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  34
 | L. Neil Smith's
 THE LIBERTARIAN ENTERPRISE
 Number 34, December 25, 1997
 
 
 
Why Libertarians Should Sing "God Save the Queen"!
by Sean Gabb [email protected]
 
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
 
 
"Over himself, over his own mind and body, 
the individual is sovereign"
 -- J.S. Mill, On Liberty, 1859
 
         The death, earlier this year, of Diana, Princess of Wales was a 
most lamentable event.  Its suddenness and other attendant 
circumstances must excuse much conduct that would otherwise deserve 
condemnation.  Plainly, some of those who had been close to the 
Princess were overcome by grief.  Equally, many common people wanted 
to show their grief in the only manner they knew.
But the remembrance service and funeral are over.  The flowers 
have been cleared away.  The time for expressions of grief, and for 
tolerance of their mode, is passed.  Those expressions that do 
continue in the media have for the most part a political end -- this 
being the destruction of the Monarchy.  The agenda is seldom explicit.  
Instead, we are told that "questions must be asked", or that 
"tradition must be set aside", or the like.  Even so, the agenda can 
be seen.  There are journalists and media proprietors who turned the 
Princess while she lived to an attack on the Monarchy, and who are now 
using her when she is dead for the same purpose.
 This is, I suggest, to be denounced by all English libertarians.  
It is nothing that those making such attacks often pose as supporters 
of the free market and of desirable social and political reforms.  By 
their actions, they announce themselves enemies of our remaining 
freedom as surely as if they went about with swastikas or hammer-and- 
sickle emblems on their arms.  The true justification of our Monarchy 
is not that Her Majesty the Queen is glamorous, or a nice person, or a 
tourist attraction.  It is that she is the living embodiment of our 
nationhood.  She is among the greatest of those symbols that preserve 
our communion with a freer and more glorious past.  This side of 
rebellion, she is the ultimate guarantor of the freedom that is our 
entailed birthright.
 Since Bagehot, constitutional writers have tended to misunderstand 
the political importance of the Monarchy.  It is far greater than they 
allow.  The Queen's legal powers are as great as those of William III.  
She can pick and choose her Ministers.  She can veto Bills sent up 
from Parliament, and call fresh elections almost at will.  She can 
declare war and peace, and make treaties.  She is Supreme Governor of 
our National Church.
 By custom, most of these powers are exercised in her name by 
elected politicians; the power of veto has not been used since the 
time of Queen Anne, and the power of choosing Ministers not since the 
time of William IV.  But custom is a living force.  The present 
arrangements require the elected politicians not to be traitors or 
other kinds of villain.  If it becomes plain that times are altered, 
and that we are being taken irrevocably towards native despotism or 
conquest by foreigners, the Monarch retains the power -- and the words 
of the Coronation Oath confer an absolute duty -- to step in and 
restore the balance of our Constitution.  It would be unwise to break 
through centuries of custom without at least some public acceptance of 
the need to do so; but the legal power and duty to act are part of the 
Constitution.
 Even without extreme circumstances, the Monarchy works in our 
favour.  Though in obvious decline in other areas, our Constitution 
has evolved to contain a separation of everyday power from authority.  
Though intervening from time to time to solve or prevent crises, the 
Monarch remains aloof from politics, leaving the business of 
government to the elected politicians, who are blamed or rewarded by 
the people according to their performance.  On the other hand, the 
elected politicians have a subordinate place within the Constitution 
that they cannot hope to change.  This may be the reason why we have 
preserved so long into an age where absolute government is easy to 
establish and maintain so much of the freedom that emerged under the 
weak governments of the middle ages.
 Personal rule is the most natural form of government; and a people 
must be unusually enlightened and fortunate in their circumstances to 
live without it.  Most peoples are neither enlightened nor fortunate, 
and so most countries are monarchies -- in fact if not in name.  Those 
republics that do exist are mostly of recent origin, and cannot be 
expected to last more than a few decades.
 Even the United States is only a partial exception.  It began as 
virtually a nation of libertarians.  It expanded over half a continent 
without any real foreign threat.  But after two centuries, its 
Constitution is increasingly a dead letter; and it can be questioned 
whether civil asset forfeiture and a militarised bureaucracy have left 
Americans as secure in their life, liberty and property as we are in 
England -- a country without such initial advantages, but with a 
constitutional monarchy.
 While there are grounds for scepticism about the existence of God, 
so far as He exists, and so far as she does her constitutional duty, 
Her Majesty reigns over us by His Grace.  In this contingent sense, 
she is the Lord's Annointed.  But even without such recommendation, I 
am not ashamed as a libertarian to call myself a loyal subject and to 
urge other English libertarians to do likewise.
 As the republican attacks in the media gain over the next few 
months in frequency and confidence, let us eclipse the most diehard 
Tories in our defence of Her Majesty.  Her defence is the defence of 
our ancient liberties.  Long may she reign over us!
 Sean Gabb http://freespace.virgin.net/old.whig is Editor of Free 
Life Commentary, an independent journal of comment published on the 
Internet, in Issue Number Two (7th September 1997) of which this 
article previously appeared.  To recieve regular issues, send e-mail 
to Sean Gabb at [email protected]. Issues are archived at 
http://freespace.virgin.net/old.whig/. Readers may also care to 
subscribe to a longer, hard copy journal:
 
         Free Life
The Libertarian Alliance
 25 Chapter Chambers
 Esterbrooke Street
 London SW1P 4NN.
 
A 10 Pound subscription buys you four issues.
 
 
 
"The right of self-defense is the first law of nature: in most 
governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right 
within the narrowest limits possible.  Wherever standing armies are 
kept up, and when the right of the people to keep and bear arms is, 
under any color or pretext whatsoever, prohibited, liberty, if not 
already annihilated, is on the brink of destruction."
 -- Henry St. George Tucker (in Blackstone's Commentaries)
 
 
 
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