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Who Polices The Police?

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The Met must stop spinning G20 policing: Defend Peaceful Protest on the Met's response to its critics
 

Met watchdog criticises G20 policing: Anna Bragga reports on the MPA meeting
 

Our campaign to defend peaceful protest launches: Guy Aitchison and Andy May have some questions for the Met following the policing of the G20
 

The architectural photographer as terrorist: Edward Denison recounts his detention for photographing a police station
 

Letter to the Beeb: Guy Aitchison responds to a complacent and misleading feature on "kettling" for the BBC website
 

Not "kettling" but "bubbling": Clare Coatman on polarised views of police and protesters
 

Kettling - another special relationship: Charles Shaw's eye-witness account of the practice's US debut
 

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Met orders review into policing of protests: Guy Aitchison comments on Sir Paul Stephenson's suggestions
 

Trapped and beaten by police in Climate Camp: Testimony from Chris Abbott

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The Damian Green Affair


A Very British Arrest: Laura Sandys on the precedent of her father's 1939 experience.


One reason why the police are dangerous, undemocratic and stupid: Anthony Barnett condemns an attack on democracy.


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A Constitutional Failure: The Damian Green case highlights the need for a written constitution, argues Tom Griffin.

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The ugly economics of immigration: Paul Kingsnorth on why the left is out of step with working class interests.


Immigration and the Politics of Resentment: Shamser Sinha suggests the real problem is a politics that turns neighbour against neighbour.

A neoliberal kingdom


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MODERN LIBERTY



Digital Privacy Wars: Guy Aitchison flags up a debate on the threat business poses to digital privacy


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Say 'No' to 42 days: Sign Amnesty's petition against extending pre-charge detention


What do we do now?: Anthony Barnett assesses the stakes for for liberals and radicals in David Davis's campaign against the erosion of rights and liberties


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Labour After Brown

The next left -Life after the Labour Party: Gerry Hassan sees a historic opportunity for the emergence of a post-New Labour left.

Scottish Labour, where's the coffee?: Gerry Hassan assesses the prospects for Scottish Labour and its new leader.

Lesson for the Left from Chile to Britain: Hassan Akram offers a global perspective on Labour's malaise.

From Milibland to Johnson land?: Jeremy Gilbert argues for Labour without neo-liberalism.

Magical thinking on Britishness: Anthony Barnett critiques Liam Byrne on fraternity.

Rule of law at risk: Geoffrey Bindman calls for a turn away from the marketisation of government.

A new Bill of Rights for Britain?: Guy Aitchison analyses Parliament's proposed new Bill of Rights.

Miliband - by our rights we will know you: Claire O'Brien puts forward a new progressive vision for Labour.

Recapturing liberal Britain: David Marquand challenges Labour's constitutional orthodoxy.

Miliband and the Liberal Democrats: James Graham on the case for realignment.

What is Labour's British story?: Writing from Scotland, Gerry Hassan widens the OurKingdom debate on Labour's future.

This is not Brown's crisis but Britain's: David Marquand says social democracy is bust and Britain may be too.

The Challenges for Miliband's Progressive Fusion: Fabian Society head Sunder Katwala responds to David Miliband.

England Awakes?

England, Britain and multiculturalism: an OurKingdom exchange

A mild awakening?, England's turn? by David Goodhart

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Free-born John Lilburne: A hero for our time

, 19 - 11 - 2008
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Geoffrey Bindman (London, BIHR): My old school in Newcastle, founded in 1545, was proud of famous former pupils. Several of them were mentioned in the school song. Eldon was the procrastinating judge caricatured by Dickens in Bleak House, Armstrong an armament manufacturer, Collingwood was Nelson’s second-in–command at Trafalgar. Absent was John Lilburne, leader of the Levellers at the time of the English Civil War, who I discovered years later had been at the school in the early 17th century.

Lilburne is only now coming to be recognised as a fundamentally important figure in our political and constitutional history. He was also a man of extraordinary personal courage and determination. Cromwell thought highly of him and made him a colonel in his army but he became disillusioned with Cromwell when he abandoned the democratic programme which Lilburne passionately advocated.

In his early twenties Lilburne was brought before the Star Chamber accused of “sending of factious and seditious libels out of Holland into England.” When questioned he refused to answer, saying “I know it is warrantable by the law of God, and I think by the law of the land, that I may stand on my just defence, and not answer your interrogatories, and that my accusers ought to be brought face to face, to justify what they accuse me of”. Lilburne was whipped and pilloried but his claims to the right of silence and to hear and challenge the evidence against him foreshadowed the safeguards later built in to our criminal justice process.

In 1641 he was vindicated by the House of Commons which resolved “that the sentence of the Star Chamber given against John Lilburne is illegal and against the liberty of the subject: and also bloody, cruel, barbarous, and tyrannical.” Later however, he accused the Commons of reviving the practices of the Star Chamber when he was arrested for publishing pamphlets advocating religious toleration and attacking suppression of dissent. Again he refused to answer incriminating questions, condemned the secrecy of the proceedings, and cited the authority of Magna Carta. Later he refused to kneel before the House of Lords. He was the first to reject this humiliating practice.

Lilburne described the Levellers as “the middle sort of people” and “the hobnails, clouted shoes, the private soldiers, the leather and woollen aprons and the laborious and industrious people of England.” They had massive support among Cromwell’s New Model Army. They produced the first draft of a written constitution – the “Agreement of the People”.Their ideas were debated in Putney Church in 1647 when Cromwell himself presided. It was at one of the debates that the Leveller Colonel Rainborough uttered the memorable words:”For really I think that the poorest he that is in England hath a life to live, as the greatest he; and therefore, truly, Sir, I think it’s clear that every man that is to live under a government ought first by his own consent to put himself under that Government.” Two years later King Charles I was beheaded in Whitehall.

The Levellers have almost been airbrushed out of history but their ideas have much relevance to-day. And the contribution of Lilburne to our democracy and our law has never been properly recognised. Channel Four is about to screen a four-part drama, “The Devil’s Whore” based on the events of this period. If, as is reported, it will highlight the the Levellers, that is all to the good. It is time they were taken seriously and given their proper place in history.

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Toque said:

Thu, 2008-11-20 12:03

From the first episode it looks as though the Devil's Whore is going to be pretty good, even if not quite the cinematic experience that it was touted as.

As I used to live in Ely so I take an interest in Ely's three famous sons, all English heros in their own was: Hereward the Wake, Oliver Cromwell and Sir Clive Woodward.  And from the comments of Irish actor, Dominic West, who plays Cromwell, it might be the case that the Devil's Whore is as much of a PR for Cromwell as it is for the Levellers.

Though Theo Hobson suggests otherwise:

"Judging from the publicity, it looks as if The Devil’s Whore has a
romantic-leftish bias, seeing the Levellers as a progressive force thwarted
by Cromwell’s self-serving conservatism. It has become almost obligatory to
portray Cromwell as a nasty piece of work."
 

Wyrdtimes said:

Thu, 2008-11-20 10:02

These days it's England getting airbrushed out of history.

Freeborn John must be spinning.

 

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