HER MAJESTY’S LOYAL ARMED FORCES AND CONTEMPT FOR DEMOCRACY

By Michael Faulkner - 02.14.2016

 “I swear by God that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, her heirs and successors and that I will, as in duty bound, honestly and faithfully defend Her Majesty against all enemies.”  The Armed Forces oath of allegiance to the Queen.

Let’s start by turning the clock back a century. In Britain during the years immediately prior to the outbreak of the imperialist war in 1914, rising tensions in continental Europe and beyond had not been a matter of great concern. After 1911 it was rather the “Irish Question” that dominated political discourse on domestic and foreign affairs, and, specifically, the near-certainty of the passage...

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THE PROSPECTS FOR 2016 AND BEYOND: INUNDATION – From Storms, Climatic and Political

By Michael Faulkner, January 10, 2016

It is customary, in Britain at least, during the days of the winter solstice from late December to early January, for most people to succumb to the spirit of “the festive season.” This is understandable and there is much about the festive celebrations that is genuinely warm-hearted and convivial. There are no national day celebrations in Britain as there is no national day and no notion of what might be acceptable as one. So the family Christmas lunch or dinner is the closest this country gets to the US Thanksgiving. Most people celebrate Christmas, but only a very tiny minority of them celebrate it as a religious festival. This is something that must be quite puzzling to those who follow other religions such as Judaism, Hinduism or Islam, whose festivals and holy days are times of religious observance. After all, unlike the United States and France, England and Scotland have an established church – the Church of England and Scotland, which have a legal position in the state. The Queen is the head of the church and is officially named “Defender of the Faith.” Yet only 1.5% of the population attend church on anything like a regular basis. According to Christian theology, the three most sacred days of the year are Christmas Day (the birth of the divinity in human form), Good Friday (his death) and Easter Sunday (his resurrection from the dead). Yet in the consumerist bonanzas that have come to dominate all three commemorations, they are associated predominantly with Santa Claus, Christmas trees, Easter eggs and Easter bunnies. Religion hardly gets a look-in.  Regarding Christmas, it might be said that if a committee had been set the task of expunging every element of religion from the festival and replacing it with an appeal to “shop until you drop”, they couldn’t have come up with anything better than this. The “success” of Christmas is measured in terms of sales figures and profit margins and for the legions of cash-strapped parents struggling to make ends meet, in the increasing volume of personal debt. But Prime Minister Cameron, in his Christmas message, tells us that Britain is a Christian country.

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CORBYN, THE LEFT AND THE FUTURE OF LABOUR: Does his Survival matter?

By Michael Faulkner - 12.13.15

Jeremy Corbyn has been under sustained attack from most of the media, all the Tories, most Liberal Democrats and a significant number of Labour MPs, Labour Peers and Blairite and other former government ministers. Never has any party leader been subjected to such an unrelenting bombardment from virtually the whole of the Westminster political establishment and their loyal echoes in the media. Compared to this, the attempted character assassination of his predecessor, Ed Miliband, which was bad enough, was mild indeed. The fact that Corbyn was elected leader of the Labour party with an unprecedented majority of votes cast and that he enjoys the enthusiastic support of the great majority of the vastly increased membership the party has achieved since his election, is of no concern or interest to his critics and detractors.

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FASCISM IN EUROPE: What was it then? What is it now?

By Michael Faulkner - 11.08.2015

Understandably, many who are knowledgeable about the historical reality of Fascism in Europe and concerned about its re-emergence in more recent years, may feel that revisiting the subject under the title chosen for this article is unnecessary. It may be thought that the saturation coverage of European fascist states – Nazi Germany in particular - by historians and political scientists since 1945 leaves little of value to be said that is not already known. Indeed one may go back much further, at least to the early 1930s, to find the first serious attempts to explain fascism and define its meaning. Surely, there is nothing new to be added.

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CORBYN UNDER FIRE: Faux Patriotism and Assault by Scoundrels

By Michael Faulkner - 10.11.15

Anyone still harbouring illusions about the objectivity or veracity of the British media should have been disabused of them after the election of Jeremy Corbyn to the leadership of the Labour party in September. It soon became clear that almost without exception the reaction to his election was hostile. In the case of the corporate print media which includes most national newspapers, this was to be expected. But coverage in more liberal papers such as The Observer and The Guardian was sometimes little better.

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LABOUR’S LEADERSHIP CONTEST : CORBYN, TRIDENT AND NATO

By Michael Faulkner - 09.13.15

Since the earliest years of the cold war, in any mainstream discourse on British foreign policy, certain supposed truths have been treated as so self evident that to question them is treated either as infantile ignorance or deliberate hostility to Britain’s “national interest.”  This has been particularly so in the case of the so-called “independent nuclear deterrent” and membership of NATO.  A moment’s reflection by anyone with a mind unencumbered by official “defence” propaganda should call into question the need for either of these. 

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