Paul
Craig Roberts Archive
November 26,
2001
PCR 11-26-01
CS UK
Say
Goodbye to England
By Paul
Craig Roberts
See
earlier reports from the British Isles:
Diversity
vs. Freedom (contd.): Three Scenes From The Decline of
Britain (last act?), By James Fulford
Gun
Control, Immigration and Social Engineering - By Paul
Craig Roberts
Anglophiles had best
pop over to the Misty Isles for a last experience of Great
Britain before the country is reduced to an oppressed
province of the European Union.
Napoleon could not
conquer England, nor could Hitler, but Socialist bureaucrats
in Brussels have with help from Tony
Blair’s New Labour and British nonchalance. Britain
is on its way back to the reign of Charles I with its
secret courts and imprisonment without trial
or evidence.
Once-proud Brits are
suffering the indignity of being gradually brought under
European law by ministerial edicts that bypass Parliament.
Recently the British lost their ancient
system of weights
and measures, but now they are on the verge of losing
their legal system, the development of which is, essentially,
the history of Britain.
Although willing to
be bullied along the path to European integration, the
British steadfastly have held on to their justice system.
And for good reason.
Historically, English
law has been a shield of the people, standing in stark
contrast to Europe’s Napoleonic criminal law, which does
not safeguard law against its use by government as a weapon.
English law does not
permit police to arrest citizens without evidence or to
hold them more than 48 hours without presenting charges
in open court. The European system permits police to arrest
citizens on suspicion and to detain them indefinitely
while preparing a case against them.
Moreover, the accused
European has no right to see the evidence against him,
no right to a jury trial, and no right to an open court.
His case is decided by a professional judge, whose career
and advancement is dependent on the state that brings
the case.
Under European law,
there is no presumption of innocence or protection against
double jeopardy. The accused can be subjected to repeated
trials on the same charges until the state wins a guilty
verdict.
The English fought
a civil war to rid themselves of such an oppressive “justice
system,” and now in a sweep of anti-terrorism hysteria
the Blair government is sponsoring
a “terrorism bill” that signs away the English birthright.
The “Anti-Terrorism,
Crime and Security Bill” (PDF
version.) currently moving through Parliament contains
a provision (109) that removes Parliament from the decision
to replace English law with Europe’s Corpus Juris. Unless
Parliament rejects this provision, the EU Council of Ministers
in Brussels, with the concurrence of the British Home
Secretary, can vote away English legal protections and
replace Habeas
Corpus with Napoleon’s
code.
The British also face
the unpleasant prospect of being tried by European prosecutors
for offenses that are not crimes in Britain.
A few days ago Law
Lord Richard Scott asked
the government to give more careful thought to the
European arrest warrant. The warrant does not require
evidence and would permit British citizens to be extradited
to Europe for interrogation should they be suspected of
crimes such as racism and xenophobia (fear or hatred of
foreigners). Surely this spells the end of soccer.
Will this direct threat
to British liberty cause the Brits to confront honestly
the loss of sovereignty required by European integration?
Lord Tebbit was succinct on November 1 when he said
ratification of the Nice
Treaty (European integration) “would be both contrary
to Magna Carta and a breach of the Coronation
Oath, which sprang from the settlement of 1688” that
established the accountability of law.
If the British decide
to give up sovereignty, they might try for better
terms. Why not form a European Union on the basis
of English Law? This would be a huge gain for all of Europe
by bringing English liberties at long last to the Continent.
Are the British people so smitten by Europe that they
would give up their historic achievements and replace
“law as shield” with “law as weapon”?
The Labour government
has not been honest with the people about the implications
of European Union. Instead, Brits have been led down the
path with assurances that they can be both British and
European. Now that shopkeepers are being arrested
for selling by the pint and pound instead of by the liter
and kilo, the British might realize that Europe is a threat
to their national character and to their liberty.
Paul Craig
Roberts is the author (with Lawrence M. Stratton) of The
New Color
Line : How Quotas and Privilege Destroy Democracy
COPYRIGHT
2001 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.