Edmund Burke

Posts in The Copybook credited to ‘Edmund Burke’

7
The Cradle of Our Race Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke warned that the French Revolution could have a devastating effect on British and European culture.

Edmund Burke (1729-1797) regarded the fates of England and France as closely intertwined, and consequently the catastrophic events of the French Revolution in 1789 made him afraid for England. If France falls into tyranny and moral decline, he warned, it will be that much harder for England to resist going the same way.

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8
Portrait of a Lady Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke takes time off from campaigning for liberty to reflect on the delights of captivity.

Edmund Burke remains one of the most significant statesmen in British history, who spoke up for the American colonists and the people of India as well as the English working man. Around the time of his marriage to Jane Mary Nugent in 1757, Burke also shared with us some thoughts on his ‘Idea of a Woman’.

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9
A Pledge to the People Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke pleaded with Parliament to emerge from behind closed doors and reconnect with the British public.

In 1780, Parliament stood accused of being out of touch. While MPs entertained generous lobbyists and rubber-stamped ever higher taxes, the country was governed by grossly overstaffed committees behind closed doors. Edmund Burke pleaded for a more direct, self-denying government, and urged the Commons to reconnect with the public.

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10
Man Was Not Made for the Government Edmund Burke

Good government is not about enforcing uniform order, but about maximising liberty among a particular people.

Edmund Burke, MP for Bristol, would have had little truck with European ‘harmonisation’. He argued that the job of any government is to judge sensitively, for a particular people, the smallest degree of restraint needed to keep their freedom fresh — in that country, and at that time — and then stop.

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11
The Bond of Liberty Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke told fellow MPs that the only way to unite the peoples of the Empire was for London to set them an enviable example.

Edmund Burke reminded the House of Commons that her enviable international influence did not depend on government bureacracy or complex trade deals or military might. It arose from Britain’s ‘unique selling point’, a love of liberty her colonies could find nowhere else.

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12
There is No Liberty without Self-Control Edmund Burke

Anti-Christian governments don’t make us free, they just impose their own, illiberal morality.

Edmund Burke MP explained to the new secularist French Revolutionaries that if you reject Christian self-control, the government will impose its own morality, and then you won’t be free anymore.

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