Books by Hitchens, Peter
- Hitchens, Peter.
The Abolition of Britain.
2nd. ed. San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2002.
ISBN 1-893554-39-2.
-
History records many examples of the collapse of once great and
long-established cultures. Usually, such events are the consequence
of military defeat, occupation or colonisation by a foreign power,
violent revolution and its totalitarian aftermath, natural disasters,
or other dramatic and destructive events. In this book, Peter
Hitchens chronicles the collapse, within the span of a
single human lifetime (bracketed by the funerals of Winston
Churchill in 1965 and Princess Diana in 1997), of the culture
which made Britain British, and maintained domestic peace
in England and Wales since 1685 (and Scotland since Culloden in 1746)
while the Continent was repeatedly convulsed by war and revolution.
The collapse in Britain, however, occurred following victory
in a global conflict in which, at the start, Britain stood alone
against tyranny and barbarism, and although rooted in a time
of postwar privation, demotion from great power status, and loss
of empire, ran its course as the nation experienced unprecedented
and broadly-based prosperity.
Hitchens argues that the British cultural collapse was almost entirely
the result of well-intentioned “reform” and “modernisation” knocking
out the highly evolved and subtly interconnected pillars which
supported the culture, set in motion, perhaps, by immersion in
American culture during World War II (see chapter 16—this argument
seems rather dubious to me, since many of the postwar changes in
Britain also occurred in the U.S., but afterward), and
reinforced and accelerated by television broadcasting, the perils of
which were prophetically sketched by T.S. Eliot in 1950
(p. 128). When the pillars of a culture: historical memory,
national identity and pride, religion and morality, family, language,
community, landscape and architecture, decency, and education are
dislodged, even slightly, what ensues is much like the “controlled
implosion” demolition of a building, with the Hobbesian forces of
“every man for himself” taking the place of gravity in pulling down
the structure and creating the essential preconditions for the
replacement of bottom-up self-government by self-reliant citizens with
authoritarian rule by élite such as Tony Blair's ambition of U.S.-style
presidential power and, the leviathan where the
road to serfdom leads, the emerging
anti-democratic Continental super-state.
This U.S second edition includes notes which explain British terms and
personalities unlikely to be familiar to readers abroad, a preface
addressed to American readers, and an afterword discussing the 2001
general election and subsequent events.
November 2005
- Hitchens, Peter. The Abolition of Liberty. London:
Atlantic Books, [2003] 2004. ISBN 1-84354-149-1.
- This is a revised edition
of the hardcover published in 2003 as A Brief History of Crime. Unlike
the police of most other countries (including most of the U.S.),
since the founding of the Metropolitan Police in 1829, police in
England and Wales focused primarily on the prevention of crime through
a regular, visible presence and constant contact with the community,
as opposed to responding after the commission of a crime to investigate
and apprehend those responsible. Certainly, detection was among the
missions of the police, but crime was viewed as a failure of policing,
not an inevitable circumstance to which one could only react. Hitchens
argues that it is this approach which, for more than a century, made
these lands among the safest, civil, and free on Earth, with police
integrated in the society as uniformed citizens, not a privileged
arm of the state set above the people. Starting in the 1960s, all of
this began to change, motivated by a mix of utopian visions and the
hope of cutting costs. The bobby on the beat was replaced by police
in squad cars with sirens and flashing lights, inevitably arriving
after a crime was committed and able to do little more than comfort
the victims and report yet another crime unlikely to be solved.
Predictably, crime in Britain exploded to the upside, with far more
police and police spending per capita than before the “reforms” unable
to even reduce its rate of growth. The response of the government
elite has not been to return to preventive policing, but rather to
progressively infringe the fundamental liberties of citizens, trending
toward the third world model of a police state with high crime.
None of this would have surprised Hayek, who foresaw it all The Road to Serfdom
(May 2002). Theodore Dalrymple's Life at the Bottom (September 2002) provides a view from the streets
surrendered to savagery, and the prisons and hospitals occupied by the
perpetrators and their victims. In this edition, Hitchens deleted two
chapters from the hardcover which questioned Britain's abolition of
capital punishment and fanatic program of victim disarmament (“gun
control”). He did so “with some sadness” because “the only way to
affect politics in this country is to influence the left”, and these
issues are “articles of faith with the modern left”. As “People do not
like to be made to think about their faith”, he felt the case better
put by their exclusion. I have cited these quotes from pp. xi–xii
of the Preface without ellipses but, I believe, fairly.
May 2004