Nation-Breaking in the U.K.
[Derek Turner,
editor of the intrepid British journal Right
Now slices through the fog shrouding the
so-called Parekh Report on "multicultural
Britain." The polemical to and fro http://www.telegraph.co.uk:80/et?ac=000820154742766&rtmo
=as8NabeL&atmo=99999999&pg=/et/00/10/12/nstra12.html
since the report's release has parallels here:
the shocked reaction of mainstream politicians
when forced to confront the popular reaction
against the multicultural policies they avidly
pursue; hurried retreats to the seemingly safer
ground of "we are a proposition
nation." http://www.vdare.com/proposition_nation.htm.
In the Tory variant, apparently, to be British
you can come from anywhere but simply have to
believe in the "Free Market" - an
assertion consigning the whole Labor movement
and much of the Christian socialist tradition to
non-Brit.]
By Derek Turner
The Parekh Report is the ultra-Left's most
ambitious attempt to date to change Britain from
an historically successful state into, in the
Report's words, "a multicultural
post-nation."
The Report was published in October 2000 by
the Commission on the Future of Multi-Ethnic
Britain, a body set up with a fanfare in 1998 by
Home Secretary Jack Straw. The Committee is
itself a subdivision of a well-known race
relations lobbying group, the Runnymede Trust.
The chairman of the Commission is Lord Parekh,
an Asian Labour peer. The remaining 23 members
of the Commission are a motley bunch of Left or
far Left academics, politicians, minority
activists, people with non-jobs (e.g.,
"former equal opportunities adviser to the
Greater London Council") and rich Labour
supporters with guilty consciences.
Labour agitators have been beavering away
constantly since they came to office in 1997 to
articulate real or imagined black grievances -
which has had the predictable effect of
aggravating or creating them. Parekh is the
second major report on racial matters to have
been published in the last two years. (The
Macpherson Report on the failed police
investigation of the murder of black teenager
Stephen Lawrence was published in February
1999.)
Parekh's remit was much wider than
Macpherson's. Underlying the Commission's
deliberations (if that is the appropriate term)
were certain assumptions, derived from the
prevailing tendency of Leftwing thought, which
is to deny not just the legitimacy of all
institutions and traditions, but even sometimes
to deny that they exist. Our homegrown Trotskys
have been unable to make lasting political
progress in a country in which the majority of
people cling stubbornly to the nation-state, the
pound and the Royal Family and who insist on
believing such shocking things as that men are
different from women, homosexuality is not
necessarily a "valid lifestyle choice"
and large-scale immigration may not be an
unmixed blessing. So they have decided,
consciously or unconsciously, to demoralise the
unexpectedly reactionary masses from within.
Human beings, according to them, are all
equal, interchangeable and malleable. The
British nation does not really exist (by which
they mean that it should not exist) or if it
does it is infinitely elastic, capable of
absorbing any numbers of people from anywhere.
Race either does not exist or if it does it is
unimportant. These Leftists are no longer
socialists but deconstructionists, to whom
everything is a matter for individual choice -
except private opinions, which can only be
Leftwing ones. Nothing, the deconstructionists
say constantly, is to be taken on trust - except
their own intellectual and moral superiority.
The great problem with Britain, as the
Report's authors see it, is that it has
"systematic, largely unspoken, racial
connotations ... Englishness and therefore by
extension, Britishness, is racially coded."
This means that the very word
"British" is tainted with racism; the
Report looks ahead to a glorious future age when
people living in these islands can share a less
terrifying collective noun. The Report says that
Britons believe that "to take race or
racism seriously or even to talk about them is
bad form." These "deep-rooted
antagonisms to racial and cultural
difference" need to be "defeated in
practice, as well as symbolically written out of
the national story."
Lord Parekh seems to have spent his whole
time in the country that adopted and ennobled
him saying how terrible it is. His Report made
over 100 recommendations, such as that there
should be a formal declaration that Britain is a
"multicultural society", that vouchers
for "asylum seekers" should be
abolished and that there should be citizenship
"education" in schools. Even political
parties should have an ethnic "audit"
of members, and so on in a long list of
preposterous and splenetic demands.
Actually, in the wake of the execrable
Macpherson, much of Parekh almost seems
redundant - or perhaps I have become inured to
the endless stream of whining, veiled threats
and sentimentality that characterises political
discourse in Britain today. In many cases,
similar recommendations are being carried out
anyway in anticipation of expected law or simply
because it seems to be the right thing to do, by
fanatical or well-meaning educational
authorities, local councils, universities, civil
servants and private individuals up and down the
country. The Parekh recommendations are merely
part of a constant refrain on the television,
radio, in segments of the press, in think tank
reports and from pulpits.
But here they are all gathered into one
place, and the cumulative effect was so shocking
to even the mainstream Right, who have long
underestimated the seriousness of political
correctness, that the press launched into a
ferocious attack on Labour and the ostensibly
independent Commission. They alleged, with
considerable justification, that Labour
"wanted to rewrite history" and
believed that all Britons were intrinsically
racist. This unexpectedly robust response
compelled Jack Straw hastily to rewrite his
planned speech for the formal launch, eventually
saying that he "strongly parted
company" with some or all of the Report's
conclusions.
But Labour's vision of Britain leaves a lot
to be desired too. This is how Tony Blair's
spokesman, Alistair Campbell, defined New
Labour's patriotism: "Britishness to us is
about issues as varied as how you manage the
economy, the approach you take to issues like
unemployment, your vision of society." The
order of priorities is illuminating; at least
the old Left believed that there were more
important things than the economy. Insofar as
Britain does exist, and insofar as it does have
any redeeming features to people on the Blairite
Left, Britain, they believe, is a land of merely
abstract values, like fair play, tolerance and
freedom. These values, they say, are
transferable to everyone.
The "extreme Right wing" Tory
hierarchy of Labour demonology has a
surprisingly similar view. Although one Tory MP
went so far as to say that whenever she arrived
at Heathrow she "said a silent prayer of
thanks that Britain is my home" and alluded
to her love of Britain's history and the
landscape, the Tories don't know what Britain is
either. Senior Tories always say that patriotism
resides in defending Britain's institutions,
while David Willetts (nicknamed "Two
Brains" because of his reputation as a Tory
sage) once said "Being British means
believing in the free market."
Hardly anyone in any senior political
position seems to realise that Britain is the
way she is essentially for ethnic reasons. If
anyone does realise this salient point, they are
keeping it quiet. When William Hague decried the
"anti-British disease" that had
produced this Report, he was certainly not
thinking of the British people in ethnic terms,
but rather as randomly accumulated people united
by free market ideals.
One doesn't expect too much from politicians,
who are often so consumed with minutiae that
they don't have time to think. But no-one even
at the "right-wing" Daily Telegraph
pointed out this obvious fact either. Nor, so
far as I saw, did anyone mention that if
"British" is racist, then so is every
national collective noun. How many people think
of black people when they hear the word
"Irish" or of white people when they
hear the word "Gambian"?
People on the Left are often more
knowledgeable and honest than the Right on the
issue of race, because their consciences are
clearer on the subject. As noted above, the
Parekh Report at least acknowledges that there
is a racial component to the British identity -
even though they deplore this, doubt that races
really exist at all and would probably like to
prevent uncensored discussion of ethnic issues
(by white people). Many Conservatives, on the
other hand, know or feel that they are
vulnerable to charges of "racism", and
so they will perform mental gymnastics to avoid
discussing the topic.
But had Britain been settled by Nubians
rather than Normans, it would not be the Britain
we know today. Evidence from modern Sudan
suggests that tolerance and fair play might not
have been entirely typical of modern Britain had
the Nubians got here first. Had the Vikings been
Vietnamese, the Picts been Persians or the Irish
been Indians then it is safe to say that British
history would have been very different.
The institutions that characterise Britain
and which conservatives quite rightly defend are
not here by chance or through the workings of
Providence. Rather, they are the
painfully-acquired product of a particular blend
of related peoples, living in a particular place
over a very long period of time. The
institutions simply cannot be separated from the
people who dreamed them up. Would Italians have
created London clubs? Would Ethiopians have come
up with the Church of England? Would Papuans
have invented cricket? It is a cliche now to say
that Britain was created by invaders and
settlers; no-one cares to mention that all of
these invaders and settlers were of northern
European origin.
The complex political organism which Labour
is presently trying to destroy with its single
currency, devolution, republicanism, immigration
and multiculturalism, has evolved from the
gradual coming together of discrete but related
peoples, all of whom originated in northern
Europe. These related peoples have grown up
adjacent to one another over many centuries,
under the common influences of Celtic and Viking
paganism, classicism, Christianity and the
ideals of the Renaissance and Enlightenment.
Britain has evolved into being through
centuries of confrontation, compromise and
intermarriage between English, Scottish, Welsh
and Irish people (with a Jewish and north
European tincture), all of whom gradually learnt
to live together. For centuries, despite
setbacks and occasional internecine strife,
these peoples have been becoming increasingly
united by shared experiences, like empire
building and living under the monarchy. Now
habit and practicality have cemented the
alliance.
Bearing in mind these very narrow racial
origins and Britain's geography and history, it
is small wonder that British institutions seem
incomprehensible or even vaguely threatening to
those who come from outside that milieu. What is
surprising - and vexing - is that now those who
claim to speak on the newcomers' behalf expect
those who were here first to be the ones to
adapt, rather than the other way around, which
good manners would seem to dictate.
No-one seems even to consider the possibility
that perhaps some day indigenous Britons might
get fed up with being pushed around in their own
country.
November 20, 2000