on a promise surgically to shorten the legs of the over tall, de-blubber the over-fat and euthanise the unduly long-lived would that justify those assaults and killings? Of course not. A mere majority vote cannot make wrongs right. This is no less true for robbery and enslavement than it is for battery or murder.

Until nationalisation at home and Communism abroad failed miserably, my fellow-Britons were – more or less – socialists. They now seem to be – more or less – fascists. They are content to leave capital with private individuals, provided that its use is directed (and its continued ownership licensed) by state power. Property rights now exist only at the whim of a state within which is all, outside which is nothing and which no-one can effectively oppose.

This is actual, not pejorative, fascism. It is clear that Britons now care far more about the elimination of "inequality" than they do about efficiency, justice or freedom. Day by day they make consistent choices to that effect. If I stay here, I must accept that my life is for others to direct in every key respect. I am free to choose only unless and until the state chooses "better" for me.

I have tried to make these points both here and face to face with people I meet in my everyday life. All I have achieved is an outward reputation for eccentricity and a powerful inward sense of alienation. As the next General Election approaches offering me no moral choices it is time, alas, to accept defeat.

Everything I might still want to say to you has been said better in this book and this one. I am wasting your time writing anything more than this heartfelt recommendation to read them.

Goodbye and good luck.

67 responses to “Goodbye and good luck”

  1. Thor Avatar
    Thor

    My conclusion is rather that economy teaches us that most (or all) people cannot be expected to have insightful opinions about large systems. Therefore we cannot expect people to have sane political opinions just like we do not expect most people to have a clue about how to operate Apple or BP profitably. This means that the problem is not that people are totalitarian fascists but rather that their opinion matters or that we consider it to have an impact on the political system.

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  2. Schrodinger's Dog Avatar
    Schrodinger’s Dog

    Tom,
    I’m really sorry you’re giving up political blogging. I’ve really enjoyed what you’ve written over the last few years and I hope you’ll accept Perry de Havilland’s offer to appear occasionally on Samizdata.
    More generally, I think you’re right: the British love statism. I see the current era as a dark age for libertarianism but stick with it anyway. I talk about it to anyone who will listen in the hope its ideas will take root one day – although I fear that day is far off.
    In the meantime, all the very best with your new ventures.
    SD

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  3. Yvonne Leach Avatar
  4. Tom Avatar

    I do take comfort from the fact that my provincial relatives are less keen on the new order than the metropolitans amongst whom I now live. I should visit them more often to stay optimistic!

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  5. Tom Avatar

    Wow. I would like that as my epitaph. “He weaponised the English language”. I am, unusually, not a Churchill fan and comparisons to the greatest Englishman of all, Shakespeare – whom I revere – raise only a wry smile. You are far far too kind, but thank you anyway.

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  6. Tom Avatar

    I intend to. Thanks!

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  7. Tom Avatar

    I may be giving up my cyber-home, but it seems I never needed it anyway. Thank you for that kind offer. If the fierce political muse returns, I shall bear it in mind.

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  8. Tom Avatar

    My “fascist” remark was perhaps ill-judged and has certainly turned off many who might otherwise have agreed with my final political sentiment. Calling names is not often persuasive, even when they are accurate.
    I was quietly referencing Mussolini’s famous definition of “All within the state. Nothing outside the state. Nothing against the state”. As far as I can tell, most British people now seem to accept that the state may intervene in any aspect of their lives (and SHOULD intervene in the lives of their irritating neighbours) so in that sense all is within the state.
    The people of what the Americans call “the Great Generation” would be astonished, I think, at the extent to which British government officials (not just ministers, civil servants and the American NSA stooges at GCHQ, but the Chief Medical Officer, social services or other local authority people) feel entitled to direct our everyday living. The word “unregulated” has come simply to mean “bad” and is said by BBC announcers or written by MSM journalists with a sneer as if anything not sanitised by state control is unfit.
    The second part was tautology anyway; Mussolini in pursuit of a Ciceronian triplet (which makes him sound like Berlusconi). “Nothing outside the state” might still be an overstatement but if new laws continue to spawn at the rate the people seem to want (at least the Metropolitan set amongst which I move – in fairness my provincial relatives are less keen) then it will a fair assessment quite soon.

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  9. Rick Lowe Avatar

    Thank you for 9 great years of political blogging from a Classical Liberal perspective Tom.
    I will miss your commentary.
    Best of luck with the travel blog, I’m sure that too will be enjoyable, just not setting the world on a proper footing :o)

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  10. Tom Avatar

    Thanks. I will journey the world as it is not as I would wish it to be. At least I can now give it a proper wheeling.

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  11. Young Mr. Brown Avatar

    I have pretty much drifted away from the political blogosphere over the last couple of years – but in the days when I did read, The Last Ditch was my favorite political blog.
    I tried my hand at political blogging for a few years, grew weary, and gave up – and so have many others.
    Sorry to see this one coming to an end as well, but I do want to thank you for the encouragement that this blog gave me.
    Tom, your final post is, I think, an excellent one to go out on. The big issue is morality. And, while our political culture was immoral in my youth in the 1960s and 70s, it seems to me to be even more immoral today.
    The battle is a lonely one – which is why I still find inspiration in the words of Tom Woods: “In a world of cowards, stick to your principles. In a sea of lies, tell the truth. Into the darkness, shine a light.”

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  12. Stephen Fox Avatar

    Tom
    Thanks for all your work, I often read you, though have not commented. I am in full sympathy with your view of things, and though I no longer expect to convince people, I do continue to say what I think. I think there is some importance in holding to values, so let’s do that. But you must only do what seems worthwhile, and therefore gives you pleasure. I do assure you though, that you have not wasted my time.
    Best wishes
    Stephen

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  13. Mark Avatar
    Mark

    Wel yes…
    I’m rather dissapointed that I couldn’t get you to argue honestly – that would require you to actually think about what you are saying. I dare say you have too much invested in your opinions to question them now… so yes… you were just (eloquently) shouting about your prejudices. Probably not healthy.
    By the way the above comment is a serious/sarcastic suggestion. Try thinking rather than shouting and if you have some thoughts worth expressing, share them.

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  14. Tom Avatar

    Thank you. I appreciate that assurance!

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  15. Tom Avatar

    You are using some different definition of honest, I think. Also, given your hackneyed ideas, a very different definition of “thinking”. Bitching about your underachievement and shouting demands for others to support you in idleness does not constitute an argument, Mark. It has been more like a sustained tantrum, which I have encouraged mainly to allow you to support my arguments by displaying every negative trait of the modern Welfare Statist.
    You hate your job, we get it. I have employed many people in my time, most of whom are still supporting their families from businesses I helped create. I would never, ever employ anyone with the attitude you have displayed here. If our dialogue had been a job interview, I would assess you as a sneering, sarcastic underminer of every initiative, a dodger of every work burden and the person most likely to piss off a customer. If I am in any way typical of employers, that might explain your situation quite adequately without any need for theories about the evils of capitalism.. I suspect that under communism you would not merely be sidelined but shot, so perhaps you ought to be happy with the status quo. 🙂
    The world does not need to be remade to elevate the likes of you, Mark. You need to remake yourself to suit the world. Retrain. Get a job you enjoy. Earn a sense of satisfaction with your life and stop whinging like a spoiled brat.

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  16. Tom Avatar

    You show no sign of flagging with yours at any rate. It has survived the cull in my RSS feed and I look forward to enjoying your trenchant views for many years to come. Thank you.

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  17. Mark Avatar
    Mark

    Uh… ok then.
    As long as you are aware that neither the above or anything much else you’ve produced has any relation to a reasoned argument, I suppose that’s fine.
    Watch out for those bandits, man.

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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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