Liberty and Prosperity

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Liberty and Prosperity’

163
Fit and Proper Persons Adam Smith

No one is more dangerous than the man who thinks that it is his destiny to direct things for the common good.

The revolutionary Scottish philosopher Adam Smith did not like to hear politicians speaking of managing the national economy ‘for the common good’. Leaving ordinary people to manage their own affairs was, he said, far more beneficial to society at large, and much less of a temptation to susceptible politicians.

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164
David Livingstone Clay Lane

The Scottish missionary and medic believed that slavery could better be eradicated by trade than by force.

By the 1840s Britain had so repented of her involvement in slavery that she was the leading force in worldwide abolition. One of the most beloved anti-slavery campaigners was Scottish missionary, Dr David Livingstone.

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165
Leslie Howard Clay Lane

Howard gave his life to saving the ‘great gifts and strange inconsistencies’ of Britain’s unique democracy.

Leslie Howard Steiner (1893-1943) was born in London, to an English mother and a Jewish father who had emigrated from Hungary. Howard became the quintessential British matinee-idol, languid, slightly detached, but with a sense of something more beneath: a curious case of art imitating life.

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166
Britain’s Destiny Leslie Howard

In a Christmas broadcast in 1940, actor Leslie Howard explained why British sovereignty was worth fighting for.

In a radio broadcast just before Christmas in 1940, British actor Leslie Howard spoke movingly of the remarkable and indeed unique character of his country, built on individual liberty and democratic government, and contrasted it with the ‘new European order’.

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167
The Small Compass Jeremy Bentham

The role of government in a nation’s prosperity is important but limited.

Bentham argues that while laws are necessary to protect security and liberty, government action should stop there: politicians can never do as much for us as we can do for ourselves.

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168
Kipling and ‘Agamemnon’ Clay Lane

Both Rudyard Kipling and the Royal Navy saw Greek sovereignty as a universal symbol of freedom.

In 1821, the Greeks declared independence from the Ottoman Empire, setting off a bloody revolution that ended in victory for the Greeks. A century later, as the Ottoman Turks shared defeat with Germany in the Great War, Kipling and the Royal Navy rubbed a little salt in wounds old and new.

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