Will Tanner Profile picture
Nov 12, 2024 13 tweets 10 min read Read on X
When was the last time that England and her glorious Empire could have been saved from becoming a decaying, socialist hell?

Many say, incorrectly, either WWI, when the empire was exhausted, or WWII when it was bankrupted

The real answer is 1911, with the Parliament Bill🧵👇 Image
The fight that led to the Parliament Bill began in 1909, with Winston Churchill's so-called People's Budget

By that point, Churchill had shifted to the Liberals from the Conservatives and was allied with Lloyd George to tax the landed elite into oblivion, despite his family being part of that elite.

The bill sparked a huge fight that culminated in England declaring war on its traditions and history in the name of socialismImage
The problem with the People's Budget was that it was the first overtly socialist law to come to England

In fact, it was entirely unprecedented and is known today as a "revolutionary concept" because it was expressly crafted to redistribute wealth, taxing landed wealth and income to fund welfare programs of the sort that have now bankrupted Britain

Because of its very nature, the bill was a shot across the bow of the landed elite, and fomented a great deal of social unrest and internal angerImage
The House of Lords, furious that class traitor Churchill would try to tax them out of existence to fund welfare programs, threw the People's Budget out, exercising their veto power

But that sparked a crisis

For one, the class warfare of the sort seen in the Punch cartoon below had already been fomented by Churchill and Lloyd George

Secondly, and much more importantly, it was unclear if the Lords had a veto power over a budgetary billImage
Those two issues combined into a much more serious one: the British public asked why the hereditary Lords could retard democracy by vetoing what bills the Commons passed

As could be expected, that question turned into outright class warfare and a desire to destroy the Lords, or at least rid it of its permanent veto powerImage
At that point, Lloyd George took over leading the class warfare charge. Churchill was, as could be expected, getting cold feet, and Welsh-born Lloyd George made a much more likely enemy of the Anglo-Norman aristocracy

His proposal to rid the country of the Lords was the Parliament Bill

Under it, the Lords could only delay/veto monetary bills for a month, effectively ending any veto power they had over those bills

Meanwhile, it allowed only a two-year delay, rather than a total veto, for other bills. While this meant bills could be effectively killed toward the end of a Parliament, it also meant that the early years of one couldn't be blocked by the peerageImage
The peerage was split over how to react, as the Lords would have to pass the bill for it to go into effect. George V, led astray by evil advisers, said he'd create hundreds of peers to ensure it was passed if the current Lords didn't do so

Eventually, a group of demoralized defeatists coalesced around just passing the bill, they became the majority. they called themselves the Hedgers, because they saw themselves as trying to hedge the risk

On the other side were the so-called "Diehards," who were against passing it at all costs. The also called themselves the Ditchers, as they saw themselves as willing to fight a last-ditch stand against Liberalism. They were led by Lord Willoughby de Broke and aided by most of the wealthy peers, including the hardline Tory and future WWI war hero, the 2nd Duke of WestminsterImage
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Eventually, the Hedgers won out despite the threats from those in the Diehards like Lord Willoughby de Broke that the county militias, largely led by Diehards and composed of those favorable to their cause, would be called up to fight the bill

So, unfortunately for England in the near future, the Bill was passed and the Lords lost their power

Churchill and George V appeared to regret what they had done, but by then it was too late and Lord de Broke's Diehards defeatedImage
Image
The Parliament Bill was really a turning point for the Empire

Even superficially, it marked England's shift from Victorian/Edwardian prosperity and preeminence to the long, bloody, painful decay of the 20th century. Within a few years, Lloyd George's government was sending England's best to die pointlessly in the fields of Flanders. As they bled out, the families of the Old Etonians who were killed en masse were taxed relentlessly to fund the war, and were financially bled out by endless income and death taxes, as Cannadine discussed in "The Decline and Fall of the British Aristocracy"Image
But the bigger problem was the shift in mindset and policy that the bill marked

The social shift is what resulted near-immediately.

Before the bill, the landed elite, both the gentry and the peerage, were widely honored and respected and seen as the goal state of anyone and everyone. Wealthy businessmen sold their companies to buy landed estates and construct gorgeous country houses, even as the agricultural depression of the 1880s made those estates less profitable than they used to be

Why? Because land was power. Tenants largely voted for the candidates put forth by their landlords, it was generally only landed gentlemen who got peerages and the powerful seat in the Lords that meant, and the resources of an estate, from the house that could host events to the votes of the tenancy, were easily translated into political influence

What that meant was that the political parties and their leaders were tied to the land of England, from the landlords at the top to the day laborers at the bottom, and the farmers in the middle. Instead of being overly concerned with Continental affairs and being dominated by the cosmopolitan managerial elite we're used to today, those in charge were committed to the country's success because their wealth was tied up in its land. There were exceptions, of course, but that was the general rule

Altogether, then, before the Parliament Bill and Churchill's People's Budget that precipitated it, there wasn't an internal war in England against its traditions and history. The empire and those who led it were self-confident, committed to its success, and through their country seats and old titles, tied to its histories and traditions

After the bill, much of that disappeared. Estates were taxed at obscene rates, the Lords no longer had power, and global commercial interests won out over the internal landed, agricultural and industrial interest that profited from England-first policy. From then on, there was much more internal unrest and class warfare, whether in terms of taxation or national class war like the General Strike of the Interwar era.Image
While the social changes were swift and severe, the policy changes were somewhat more gradual but even more destructive

Namely, the transition from aristocratic government to bureaucratic government meant massive change in what was accepted

Take taxes. To the landed elite, direct taxes like death or income tax should serve a valuable national end and generally only be established in time of war. So they were more than willing to pay both in the Napoleonic Wars, but repealed them immediately afterward and kept reasonable throughout the conflict. To the bureaucrats, however, taxes are a way of effecting massive social change. So, the direct taxes are not only kept around permanently but raised dramatically, such as the 90% of Harold Wilson' 1960s, even when unnecessary from a financial, national interest perspective

Another example is regulation. To the landed elite, a gentleman should be the lord of his own domain except when absolutely necessary. So there are laws that restrict anti-social behavior, such as murder, but otherwise regulation and laws are kept limited so as not to infringe upon the liberty of the people. To bureaucrats, however, regulations and laws are a way of cementing and expanding their own bureaucratic domains. So, such laws and regulations have to expand relentlessly so that there are always more slots for more bureaucrats with more power and pay. That leads to rapid infringements upon liberty, even the traditionally understood rights of Englishmen

And, of course, there's the matter of private property. To a landed gentleman, property is sacrosanct because it is the basis of his life, wealth, and power; that same view generally imbues the classes under him, as they want to be like him. To the bureaucrat, however, private property is a threat. It's a basis for non-bureaucratic power, leads to anti-regulatory sentiment, and so on. So, it's attacked, whether through taxation like death duties, government fiat, or other devices. This happened in England under Attlee, who was elected in 1945 and quickly "nationalized" (stole) everything from railroads to coal mines while taxing agricultural estates out of existence. Harold Wilson picked up where he left off and further destroyed itImage
Thus, the high-level results of the Parliament Bill were:

1) hostility to English tradition and emblems of its glory,

2) the destruction of the gentlemanly class that administered the empire and served in its armies, and

3) prosperity-destroying taxation and regulation that wiped away the English pre-eminence in industry and agriculture that enabled its imperial ambitions

So, before it you had a prosperous and free society led by those with a tradition of service, at little cost to the state, and a vast empire that supplied it with resources. After it, the bureaucrats quickly bankrupted the empire in WWI and II, taxed away its prosperity and gentlemen, and then gave the empire up because they didn't see the point of imperial splendor, glory, and paternalismImage
Image
Thus, the glory of England ended because of the Parliament Bill

Though it took a few decades for the changes wrought and made possible by it to play out, particularly the heavy taxation and shift of political power away from the landed elite, those changes were disastrous, and weren't ones the empire could survive, even had WWI and II not soon happened; the taxation and class warfare would have gone the same way anyway, as seen in the '20s, '60s, and '70s, or with Starmer today and his attempt to tax farmers out of existence, as @NoFarmsNoFoods is fighting

The pre-Parliament Bill landed elite would never have done anything approaching these attacks on liberty, property, and prosperity. But the bureaucracy that followed it? This is the natural result, what it always wantedImage

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More from @Will_Tanner_1

Jun 26
NYC's communist is quoting Nelson Mandela, a communist terrorist known for murdering white civilians

As a reminder: Nelson Mandela was not a kindly leader as presented in Invictus. He did not want peace; he explicitly rejected it

A short 🧵on Mandela's terror campaign👇Image
For one, Mandela was in prison because he created a civilian-bombing terror group called "Spear of the Nation," and premised it on the success of Fidel Castro and Che Guevara in Cuba

He then carried out dozens of bombings on civilian farms and infrastructure

MK was backed by the Soviet Union, co-led by a Lithuanian communist named Joe Slovo, and the Mandela-era leadership was convicted of trying to violently overthrow the state

This was after Mandela convinced the ANC, in the '50s, to request arms and support from the People's Republic of ChinaImage
Once in prison, Mandela refused to renounce violence

In fact, the South African government offered to release him from prison if he would simply pledge to not engage in terrorism anymore. He refused

He then smuggled messages to MK's new leadership through his murderous wife Winnie, and those messages helped them plan their attacks and tactics in the terror bombing campaign of the '70s and '80s, which led to hundreds of white civilians killed and thousands woundedImage
Read 5 tweets
Jun 21
In the Medieval period, most states in Europe executed between 0.5% and 1% of their population every year, as punishment for lawbreaking

Turns out, when you do that for half a millenium, you essentially get rid of the "crime" gene and crime becomes a non-issue
*I typed this incorrectly. It was this percentage per generation, not per year. However, the same study estimates that around the same percentage died at the scene of the crime, in some form or another, or while awaiting trial, which would boost it to 1-2% per generation
So yes, not per year, per generation. Still a lot of people and enough for a eugenic effect over time
Read 4 tweets
Jun 18
All you think you know about King Leopold II and the Belgian Congo is wrong

You were told it was a hellish land of cruel exploitation. That's a lie

In reality, Congo was a colonial jewel, the atrocities didn't occur, and the Belgian years were the only good rule it's had🧵👇 Image
First, it's important to note what state of things existed in what became the Belgian Congo before King Leopold II became its ruler

That tale is best told by Henry Stanley in his book, How I Found Livingstone, his tale of searching for Dr. Livingstone in the heart of Darkness

In it, he describes hell on a grand scale. Arab slavers from Zanzibar pillaged the anarchic territory, taking gangs of fettered slaves back with them to be castrated and sold to the Arab slave market

The interior, when not being raided by Arabs, was in a state of horrid chaos. Random violence, cannibals, the ever-present threat of famine, and all the rest we think of when we think of pre-colonial Africa is what life was like in the Congo. Rotting vegetation, insect-infested huts, farms barely maintaining subsistence, and tribes raiding each other and explorers were the basic aspects of life in the pre-Belgian world

In short, life before the Belgians was like life in the Stone Age: nasty, brutish, and short, with the only law being the law of the jungle

Stanley and Livingstone did much to expose this state of things, and it was the greedy, exploitative traders who followed in their wake, before Leopold and the Belgians, that are recorded by Conrad in his The Heart of DarknessImage
It was about a decade and a half later that, during the Berlin Conference, King Leopold II was granted control of the area now knows as the Democratic Republic of the Congo

He controlled it through the Congo Free State, a private attempt he founded and fully owned, with the goal of colonizing and bring order to the anarchic territory

To do so, he started sending to the state Belgian officers and administrators. They, along with a bevy of monks, nuns, and traders, were the ones who set out to turn the anarchic Congo into a well-administered area that turned from animist paganism to Christianity while becoming prosperous and stable

The military/police arm of that rule was the Force Publique, which was mainly officered by Belgians but otherwise consisted of natives allied with the Congo Free State. They protected the nuns, protected the traders, kept out the Arab slavers from Zanzibar, and generally tried to first impose and then maintain orderImage
Image
Read 15 tweets
May 22
South Africa is back in the news because of its anarcho-tyranny and Mugabe-style land expropriation

Missed is that this is Mandela's vision

The ANC's "National Democratic Revolution" concept—using liberalism to establish communism—is going exactly as he planned & hoped for🧵👇 Image
"National Democratic Revolution" (NDR), is originally a Soviet concept that was adopted and built upon by the South African communists, particularly the ruling ANC regime, to suit their unique situation and goal

Their goal, as one might expect of an anti-colonial communist group, is race communism of the sort seen in Zimbabwe under Mugabe

Their unique situation, however, was that they had the world's sympathy and were expected to create the "Rainbow Nation" rather than just another nominally democratic hellholeImage
Hence, the NDR concept. By slowly boiling the frog, they could use the slogans and methods of liberalism to first establish socialism, and then, from ther,e move to communism

It's that final step we're seeing now, and they might not have boiled the frog slowly enough, as they're getting more resistance than was expected

Still, it's gotten them this far, so it's worth reviewingImage
Read 15 tweets
May 19
The American left is embracing race communism of the sort that destroyed South Africa + Rhodesia

Here, e.g., the Chicago mayor admits to anti-white racism in permitting: “Every dime [blacks] were robbed of, I’ll make sure is returned two- or threefold”

Here's what's coming🧵👇
Mayor Johnson's spewed absurdities are, essentially, the same inane nonsense the African communists pushed before destroying their countries

In South Africa, Mandela's ANC has long insisted that the white farmers "stole" the land from blacks, and thus it needs to be "returned" to them

Much the same was true of Mugabe's thuggery in Zimbabwe, where he and his cronies insisted that "land reform" (farmland expropriation) was a necessity because the white farmers had "stolen" the land when they founded RhodesiaImage
In every case, it was absurd: the supposed "thieves" built everything that existed, they didn't steal it

South Africa is a great example. When the progenitors of the Afrikaners arrived in 1654, they found a nearly uninhabited land, and those few Khoisan there were roving pastoralists who had settled nothing. The Afrikaners then built South Africa from the ground up, turning an untamed wilderness into a thriving colony with hugely successful farms. They gradually marched to the north and west, settling the land as they went and eventually finding the Xhosa and Zulu, both of whom arrived in what's now South Africa from the north well after the Afrikaners did. Once again, it was the Afrikaners who built civilization, with their labor and hands, in that mostly untamed land. Over the mid-19th to mid-20th century, Anglo settlers and capital poured in as well, helping build civilization where none had formerly existed in South Africa

Rhodesia was much the same thing. The British South Africa Company did, admittedly, find the Matabele and Shona in what became Rhodesia when settling the territory began. But agriculture was limited. No cities, roads, railroads, or the like existed. Populations were limited and sparse. Anglos then poured in and settled it, turning veldt into farms, building cities on open land, and gradually raising civilization on land where little formerly existed. Further, what land the BSAC obtained, the land on which civilization was built, was bought from the Matabele, not "stolen."Image
Read 15 tweets
May 15
Why are Afrikaners fleeing South Africa?

Well, here's what prominent SA politicians say: "We will k*ll white women, we will k*ll white children, and we will even k*ll your pets"

Importantly, this violence is part of Mandela's legacy and happened because of American policy 🧵👇
This should be quite clear as the Afrikaner refugee situation heats up

For example, an ANC (Mandela's party, long aided by the Soviets) hack calling himself "Staling" released this statement about Trump's refugee program and demanded the Afrikaners stay so that they can face "accountability" for "historic privilege"Image
What does "accountablity" mean in this situation?

It means he wants them to be slain in some of the sickest, most horrific ways imaginable

This is what the farm murders and home invasions across South Africa are: aided by the government (the military, for example, provides them with signal jammers), thugs r*pe, m*rder, and k!ll Boers in their homes

The farm attacks are almost always black on white, almost always involve sexual assault, and frequently involve murder. The same is true of home invasions in urban zones, what few are left in the years after MandelaImage
Read 13 tweets

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