Showing posts with label devolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label devolution. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

The Destruction of British Identity

Britain of today is not the country that it was for the millenium after William the Bastard first set foot on English soil in 1064. The pernicious effects of socialism and its related ills, all combined with open borders immigration and other benefits of EU membership have torn the fabric of British society, and there is no respite on the horizon.

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I blogged here on how a half century plus experiment in secular socialism combined with open borders immigration driven by EU law had stripped Britain of any feeling of nationalism or patriotism and set the stage for the Labour governments passage of the Lisbon Treaty without any referendum. Then the other day, author Melanie Phillips raised many of the same issues, examining them in depth. Today it is the turn of the editors of the Daily Mail:

This Government has done more than any other in our island history to undermine our sense of national identity.

It has thrown open our borders to unprecedented numbers of immigrants, many of whom feel no strong allegiance to our country, its traditions or laws.

It has promoted a policy of multiculturalism, only recently abandoned, which rejected the idea that minority ethnic groups should be encouraged to integrate with the majority.

Meanwhile, it has dismantled the UK through devolution and surrendered the sovereignty of our parliament to the EU and European human rights judges.

Only now, far too late, are ministers waking up to the damage they have done by this sustained and deliberate assault on the concept of Britishness.

The best that can be said for Lord Goldsmith's review of the meaning of citizenship is that it's a belated official acknowledgment that multiculturalism has been a disaster.

Many feel no sense of belonging - to the point where uniformed servicemen are abused on our streets and young men born and brought up here turn to terrorism to overthrow our way of life.

But how on Earth are the former Attorney General's proposals supposed to put this right?

There may be one or two sound ideas buried in his report. It must surely make sense, for example, to lift the ban on paid work for asylum seekers (so much sense, indeed, that the hopeless Home Office has already ruled out any change).

But voluntary citizenship ceremonies for cynical teenagers? A British national day - on a date carefully chosen to have "no historical significance"? Oaths of allegiance (to whom or what, Lord Goldsmith seems unsure)?

Does he really think such unBritish gimmicks will make a hap'orth of difference?

As for his plan to offer council tax and student loan discounts to voluntary workers, imagine what a vast army of bureaucrats would have to police it.

No. If the Government is serious about restoring our national identity, it must tackle the problem at its roots. That means repatriating power to Westminster - and, above all, closing the floodgates to mass immigration until those already here are fully integrated.

That'll be the day. . . .

Read the entire article.


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Monday, January 28, 2008

Cognitive Dissonance In The UK

There is a real bit of cognotive dissonance occuring in the UK today. By that, I mean people are acting way out of character. Before addressing the specifics, understand that one of the most fundamental differences between the political right and left is the difference in how each views centralization of power and the degree to which each believes the government should intrude into the lives of the governed. I could wax uneloquent on this, or I could just quote from the far more eloquent and incisive Thomas Sowell:

[W]hat the political left, even in democratic countries, share is the notion that knowledgeable and virtuous people like themselves have both a right and a duty to use the power of government to impose their superior knowledge and virtue on others.

They may not impose their presumptions wholesale, like the totalitarians, but retail in innumerable restrictions, ranging from economic and nanny state regulations to "hate speech" laws.

If no one has even one percent of all the knowledge in a society, then it is crucial that the other 99 percent of knowledge - scattered in tiny and individually unimpressive amounts among the population at large - be allowed the freedom to be used in working out mutual accommodations among the people themselves.
These innumerable mutual interactions are what bring the other 99 percent of knowledge into play - and generate new knowledge.

That is why free markets, judicial restraint, and reliance on decisions and traditions growing out of the experiences of the many - rather than the groupthink of the elite few - are so important.

Elites are all too prone to over-estimate the importance of the fact that they average more knowledge per person than the rest of the population - and under-estimate the fact that their total knowledge is so much less than that of the rest of the population.

Central planning, judicial activism, and the nanny state all presume vastly more knowledge than any elite have ever possessed.

The ignorance of people with Ph.D.s is still ignorance, the prejudices of educated elites are still prejudices, and for those with one percent of a society's knowledge to be dictating to those with the other 99 percent is still an absurdity.

Read the entire article here.

In one way, the Tory party in Britain are acting true to the form. They are running on the platform of devolving power to local governments in Britain - something the UK desperately needs. As it stands now, the British do not even elect their own local police chiefs. The degree of central government control over decision making in Britain is really quite amazing. And when it comes to the nanny state, that term is defined by modern Britain. That the Tories, who claim the mantle of conservative, should embrace devolving real power to localities makes perfect sense. But then there is the EU.

The dissonance on the conservative side comes from the inexplicable Tory support for the EU - a form of highly centralized, highly regulatory, anti-democratic government which is the penultimate leftist construct - and which will turn Britain into a mere province. Even after reading Peter Hitchens's take on Tory support for the EU, I still find it difficult to fathom. And on a related note, there is equally as much dissonance in the Tory refusal to unequivocably say that they will allow the people of Britain a referendum on the fundamental issue of whether the British government can unilaterally transfer sovereignty of the British nation to the EU. Both of these scenarios as pertain to the EU are impossibly dissonant with the concept of conservatism.

That said, there appear to be equally dissonant rumblings on the left. Earlier this month, an MP Frank Field, wrote what looked like a conservative manifesto, arguing that the left should decentralize control to a large extent. I was amazed to find that he was a member of the Labour party. He was clearly trying to neuter the appeal of the Tories, who are now ahead in the polls. But to even raise the issue is unthinkable to many on the left who ususally see the answer to all problems, including those caused by government regulation, to be more government regulation.

That said, I was amazed to find a similar appeal to Labour to consider decentralizing power on the opinion pages of The Guardian. The Guardian is a UK newspaper where you can find some of the best straight reporting of any newspaper, bar none. That is why I read it daily. The opinion pages are another matter entirely. Guardian opinions are so far left that, by comparison, the NYT editorial board look like neocons. For example, I read an opinion piece on the Guardian not too long ago bemoaning the fall of communism in the Soviet Union. Yet, there today on the editorial page is reliable leftie Martin Kettle arguing that "new Tory ideas about devolving power deserve a hearing:"

[T]he two main parties are now travelling in very different directions. Labour, according to Cameron, wants to use the digital revolution to modernise the bureaucratic state - through ID cards and the computerisation of the welfare state. The Tories, says their leader, have a radically different approach. They want to use the information revolution to liberate citizens and take them into what Oliver Letwin rather grandly calls "the post-bureaucratic age".

So is the devolution of the state, at last, the elusive great divide across which the two parties will battle for the nation's votes in 2009 or whenever the next election comes?

Cameron's speech came at the end of a seminar that was rich in interest and ideas about the evolving modern Tory attitude to the state's role. . .

Cameron and his shadow ministers today repeatedly talked about the centrality of fairness to any devolved settlement. It would be blindly partisan to pretend that there is no serious new thinking going in Tory ranks or to rubbish what Cameron and his team are saying as either irrelevant or deceitful - though I'm sure that won't stop many from doing just that.

The stubborn question that won't go away is that centralised state systems do not work as well as socialists used to think - or as some social democrats continue to hope. Devolution of power in the centralised British state has become a live issue in our politics because it appears to be the answer, or at least part of the answer, to some real failures of delivery and public satisfaction in the centralised system. It won't do to dismiss the Tory contribution to this debate - or the New Labour contribution to it either - as if it is simply some further abject moral failing by discredited political fainthearts. If only things were that simple.

All the political parties are struggling to present themselves as the party of devolution, choice and localism. They do so because our state system does not work well for the citizen. All the parties, though, have problems about doing what to replace it with - not just the Tories. The LibDems talk about devolution and believe in it - but they won't be the next government. Labour may well be the next government - but there's a gulf between what Labour says on devolution and what it believes. Moreover, Labour's record is hardly ringing proof that the man in Whitehall knows best. The Tories, though, both talk about devolution and believe in it . . . They are entitled to be taken seriously on the subject now - and entitled not to be dismissed a priori as either naive or deceitful. . . .

Read the entire article. This is left wing heresy of the highest order. This from a leftie appearing in the Guardian is cognitive dissonance so loud as to be deafening. Between that and what the Tories are doing on the EU . . . I'm just not sure which way is up any more . . .


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