Author: Graham R. Catlin

  • Where is God in all this ?

    At the time of writing this, both France and the United Kingdom are in the throes of elections with potentially historic implications. Putin is trashing Ukraine where Zelensky dictatorially cancelled Presidential elections recently. Fundamentalist Iran is in process of electing a new President and the bloody Arab-Israeli conflict threatens world stability again. China wants Taiwan, the South China Seas, and to succeed the USA as primary power in the world. Later this year, the USA will relive the angst of the 2020 Presidential election – and possibly much worse. Everywhere there is a clash between the new and the old order. Progressives and Conservatives are implacably opposed. The fundamental fault lines of the world’s political geography are being exposed, and the simmering tensions everywhere raise the menace of political earthquakes, by which I mean war.

    So how should Christians view these developments?

    Basically by adopting the right standpoint – the position from which we view the world. Perspective determines our view of reality and how we make sense of this world.

    To take a specific example, the view of western Progressives means that they refuse to face the reality the rest of us have to live with – they persist with a human centred ideological perspective and paradigm which cannot grasp how to handle the real world. In France right now, the hard Left is on the streets issuing threats of actual violence because their ideological bogeyman could form the next government. Even though the peaceful process of elections to settle conflict and avoid war is actually taking place, the hard Left is filled with righteous anger and sees itself as fully justified in refusing the verdict of the ballot box. Its Marxist, materialist inspiration is exposed and it sees itself as fully justified in taking any measures at all to stop the Fascist Rassemblement National.

    The French hard Left are the true fascists, of course. The RN is no such thing, whatever the media keep intimating. It is the hard Left which petrol bombs the police during demonstrations in France and then portrays that legitimate institution for maintaining law and order as the guilty and illegitimate party. It is the hard Left which peddles the lie that the French police are institutionally racist and inherently inclined to kill – “la police tue !”

    Historically, the fascists in Italy and later the Nazis in Germany behaved like the Bolsheviks before them. Fascism is a left wing phenomenon: the fascists and the Nazis were never Conservative in either mentality or practice; they were totally new movements with hardline ideological agendas, using both street violence and the ballot box as means to their own ends. Like their mentors the Bolsheviks, they had no intention of allowing dissent of thought or action. Disagreement had to be crushed.The original fascists were led by Socialists in both Italy and in Britain, and the full name of the Nazi party is “the national socialist German workers party”. Nationalism was exploited ruthlessly by every Communist regime of the 20th century.

    These were totalitarian and dictatorial movements expressing class struggle and conflict to overthrow the traditional political and social order which existed before them. 

    In contrast, the Christian paradigm teaches that the true, fundamental conflict lies within each of us because we are sinners estranged from God – we are born in a state of inherited sin.

    France’s ideological idol, Rousseau, perverted the spiritual truth of what we are long before Karl Marx. ‘Man is born free but is everywhere in chains’ perverts the Christian truth that we are born in sin, and that is why we are not free – free from the self centredness of sin which poisons human relations and lies at the root of this world’s problems. Rousseau’s philosophy is akin to that of the pagan philosopher Plato whose Republic looks like the blueprint for every 20th century Totalitarian State.

    In short then, we are living in the midst of humanity’s own state of sin, and we are reaping the consequences. The consequences of self delusion; the consequences of idealistic expectations which can only be fulfilled by Jesus Christ as Lord in each and every human heart; the consequences of inequality visited on us by those who claim the eradication of inequality as their goal, believing foolishly that we can trust in fallen humanity as its own god or ideal; the consequences of rampant Materialism in social and economic belief and practice.  Decades of advertising preaching consumption as the goal of life has poisoned our collective subconscious and given rein to the globalist crony capitalism of the billionaire priests of Mammon and their Corporatist acolytes in government Establishments across the world.

    Materialism in philosophy, politics, society, culture, economics, academia, media, law and judiciary is the now determining standpoint and paradigm for western society. Materialism is the Religion which dictates the assumptions and worldview which constrain and determine the mindset of our institutions and culture. And that is the root of the problem: we have adopted the wrong God, and we live with the consequences of disobeying the primary Commandment of our one true Creator:

    Thou shalt have no other gods before ME.

    It is a serious mistake to trust in mere men, or in political parties or idealistic philosophies. Start looking to the true God revealed in the Bible.

    We must see that God is on the throne and that God will not change – we must. The problems of this world confirm the truth revealed by the Christian perspective: –  rebellious, sinful human beings put themselves on the throne of their lives – they demand their own view, ambitions and wants. That is the problem – not God.

    Christians, however, are called to live

    1. trusting in the Son of God who gave himself for us
    2. realising that circumstances are the means God uses to sanctify us – to change us
    3. knowing that God’s purpose is to bring forth a pure, spotless bride for the Son

    All things work together for good to those who love God, who are called according to his purpose.

    ALL THINGS !

  • Macron Magician

     

    God gave them a perfect day. Elsewhere in France the weather was often mixed but on the Normandy landing beaches the sun shone all day long. God did his part. But what did mere mortals do with it ?

    Sadly, mere morals did what they usually do : took it all for granted and forgot about God’s divine intervention to deliver Europe from evil in 1944.

    And again Emmanuel Macron perverted a moment in history to promote himself. He hi-jacked the 80th anniversary commemoration of the sacrifice and historic success of the Allied Landings in Normandy on 6th June 1944.

    6th June 2024 was planned like a French political meeting, rising to a climax and placing Emmanuel Macron centre stage as Leader of a « Free Europe » standing defiantly against the threat from the Russian Tsar, Putin.

    Accordingly, the Canadian and British commemorations were planned for the morning, concurrently. Inevitably, media coverage had to make a choice as to which to report primarily : they went for the British. I was appalled that the commemoration of the vital Canadian contribution was relegated to mere pictures on a split screen segment. Yes, the British ceremony was broadcast, but French media pundits often talked over the translator.

    The American commemoration early afternoon was treated by French government and media as the principal national commemoration of the day. After all, they are fellow Republics. Jo Biden played his part perfectly in Macron’s orchestration when he pointedly identified Putin as the 21st century incarnation of Evil we must now fight.

    The day reached its high point with the international commemoration. The now un-elected President of Ukraine was seated front and centre for all the world to see. All this, however, was but the lead up to Macron’s big speech:

    the fight of democratic freedom loving peoples everywhere is again before us in Ukraine and we must defeat Putin’s tyranny at any cost.

    Now, historical accuracy has rarely been the strongpoint of politicians, ditto their respect for other people’s traditions or views. And Macron is the consummate contemporary politician : it’s all marketing, it’s all ME ; and it’s all callously careless of the very real suffering of millions of ordinary people, be they French, British, Americans, Russians, Germans, Ukrainians, whoever.

    Domestically, Macron has failed. The promised Saviour of 2015 has not delivered. Instead, things have got worse – drugs gangs operate with impunity, and not just in major cities now. Ditto so-called ‘honour crimes’ in suburbs dominated by religious extremism. Ditto lawless teenagers who steal cars and refuse to stop for the police – in the latest instance just this last week, a 14 year old refused to stop for police and soon after crashed, killing an innocent man.

    Since the death of « young Nahel » a year ago, police are frightened to use force to stop tearaways risking the lives of innocent bystanders. « Young Nahel » was well known to police ; had been prosecuted for joy riding previously ; had near missed killing innocent people already the same day an officer decided to pull his pistol and warn the young errant, before firing to stop the reckless 17 year old from getting away again. Within hours Macron himself condemned the police officer, without even knowing all the details. And for his pains, the police officer was suspended, arrested and imprisoned. Result ? Widespread rioting across France as young hooligans saw that the government sided with the miscreant, and distanced themselves from the police. The Far Left felt free to adopt the slogan, “la police tue” and deliberately stoked the turmoil.

    In Macron’s ambitious mind however, domestic problems are not the issue. He now plays on the international stage where the 1944 clash of Good and Evil is alive today between the West and Russia.

    But back in 1944, Britain and the USA held their noses as they actively supplied the war effort of their ally, Stalinist Russia. For western government back then, geopolitics was brutally realistic, not idealistic. Back in 1944, the American President characterised the United States and Britain as « Christian Democracies » in conflict with Evil. Back in 1944 Ukrainians sided with Nazi Germany – there was even a Ukrainian SS unit. And until 2022, liberal and left wing Western media regularly reported on widespread official corruption and the persistence of Nazi militias in Ukraine – a Ukraine in which American businessmen including President Biden’s son, Hunter, were happily doing business …

    So today in the freedom loving Western nations, just what will we send our young people to die for ? Western nations like France in the condition I have already mentioned ? For governments who lock down their populations at the behest of the plutocrats in global petro-chemical industries; for a political culture prepared to oblige ‘free’ populations in supposed ‘democracies’ to depend on the multi-billion dollar Pharmaceutical industry for their regular fix of superfluous ‘vaccine’.

    And now, we are supposed to swallow blatant propaganda about a military invasion from Russia because it suits the political ambitions of a contemporary wannabe Napoleon …

    The same day Macron staged his global propaganda coup, however, the General Secretary of NATO held a press conference with the President of Finland. He stated unequivocally what we can all see for ourselves: Russia is not a viable military threat to the West. That is obvious. They are still slugging it out in eastern Ukraine after more than 2 years. Taking resources from the Baltic area to do so, Russia has no capacity to over-run  Europe, and even less to hold on even if it did.

    The magician deflects our perception from the truth to convince us of a falsehood which serves his own agenda.

    But mere mortals like Mr Macron would do well to heed the Psalmist:

    Be wise now therefore, O ye kings: be instructed, ye judges of the earth. Serve the Lord with fear and rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled  but a little. Blessed are all they that put their trust in him.

  • ‘le débarquement américain, juin 1944’ – history, impression and Oxford today

    A friend came to tea last Sunday afternoon. He had been away on holiday in Jonzac. There he had discovered that two resistance fighters were killed helping the allied invasion in June 1944. In relating his story, he made reference to ‘le débarquement américain’. ‘Le Débarquement américain ?’, I asked. Yes, he said, June 1944. I asked again, ‘le débarquement américain?’. He repeated the affirmation. So a history lesson ensued.

    I pointed out that the Normandy Landings of 6th June 1944 were an Allied assault, not just an American enterprise. Ah yes, he said, as recollection of certain details began to permeate the received French notion that the Americans set them free in 1944.

    Having witnessed the 75th anniversary commemorations of the D-Day landings courtesy of French media and French State stage management, I anticipate the usual distortions of the historical record come the 80th anniversary of the Allied Assault on Normandy on June 6th 2024.

    Let me explain what French television reporting and commentary did with the 75th anniversary commemoration, before I outline my history lesson from last Sunday.

    President Macron and President Trump shared the platform at the American D Day cemetary at Colleville-sur-Mer. French television covered the event most of the day, following every move of the two Presidents. Colleville-sur-Mer was the only media setting for the 75th anniversary celebrations.  It was very clear that this was a Franco-American commemoration. After all, it was the Americans who saved France – virtually all the video footage which you ever see on French television concerning D Day and its consequences portrays American soldiers being hailed by joyful French people.

    By contrast, the British Imperial contribution is a footnote in French consciousness, and this was reflected in French media treatment of the 75th anniversary. The television reporting of another commemoration at a British cemetary that day was limited, for example to a brief insertion in the evening news – a footnote to the main event of the day at the American Cemetary.

    Now, let’s put that French impression in perspective with some raw statistics. One source says that 132,700 soldiers were involved in the primary assault: the Americans constituted 43.3% and the British and Canadians 56.7%. There were 2 British, 1 Canadian and 2 American landing beaches.

    I pointed out to my retired teacher friend that the operational commander for Overlord was General Bernard Montgomery, the British architect and commander of the El Alamein victory. Montgomery also determined the strategy for the battle of Normandy, and was in command before, during and 6 weeks after the landing.

    Operation Overlord was an extremely difficult operation which entailed great risk – it was by far the largest amphibious assault ever undertaken. Montgomery executed his strategy brilliantly.

    What was his strategy ?

    The Canadians and British were positioned on the left flank of the attack, the Americans on the right. Each flank had its task. The left flank was to meet the inevitable German counter-attack around Caen, and hold it off, pinning down vital German forces while the right flank gained strategic ground, sweeping in a great arc around the back of the Germans from the right. In doing so, the Americans were to secure the vital seaports of Cherbourg and Brest. Montgomery used the metaphor of a door on a hinge: the left flank was the hinge and the right flank was the door intended to swing wide open to the right and rear of the German defences. This was precisely how the operation unfolded

    But of course, this strategy was designed to win a strategic military campaign; it was not concerned with writing history.

    What goes into the public consciousness of such events, however, are certain aspects of what actually happened, NOT how and why the whole strategy played out. So the French collective memory of the invasion of Normandy tends to revolve in my experience around 3 aspects of what happened, and not the entire record and its explanation.

    One aspect of French collective memory is the British bombardment of Caen, seen as gratuitous destruction. That military tactic  feeds into the underlying general, historical distrust of “les Anglais”. Another aspect is the suffering and death endured by the Americans pinned down at Omaha beach. And the third aspect arises from the fact that the Americans were charged with the big sweeping movements to outflank the Germans. That meant that the Americans were highly visible as they sped through France towards Paris, liberating town after town.

    That was all part of the plan. But the public impression was that the Americans were doing the liberating while the useless and perfidious British failed to take Caen. The plan, however, required Canadian and British imperial troops to take the main weight of the German counter-attack so that the Americans on the right flank could establish the Allied hold on terrain well beyond the initial bridgehead. The failure to break out of the bridgehead at Anzio in early 1944 could not be repeated in this critical and strategic operation in Normandy.

    So, to this day, the Americans remain the real heroes of the hour in the French collective memory. That is understandable, but it is not the whole story, it is not the whole truth. As such it is not history but impression or legend selected according to the predispostions of the French: in their eyes, the Americans are fellow Republicans and defenders of the rights of the people; whereas the British are monarchists and the historic foe which cannot be trusted – perfidious Albion. Impressions based on aspects of the whole truth and which reinforce received prejudice are legend or propaganda, they are not history.

    Yet this is the sloppy approach by leading academics in history, and other disciplines in the University of Oxford concerning analysis of the Russian invasion of Ukraine since February 2022. Such predisposition and consequent editing of evidence are worthy of political protagonists, not academics in a great University. See The Faculty of History, for example, in my previous post titled: “Will incoming Vice Chancellor Irene Tracey investigate the evidence of aberration at Oxford and take corrective action ?”

     

  • Emmanuel Macron or Macroleon Bonaparte?

    Beginnings and origins are important. They shed light on what comes later. If we take, for example, the book of Beginnings called Genesis in the Bible, we see human nature in the raw : political machination and the lust for power are there from the start. People prepared to kill other people …

    I live in France where Monsieur Macron is playing the part of Historic Leader – enshrining the right to abortion in the French Constitution, and insisting that Putin must be defeated in Ukraine, by whatever means. My longstanding suspicions about the man are being confirmed.

    As a 15 year old keen on play acting, Macron had a romantic affair with his drama teacher to whom he remains faithfully married. He has higher degrees in Philosophy and Public Policy, and also graduated from ENA – the elite training academy for top administrators and politicians. At Rothschild bank he made his millions, and was appointed to the finance ministry by President Hollande. There he brought in France’s market de-regulation law. [For his CV, see # below]. So how did a man who had never been elected to any public office before suddenly become President ?

    Hollande had been a dud president. His party knew he could never be re-elected. So, the centre Left political Establishment of France needed to find a successor. Marine Le Pen was more and more popular as she addressed the basic concerns of ordinary voters. The Establishment needed a credible alternative …

    The Establishment needed someone new and dynamic to answer popular discontent with politics – remember, social democrat Hollande appeared more concerned to bed a famous actress than solve France’s unemployment problem. Well, in came the professional marketing men from the American PR consultancy, McKinsey [re. that story, see ## below] The strategy was clever. Out went teams of youngsters wearing « En Marche » [E.M. Emmanuel Macron] sweatshirts, ostensibly to find out what people really wanted from politics. Simultaneously Macron held public meetings around France to which thousands flocked. For several months in 2015/16, Macron presented himself as the Saviour of France ; and during those same months he proclaimed not one word of policy … He simply traded on popular discontent and on a popular craving for The Answer : he gave them a clever, charming and youthful media star from outside traditional politics. The whole campaign was brilliantly managed by the professionals in popular psychology and advertising. They stole the populists clothes and simultaneously created the domination of “Centrism” in French national politics, marginalising the emerging radical stars of Left and Right – Melenchon and Le Pen respectively.

    This is the Macron M.O. – marketing and media manipulation. This M.O. explains all the contradictions of his seven years as President. In reality, he has failed : social tension and serious crime have got worse as he persists in media management, rather than address the actual cause of problems. Membership of the European Union is crippling many French working people and subservience to the Ethos and Culture of the European Convention on Human Rights is stripping France of its identity and morale.

    In reality, Macron is a front man for the globalist, materialist, humanist agenda of western plutocrats ….

    Macron believes in that agenda. This explains his year long campaign to enshrine abortion in the French Constitution – a campaign declared on International Women’s day in 2023 and orchestrated to culminate on International Women’s day 2024 with a staged, televised public sealing of the Amendment. It explains his extraordinary declaration that Putin must not win in Ukraine, and that there can be no red lines as to what the West should do.

    Now, there is a patently Ideological dimension here. Putin champions traditional values and criticises the Woke West.

    But is that the whole story? Does that warrant risking all out war in Europe, and even across the world ?

    In my view, Macron has unbounded ambition and a Napoleonic perception of himself…

    I suspect that Macron is preparing the way to become Leader of Europe. War will give him the pretext of a State of Emergency, and the excuse to remain President despite the 2 term constraint in the French Constitution. The stakes are high ; the risks also. He will know Von Clausewitz thesis and he will know Napoleon’s biography : how he rose to power and how he maintained himself in power.

    War – after all – is merely the pursuit of policy by other means.

    # https://www.britannica.com/biography/Emmanuel-Macron

    ##

    https://www.france24.com/en/france/20221125-french-prosecutor-to-investigate-role-of-consultancy-firms-in-presidential-elections

  • Does brain research corroborate “Dominus illuminatio mea” ?

    On 7th February 2024 more than 200 people crowded into the Chapel at Pusey House, Oxford to listen to a lecture by researcher psychiatrist Dr Iain McGilchrist who spoke on the theme: “Dominus Illuminatio Mea: our brains, our delusions and the future of the University”. I commend it to you. The video can be accessed via Dr McGilchrist’s own website at

    Iain McGilchrist: Dominus Illuminatio Mea: Our Brains, Our Delusions, & the Future of the University

    in view of the above, and the thesis it postulates, I am minded to publish below a blog post drafted in  November 2022 but not actually posted at that time. It was titled:

    “Thomas Paine-us Illuminatio mea”:

    I have great admiration for Thomas Paine: he was indisputably a man of principle and conviction, fearless and articulate in expressing the Enlightenment message. He was an apostle of the Materialist, rationalist faith in the superiority of Man, taking the message to America, Britain and France.

    To read Paine’s work is to be carried along by a religious fervour of justice for all. Today Paine’s philosophy of the Material Man has many influential adherents in western institutions.

    Institutions like the University of Oxford are a good barometer of the ruling intellectual climate of the day. The animating spirit of contemporary Oxford exudes the same Materialistic faith proclaimed with such evangelistic zeal by Paine.

    At Oxford,  Paine’s principles appear to be

    Axiomatic Dogma

    So, Oxford today is Republican and anti Monarchist. Therefore official reaction to the death of Elizabeth II was terse and factual; an acknowledgement of a lady widely respected. Elizabeth was a wonderful human being, but this had nothing to do with her Christian faith, nor her role as Governor of the archaic Church of England.

    The consequent accession of Charles to the throne is an unfortunate event in an age when Reason should have dismissed such undemocratic nonsense to the ‘trash-can’ of the past. Therefore Charles accession will only be mentioned when unavoidable.

    Two pillars of the traditional English Establishment and Constitution are thereby being edited from the record in a campaign to reframe public consciousness according to the new faith.  It matters not that the systematic conservation of the totality of knowledge and understanding of our existence is the business of a “University”.

    Clearly contemporary Oxford does not see things this way. Like the adherents of all proselytising beliefs, Paine~ian Oxford is concerned to protect the young, the impressionable and the un-enlightened from ignorance and from their own mistaken ideas. Like Paine they know far better. Just as Paine condemned Edmund Burke’s insightful “Reflections on the Revolution in France”, so Oxonian experts see today’s reactionaries as advocates of “horrid principles” which are “poison”. Accordingly, their behaviour “cannot be pardoned”.

    Oxford was therefore embarrassed by the Roger Scruton Memorial lectures held in its celebrated Sheldonian Theatre this term. Scruton  may have been one of the most significant Philosophers of recent times, but he was the principal British apologist of the Right.  Worse still, the lectures were given by Britain’s most strident right-wing commentators.

    They included Emeritus Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, Nigel Biggar  – the scholar who trashed the Apostle Paine’s Rights Idealism with his 2020 book, “What’s Wrong with Rights  ?”

    Worse still, they included Peter Hitchens the rabble rousing, death penalty advocating, Trotskyist turncoat who betrayed the Cause in his youth and has spent his entire career casting doubt upon the triumphant Materialist Revolution.

    Hence there could be no promotion, recognition, or even mention of the Scruton Memorial lectures by the University Establishment.

    Edmund Burke diagnosed this censorious mindset as “the spirit of atheistical fanaticism“. And in the same 1790 treatise he warned us that such Enlightened persons, “…. had some years ago formed something like a regular plan for the destruction of the Christian religion. This object they pursued with a degree of zeal which hitherto had been discovered only in the propagators of some system of piety.

    Such zeal is evident at Exeter College in the University of Oxford. The College was founded by the Bishop of Exeter in 1314 to prepare men for Church ministry. In 1565 the College was given a critical financial endowment by Sir William Petre. That endowment was made for the “increase of sound learning, and for the common profit of the Church of Christ and of this realm and of the subjects of the same“.

    Last year, however, the Enlightened Fellows of the College obtained the blessing of the Vice Chancellor and Council of the University to update the Statutes of the College to conform with today’s reality. Exeter College now promotes the crypto-communist, American ‘Black Lives Matter’ campaign with Paine inspired wisdom and zeal.

    I am wondering, however, when the College or the University will find time and resources to mount campaigns for

    • black African Christians routinely murdered by literalist, politicised Islamic extremists; or
    • for European school teachers and journalists so badly persecuted by said religious extremists that they now live under constant police protection …

    The answer to this paradox was provided by the University itself in the November 4th 2022 Romanes lecture given by the Irish Taoiseach, Micheal Martin.  He spoke with deep concern for liberty and democracy, for diversity, equality and inclusion. But when it came to specific elaborations, Mr Martin’s understanding of those words appeared to be at odds with their inherent meaning.

    Brexit and the phenomenon of electing right-wing governments generally are “authoritarian” and “populist”. In fact they constitute a “very direct threat to liberal democracy”. It is clearly Mr Martin’s view that a democratic vote can only be legitimate when it endorses the agenda and worldview of liberal democratic Centrists. All other perspectives are “extremism”. Given that the existence of the European Union is axiomatic, hallowed Truth,  no normal, rational and civilised person could possibly disagree.

    Vaccination against the Covid pandemic has been an indisputable success. People who question this must be dangerous extremists.

    EU immigration policy is also a success – even though member States still fail to agree a policy of distributing illegal immigrants among them, after more than two decades. As I write, in November 2022, France and Italy are yet again at loggerheads on this very issue.

    “Populism encourages active distrust of government”, says Mr Martin. But his speech does not address the root issues behind ‘populist’ appeal. Why ? Because such problems exist only in the minds of the populists and their ignorant or duped electorate.

    “Active distrust of government” ?

    The 13th century Magna Carta and the 1689 Bill of Rights were the institutionalised, constitutional “distrust of government” and the very basis of the traditional English conception of liberty. And the separation of powers in French and US constitutions ?

  • Biggar, Empire and Academia

    Nigel Biggar is Emeritus Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology in the University of Oxford. However, many fellow academics regard him as a wicked reactionary. That is reason enough to read his latest book, Colonialism: a moral reckoning. I have just finished it;  I thoroughly recommend it.

    The dust jacket cites commendations from historians like Professor Robert Tombs and Dr Zareer Masani, while Times Columnist, Matthew Parris states this:

    As a not un-critical child of empire, I think his assessment is fair and accurate

    “Fair and accurate” – words in desperate need of revival today.

    Professor Biggar earns such praise by his impressive demonstration of courage and intellectual prowess in Colonialism a moral reckoning. There, he tackles head on the indictments of Empire made by progressive ideologues in academia. Biggar rehearses and analyses the evidence from both sides to paint a more realistic picture of the past than that promoted by today’s Ideologues with a political agenda.  In my view, there are leading figures in the faculty of history at Oxford today who should learn from Professor Biggar’s approach and honest realism …

    For one thing, Professor Biggar starts with the perspective of the past as seen through the eyes of the players involved; he does not start with contemporary political prejudice against the concept and practice of empire. He therefore starts with reality, not today’s Manichaean, simplistic, absolutist moral rectitude. He is manifestly concerned for what actually happened and why; he is not looking to find evidence to support his preconceived view of the world – witness his clear avowal of horrors like Amritsar and Mau-Mau Kenya.

    What also stands out for me is that Biggar can take the broad sweep of the historical evidence and explain that diverse evidence coherently. He achieves this because he takes his line from the evidence, not from contemporary fashions in ideology. To take just one simple but serious example, the British Empire exploited slavery and yet it also actively sought to destroy slavery: quite simply the second 150 years contrasts with the first 150 years.  And it contrasts because British government  insisted on the primacy of moral imperative in imperial affairs – so the Royal Navy actively and systematically put down the slave trade. This strategic fact is wilfully ignored in the world of woke today because it contradicts the pre-set moral mindset derived from anti-academic techniques like critical race theory.

    I find Professor Biggar’s prose style to be in the best tradition of Oxford dons – precise, logical, fluent, clear and simple; it is  not pretentious, contorted, or convoluted like much that is written in academia today.

    And I like his personal touch; he opens the book with his own painful experiences, and he reveals that a major publishing company cancelled its contract to publish Colonialism. I like too that he is up front and crystal clear about his own personal beliefs and values. He is not afraid to own his position; nor indeed is he afraid to tackle the shallow and illogical thinking of his opponents. Note I say tackle their thinking; he does not attack the person ! This contrasts with many opponents who default to the sly and sloppy device of insulting the man sooner than engage with the evidence and argument; of course, to engage with him would be to accept a paradigm which they reject out of hand. Or, perhaps, because they cannot answer him ! Where he takes them on, he demolishes their view for the simple reason that their thinking and their evidence do not stand up to serious scrutiny.

    I especially like Biggar’s clear and straightforward grasp of what history is. It is traditional and simple: it treats history as the narrative of past events leading to the present – the chronological narrative. On page 17 he states that Colonialism is not a history because “the book is not ordered chronologically”. Instead, he says, the book is “a moral evaluation”.

    Yes, the book does indeed make “a moral reckoning”.  But in order to make a moral reckoning of historical events and evidence, and in order to make a moral reckoning of the assertions of academics and historians about a historical phenomenon like the British Empire, Biggar necessarily examines the historical record and the historiography. Indeed, he provides a very effective “framework of a bare chronology” in section VII of the Introduction. He appears in fact to be writing a history of the British Empire because recent historiography is just so bad !

    I suspect such coyness about behaving like a historian has something to do with the treatment he has received from dozens of the More Enlightened professional historians at the University of Oxford in letters to the London Times. From that platform, they have criticised Professor Biggar for trespassing on their patch of academic study, asserting from their own sense of moral and intellectual superiority that historians don’t make moral judgements on the past … Well, evidently they do because a moral theologian has had to take many of them to task for doing just that with the history of the British Empire. Indeed Professor Biggar examines this very question of moral viewpoint in historiography in section IV of his Introduction.

    I also question the title of the book. Colonialism is not in fact a book assessing all empires and colonisation throughout history; it is specifically about the British Empire over some 3 centuries. Again, this has something to do with today’s context: Biggar is using the British Empire and its historiography to counter-attack the dangerous assaults on the historical record by progressive minded intellectuals. He is taking on the anti-colonial lobby. That presumably explains the less than 100% accuracy of the title. Indeed, he himself explains that there is a distinction between empire and colonisation in section V of his Introduction.

    I must raise too the question of Biggar’s assumptions. He accurately analyses and exposes the failure of the anti-colonial lobby to examine their axiomatic assertions – there is a notable example in section VI of chapter 8, where he tackles the view of Dan Hicks, professor of contemporary archaeology in the University of Oxford and curator of the prestigious Pitt Rivers Museum. There Biggar exposes Hick’s use of abstractions like “militarism”, “racism” and “proto-fascism” to define colonialism. Biggar observes: “None are explained or justified. They are taken as axiomatic”.

    But Nigel Biggar doesn’t really examine and explain his own political and moral assumptions about the moral superiority of the western world’s liberal values, either. He assumes their superiority. In his defence I will say that he implictly explains by reference to specifics like the suppression of sati in India and of slavery. Indeed, most people reading his book will broadly agree his assumptions about the western world’s liberal, rules based order because they understand what those terms mean. All the same, there is a certain deficit here which I identify in order to make my main criticism now.

    Professor Biggar is deploying this much needed thesis, perspective and analysis because he is an apologist for today’s Western dominance of the global world order. He wants to bolster morale for the battle against Russian authoritarianism and Chinese totalitarianism. He is concerned, too, about the disintegration of the United Kingdom – see section 2 of the Introduction.

    But the threat to our western civilisation today does not come primarily from Russia or China. It comes from within – it comes from the corruption engendered by greed at the highest levels of the most powerful western corporations and governments; it comes from the corruption of public life by the assault on public values and morals by hyper libertarianism and crass consumerism; it comes from a religious fanaticism which believes in heaven on earth courtesy of a new world order of woke. It is the fruit of the very “Liberal Democracy” Professor Biggar is concerned to preserve. It comes from what Edmund Burke described as “the spirit of atheistical fanaticism”. As an expert on Burke, Professor Biggar knows this. ##

    Our problems in the West today arise from the “liberal democracy” which Professor Biggar wants to defend against authoritarianism and totalitarianism. That “liberal democracy” has spawned a woke variant of totalitarianism and illiberal intolerance. Today’s West espouses demeaning Materialism and its associated aggressive, Godless Atheism. We have eradicated the Christian culture which distinguished western civilsation. We have lost the “Christian democracy” which obtained in the later stages of the British Empire.

    Chairman of the Edmund Burke Foundation, Yoram Hazony explains this cultural revolution in chapter 6 of his “Conservatism: a Rediscovery“. The first section of the chapter is titled: From Christian Democracy to Liberal Democracy.  There Hazony explains the critical distinction between pre Second World War Christian democracy and post Second World War Liberal democracy. Professor Biggar knows about the post war development of an insidious Rights culture – he explains it in his last book, “What’s Wrong with Rights?”  Why then does Professor Biggar not espouse “Christian democracy” against the “liberal democracy” which has spawned the very problems in academia to which he, quite rightly, objects  ?

    GRC

    # #  I identify this vital but overlooked assertion by Edmund Burke at paragraph 251 in my edition of his Reflections on the Revolution in France

  • Will Oxford’s new Vice Chancellor solve the problem of political prejudice in the administration of the University ?

    Oxford’s famous Sheldonian Theatre hosted two fascinating lectures this term. The first was delivered by an Emeritus Regius Professor while the other was delivered by the Prime Minister of a European Union member State. The subject matter of both lectures was political. The first was delivered by a self identified Burkean Conservative, while the other was given by a practising politician fundamentally committed to what he identifies as “liberal democracy”.

    So what is the problem ?

    Answer:  the prejudiced treatment accorded to these lecturers by the administrative authorities at Oxford.

    Irish Prime Minister, Michael Martin, was invited by the outgoing Vice Chancellor to deliver the annual Romanes lecture. The lecture provided an opportunity for Vice Chancellor, Louise Richardson, to make a political statement before she leaves next month. The lecture was – of course – promoted by the University on its website and recorded on its video streaming channel. The lecture was titled, ‘The Centre Will Hold: Liberal Democracy and the Populist Threat’.

    Such promotion was not extended to Emeritus Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology in the University of Oxford, Nigel Biggar –  even though his lecture was a pertinent and coherent analysis citing solid evidence for his thesis. His lecture was not deemed worthy of any mention in the headline “News” or “Events” pages of the University’s main website . Why ?

    Professor Biggar’s lecture challenged the evident shortcomings of today’s progressive thinking in academia on race and colonialism. It was titled, ‘Deconstructing decolonisation’. While it was indeed advertised on the Sheldonian’s page of the university website, the video link of the his lecture is not available;  so, I will provide you with the evidence of my assertions about Professor Biggar’s lecture –   you can find it here !

    We know that Professor Biggar’s views are anathema to political Orthodoxy in the Humanities at Oxford because much of the Faculty of History in the University wrote to the Times in 2017 to distance themselves from his research into Colonialism. This problem of political prejudice at Oxford appears to continue: I could find not one single video of a Nigel Biggar lecture on the University’s You Tube channel. 

    Professor Biggar is, however, an exemplary scholar. That is evident in the lecture he gave this term in the Sheldonian as part of this year’s Memorial lectures in honour of Sir Roger Scruton, the celebrated Philosopher – link cited above. For any one in doubt, a mountain of evidence for Biggar’s competence is provided in his 2020 book, “What’s Wrong with Rights?”.  The opening sentence in that book is telling. Biggar writes:

    I did not know the answers when I began this book, but I did know some of the questions.

    Given such a degree of willingness to go where the evidence leads, we are forced then to ask why so many academics at Oxford have a problem with Professor Biggar ?

    A clue to their mentality is provided by

    • the choice of Micheal Martin as the Romanes lecturer this year;
    • the title of his lecture;
    • what he had to say; and
    • the terms in which he said it.

    The title of Mr Martin’s speech was “The Centre will hold: Liberal Democracy and the Populist Threat”. It assumes that his viewpoint is shared by all reasonable people. Indeed, his preconceptions are so axiomatic, Mr Martin saw no need to examine them. He simply assumed that his audience knows where the “Centre” of politics lies; what “populism” is; that populism is a “threat”; and that “liberal democracy” is under seige.

    Mr Martin did say that Liberal democracy is a set of values characterised by freedom, democracy, equality, diversity and inclusion. Well, fine; but everyone knows that the words “diversity” and “inclusion” are employed routinely by those with a particular worldview. That worldview promotes “Human Rights” in a way which privileges certain rights over all other rights and over all other legitimate and practical considerations. That worldview is itself a philosophy which Professor Biggar identifies as “Rights Fundamentalism” in his book, “What’s wrong with Rights?”.

    My concern about Mr Martin’s worldview is amply justified by the content of his Romanes lecture. “Populism” is “authoritarian” and exploits certain issues which are a self evident threat to “liberal democracy”.

    So, what are these problematical issues ?

    They are, according to Mr Martin:

    • questioning the validity of the European Union
    • questioning the validity of Covid 19 vaccination
    • questioning the EU’s handling of illegal immigration

    Now, I always understood that it is a basic function of university research to question worldviews and hypotheses and to posit answers. However Mr Martin tells us that it is extreme and dangerous to question what he regards as axiomatic.

    If we accept Mr Martin’s logic, then universities should become propagandists of current political Orthodoxy.

    Worse still, it becomes clear during Mr Martin’s speech that his use of the words liberal, democracy, equality, diversity and inclusion is at odds with the plain meaning of those words. So,

    • Diversity of opinion about Europe, vaccination or immigration;
    • equal treatment of those with such different views;  and
    • the inclusion of those dissenting views in the debate going forward

    are all viewed by Mr Martin as evidence of an extreme and authoritarian threat to liberal democracy, ipso facto.

    He tells us that the Brexit vote was “a tragic error”. And of course sensible people learn from their mistakes and put them right. It is very clear indeed that Mr Martin does not view Brexit as a democratic decision which should now re-determine the parameters of politics in a liberal democracy like the United Kingdom. Nor is there is anything for the EU to learn about why the UK voted Leave.  As Mr Martin made clear, the EU is the most successful international project of democratic co-operation ever; those who question its validity are therefore deeply suspect.

    The plain demonstrable, historical facts about each of these issues, however, contradict Mr Martin’s patent reinterpretation of reality.

    Martin asserts that the EU has handled the immigration crisis well.

    And yet after decades of crisis, the EU still has no proper working protocol and procedure for the reception and distribution of ‘asylum seekers’ among EU nations. Witness the current diplomatic confrontation between France and Italy on this issue. Whatever your point of view on this, the failure of the EU to manage this crisis is scandalous. 

    Mr Martin associates authoritarianism with those who question Covid vaccination, whereas the truth is the very opposite. What he blandly and curtly asserts as “public interventions” in response to Covid 19 were in reality an unprecedented peace-time usurpation of powers over the individual everyday lives of free citizens by liberal democratic governments. Such governments even resorted to setting up high level teams to implement ‘engineering of consent’ – the despicable practice first promoted by Edward Bernays, the ‘father’ of modern mass marketing and advertising.

    The question must therefore be put. Will the new Vice Chancellor, Irene Tracey, take steps to eliminate political prejudice in the operations of university administration ? Will she ensure equality of treatment by the university authorities for the work of scholars like Professor Biggar ? In short, will she reject the preference for patently biased and distorted narratives about liberty, equality, diversity and inclusion in order to make unfettered academic enquiry the over-riding priority ?

    Watch this space !

     

    Reference:

    Nigel Biggar’s “What’s Wrong with Rights” is available here

     

  • Will incoming Vice Chancellor Irene Tracey investigate the evidence of aberration at Oxford and take corrective action ?

    The University of Oxford recently released the news that medical scientist Dr Irene Tracey, currently Warden of Merton College, has been nominated as the next Vice Chancellor of the University. #

    In the announcement outlining her profile and nomination, the work of Vice Chancellor is described as:

    The Vice-Chancellor is Oxford University’s senior officer, responsible for the strategic direction and leadership of the world’s top-ranked university. Professor Tracey’s nomination has been approved by the University’s Council and is now subject to approval by Congregation, the University’s sovereign body.

    The critical, vital question for an incoming Vice Chancellor is this:

    What philosophy or worldview will inform Dr Tracey’s approach, initiatives and projects during her 7 year term starting January 2023 ?

    Will she simply assume her predecessor’s perspective and policies, as Chancellor Patten suggests when he states:

    I am sure she will build successfully on the outstanding achievements of Louise Richardson and lead Oxford in coping with the big challenges which lie ahead.

    Or will she step back and question whether her predecessor’s actions, aims and methods were entirely appropriate for a world class university ?

    Will she promote the creed of “Diversity” as religiously as her predecessor by, for example, continuing the “Vice Chancellor’s awards for Diversity” ?

    Will she maintain the university’s co-operation with totalitarian China ?

    Will she precipitate the University into high profile and contentious projects like the race to develop a Covid 19 vaccine ?

    Will she allow big corporate interests to determine the University’s ethos and projects according to their agenda, or will she ensure that a university’s primary role is sacrosanct ?

    Will she demonstrate the same attitude to national traditions as Louise Richardson has manifestly done in ignoring the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee ?  University reference to the Platinum Jubilee was tangential, publishing a post on May 30th discussing Golden jubilees of English monarchs in history; the tenor of that post was summed up in a comment that jubilees were contrived to hype interest in an institution otherwise not especially popular. ##

    It will of course depend on whether Dr Tracey takes time to step back and consider the ethos prevailing at Oxford; to make an assessment of its inspiration and its consequences; to consider alternatives and their merits; to make a decision to change direction and lead the University into less contentious and dangerous waters.

    But if she assumes that Dr Richardson had the right philosophy, then nothing will change.

    I believe that would be a very serious mistake. Surely the fundamental role of a University is to maintain and communicate the vast corpus of knowledge, skills and understanding accumulated to date, and to conduct research concerned to verify and extend that vast corpus ?

    My concern is that the maintenance, communication and extension of the corpus of knowledge, skills and understanding is being influenced by ideological and by commercial ends. That in pursuing such potentially conflicting aims, the university is being distracted – even perverted – from its fundamental role and purpose.

    Topics highlighted by the University just this year manifest a particular worldview and mentality at work which is causing this conflict. That worldview may be characterised as internationalist and anti-patriotic; ‘progressive’ and anti-traditionalist; ideologically partisan, not objective; deductive not inductive.

    There is a particular mindset associated with this dominating worldview at work in the University of Oxford. This mindset has a deductive approach which unquestioningly applies a certain progressive moral stance, via which all evidence is then assessed. The moral stance adopted is treated as the ruling point of reference according to which all else must be assessed in order to be commended or condemned.

    Will the new Vice Chancellor bring to bear on this problematic mindset her valuable skills as a natural scientist ?  Will she adopt an inductive approach: that is, examine hypotheses empirically by reference to what the evidence suggests, rather than assuming the hypothesis to be self evidently correct ?

    The problematic mindset to which I refer is clearly at work in the Humanities and Social Sciences at Oxford. Dr Tracey’s scientific training will be invaluable in tackling a problem which sorely needs to be tested empirically.

    Should she apply her undoubted skills as a natural scientist, I firmly believe that she will be successful in diverting the University away from the embarrassing trajectory it now appears to be on. She will have done both Oxford and education today an invaluable and historic service.

    I am, of course, obliged to cite evidence for the problem I identify. I will take one example from three areas of university life:

    1. the history faculty
    2. a constituent college
    3. a university inter-disciplinary forum

    1. The faculty of History

    There is a blatant assumption that Ukraine is right and Russia is wrong because Russia invaded an independent sovereign state on 24th February 2022.

    In assessing this, the University staff in the disciplines of history, politics and philosophy have revealed a moral predisposition which pre-determines their analysis, even to the point of censoring highly pertinent evidence.

    One blatant example will suffice.  The University website page for Ukraine has an “Expert Opinion” post dated March 9th written by Peter Frankopan, Professor of Global History. ###  Frankopan cites George Kennan’s 1946 Long Telegram about Stalinist Russia and the need for the West to contain the Soviet Union. It is demonstrable that Frankopan cites this evidence because it suits his pre-determined, moralistic thesis: the West knows best and Putin is a Soviet revivalist.

    Evidence ?

    Frankopan censors from his discussion Kennan’s much later – and far more apposite – assessment published on 5th February 1997 in an Op-Ed piece for the New York Times. Kennan called expanding NATO into eastern Europe “ the most fateful error of American policy in the entire post Cold War period“, that it would “impel Russian foreign policy in directions decidedly not to our liking” and said that it was “doubly unfortunate considering the total lack of any necessity for this move“. ####

    As an Oxford professor of Global History, Peter Frankopan can hardly plead ignorance about Kennan’s 1997 Op-ed !

    Whether Russia is right or wrong, is not the concern of historians. The basic business of the historian is a comprehensive review of all the evidence and interpretations thereof, before arriving at a representative assessment in order to explain what has happened. Like the natural scientist, the historian should be examining every hypothesis against the full weight of all the evidence.

    Perhaps natural science expert, Dr Tracey, will help Oxford’s aberrant history faculty get back on track and leave moralising to the politically partisan etc.

    Frankopan manifestly fails his basic duty as historian. He does so because he is subject to the pervasive, moralistic mindset at work in Education today. If something is un-just, it must be put right, whatever the cost, and whatever the counter claims, arguments and evidence.

    2. A constituent College of the University

    Exeter College is indulging the same Righteous Rectitude as Dr Frankopan with its recently announced Black Lives Matter “competition”. ##### There is a clear intimation that all students are expected to demonstrate their commitment to this Cultural Revolution and participate. There are even funds available for those who lack the means.   Ergo, students have no excuse for failing to confess conformity

    Now, it should not be necessary for me to point out that George Floyd’s death in May 2020 was a disgrace in a civilised society. Indeed I have blogged elsewhere about it. But George Floyd’s murder has been made an iconic and ideological reference point.

    I would like to know why this man’s death is being held out as an opportunity for everyone to express their conformity to the expected ideological line – as if it is not self-evident that murder is evil and that racism is indeed obnoxious.

    I would also like to know why the focus is on one man’s death because he is a blackman in the USA, and not the murder of innocents wherever they may be. Is there a campaign anywhere in the University of Oxford about the brutal, ideologically motivated slaying of teacher Samuel Paty, also killed in 2020 ? Would that not be more pertinent, given that he was an educator, killed for doing his job ? And where is the Oxford campaign for the slaughter of black people attending a Pentecost church service in Nigeria last weekend ? This is but the latest bout of murderous attacks on Christians, a social group with by far the worst lethal persecution rate on the planet ?

    This is disturbing. It betrays an ideological paradigm which values certain people, but is prepared to discount others. Samuel Paty is ignored because he is a White Man murdered by a fanatic adhering to a fundamentalist, political interpretation of Islam. Indeed black people in Africa slaughtered and maimed while attending a church service are also overlooked in this ideological paradigm simply because they are Christians –  a religion blamed for its association with the evil of European colonialism. #### ####

    Such hypocrisy arises from a closed, censorious  and intolerant mentality. This directly undermines the traditional academic quest for the truth. It is a direct threat to the civilised and open debate so vital to the academic pursuit of truth. But it is being treated as Orthodoxy entitled to judge other views as dangerous heresy. In fact, it is – itself – dangerous.

    Interestingly, the Rector of Exeter College is in breach of his own sworn oath to retire from office in 2016. He is required under the College Statutes to uphold those Statutes – as are the Fellows of that College’s Governing Body. However, they lay claim to Equality law concerning “ageism” to excuse their dereliction of duty.  The offending Statutory provision to retire was removed last year by the same Rector and Fellows who chose not to provide explicit Statutory limits to their terms of office in the same way specified in other colleges and posts at the university. #+#

    3. An inter-disciplinary forum

    My evidence is an event held the same week as the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. Oxford’s showcase website completely ignored the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee celebrations. But Oxford did take the trouble to host an event called, “A conversation on policing, prisons and abolition”, held on 1st June as part of the “Race and Resistance Programme”. ### ### This programme is conducted by TORCH – the Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities.

    One of the two speakers at the event was Dr Sarah Lamble who is “a Reader in Criminology and Queer Theory at the School of Law, Birkbeck, with a focus on gender, sexuality and imprisonment, as well as alternative and transformative justice“. Lamble is also an organiser with “Abolitionist Futures”.

    When we go to the link for Abolitionist Futures we find an explicit and uncompromising campaign demanding, I quote,

    a future without prisons, police and punishment

    ### #### The website also states:

    It’s time to imagine and build
    the world we want

    Indeed – pure imagination which has no grounding in the realities of human experience. Previous experience is evidently rejected as unquestionably corrupt and useless.Therefore only an abstract vision of what ought to be will suffice. Evidence is irrelevant:  the fundamental component of scientific enquiry is annulled…

    This qualifies in my humble opinion as extremist, highly contentious political activity. Yet it is held out as a serious discussion.

    If this is indeed an academic enquiry into a particular ideology or campaign, then presumably Oxford will be hosting other extremist and highly contentious political debates. For example, why not host a seminar on Mein Kampf, presented by a dedicated white supremacist ? After all, that would

    • be extreme
    • deeply troubling to most people’s idea of societal norms and
    • present a vision of the world wholly divorced from the reality of how to maintain a civilised society

    What do you think of this proposition – and why ?

     

    ###References###

    # news of Dr Tracey’s nomination

    ##  Jubilee Kings post May 30th 2022

    ###  Frankopan’s Expert Opinion post on March 9th

    ####     Kennan New York Times 5th February 1997

    #####   Exeter College Black Lives Matter competition

    ### ### Conversation on Prisons, Policing, Abolition

    ### ####     About Page for ‘Abolitionist Futures’

    #### #### Pentecost killings in Nigeria 2022

    #+# Rector and Fellows of Exeter College broke their sworn oath and what this means

  • Is Oxford university’s role intellectual or political?

    Just what does a university exist to do ? Does it exist to promote a particular philosophy or political programme ? Does it exist to make society more equal and just ?

    Well, the purpose declared in documents like Statutes indicates universities exist to promote research, learning and teaching – sometimes religion too because of the Christian heritage of western nations.

    Research, learning and teaching, for sure. That is what universities do. That is their niche role. They do not, then, exist to pursue campaigns. Rather, they are places where intellectuals pose questions and suggest answers based on argument and on evidence. They promote research and learning by means of the intellectual process of thinking and of acquiring knowledge of our existence, be that of the physical world [natural sciences and engineering] or of our interactions as human beings over the entire range of those interactions [humanities and social sciences].

    In terms of encouraging thought and acquiring knowledge, it must surely therefore be in-appropriate for universities to pursue campaigns. A cause and its promotion are necessarily one view, reflecting a particular philosophy and the ambitions of those who adhere to that view.

    My view of the world is Christian, and my politics are Burkean Conservatism. That explains where I am coming from.  I believe such transparency is both necessary and ethical.

    If your politics and religion differ from mine, you may well take serious exception were my religion and my politics promoted by the University of Oxford as if they were objective truth to which everyone should subscribe.

    A university must examine and assess all human activity. It does so by investigating. But as we investigate in order to seek truth, the wise person and the good academic are aware of the truth about themselves as seekers of truth, and the truth about the methodology they employ.

    Historiography raises such questions for historians.  In my day, undergraduate historians were taught this in their very first term at Oxford.

    But such vital self awareness is evidently neglected in certain quarters in Oxford today. Take the editorial line of the University’s website, for example. There, Ukraine has been thrust into prominence, and the editorial treatment appears worthy of the worst tabloid press.

    The website has, for example,  highlighted a Guardian Op-ed by European Studies professor, Timothy Garton Ash, titled “Expert Comment: Ukraine has earned a future in the European Union”.  Ash states Russia is becoming “a satrapy of China” and is suffering “Putinian delusions of rebuilding the Russian empire.” Contrary evidence cited below is completely ignored.

    Putin is assumed to be a mad monster with Stalinist era pretensions for expansion. No further explanation need be sought. What we are witnessing is the very opposite of open enquiry and assessment of competing concerns and interests of the various actors in this crisis. The West is right; Putin is wrong. End of.  Indeed one Oxford professor of Ethics has suggested that Putin is a legitimate target for assassination. I cite a transcript of Professor Dill’s contribution to an edition of the BBC’s “Moral Maze”:

    So, Hitler, like Putin, they’re not innocent human beings.  If we can foresee the way in which they are going to present imminent threats to the lives of others, then killing them isn’t assassination of an innocent person. It is a defensive killing of someone who is liable to…moral harm.

    Presumably Professor Dill advocates the Death Penalty for Murder !

    Professor Dill is an example of Oxford thinking I find troublesome. Putin is wicked. This is proved by the shocking evidence of war in Ukraine. Wickedness is wrong and must therefore be eradicated. Ergo, get rid of Putin. Impeccable logic –  but the assumptions and predisposition must surely be questioned.

    There is a marked failure in the university website content to give any thing like due consideration to the Russian perspective, concerns and thinking. Instead Putin is placed automatically in the category of evil beast for whom there is no redemption. This interpretation alone explains all.

    But of course it doesn’t – not in the real world. Yet at Oxford, the only evidence being allowed to count comprises current atrocities in Ukraine. The history of Russia over the last 30 years has been censored and we jump directly back to the horrors of the Stalinist era. Evidence ?  Global History Professor, Peter Frankopan, cites the “Long Telegram” analysis of George Kennan, US diplomat to Moscow in 1946.  But Frankopan blatantly ignores Kennan’s later and more pertinent warning about the persistence of NATO and the Cold war paradigm in a New York Times Op-Ed, on February 5th, 1997.

    And where do we read about U.S. and NATO “activities” over the last 30 years ?  There is no Julian Assange; there is no Edward Snowden; there is no American imperialism reinforcing American domination of the world economy since Bretton Woods in 1944 – a domination leading to western claims, inter alia, on Ukraine and Taiwan …

    The only historical and geopolitical evidence being admitted confirms the political predilections of Oxford dons – a predispositon treated as indisputable and axiomatic.

    Indeed Professor Dill expresses this disturbing predisposition and closed mindset in the conclusion of the interview cited above.  Her comments demonstrate that the mentality produced by a certain mindset in Oxford today contradicts the very purpose of a university as a place where we pose questions and posit answers. She says:

    Now that we are here, our chief moral concern must be the prevention of nuclear escalation and nuclear war. There is really no greater moral evil than that sort of escalation and I think we should not morally be distracted by the question of how did we get here, who is to blame? We need to look forward and try to prevent with everything possible that greater moral evil.

    How we got here is a distraction !  With that comment, Professor Dill trashes an entire academic discipline called History…

    Thankfully,  South Africa’s President is far more realistic – see this report

    GRC

    Garton Ash Op-ed

    Peter Frankopan Global History professor’s view

    Kennan Op-ed 1997

    Professor Dill interview

    University of Oxford Ukraine crisis page

  • Should Oxford dons keep their word or are they privileged ?

    Update Note 24th April 2025:  please note the original date of this post is early 2022. Circumstances have now changed and the current Rector of Exeter College, Dr Andrew Roe, is not the Rector who was the subject of this post. Dr Andrew Roe is not the subject of any comment by me and to my knowledge had no connection whatsoever with Exeter College at the time this post was originally written or with the issue I raised. Dr Roe’s predecessor, Sir Richard Trainor, is the Rector in question in this post. Sir Richard’s status in the University is such that he has been entrusted with the Wardenship of Rhodes House whose website currently states:

    Sir Rick is serving as Interim Warden of Rhodes House and CEO of The Rhodes Trust during 2025 while the Board conducts a global search to identify the next permanent Warden.

    The following is the text of the original post.

    Should we keep our word, our promised commitment? We all know that we should, and we all know that there are times when we don’t. Sometimes we have reasonable excuses, but they tend to revolve around releasing ourselves from our obligations or duties. In doing so, we fail to consider others – their interests, their needs; we place our own convenience first.

    Should university teachers keep their word ? May we expect a higher standard of personal morality from such people, or should we cut them the same slack we allow ourselves ? Does their position of trust as educators of the young oblige them to maintain a more exemplary standard regarding their moral, educational responsibiliites ?

    Should the heads of Oxbridge Colleges be expected to keep their word ? Does their position oblige them to operate according to an even higher standard of personal trustworthiness than their academic colleagues ?

    When we reinforce our word with a solemn declaration or oath, should there be a higher standard required and therefore a greater sanction imposed when we fail to keep our word ?

    When a person witnesses in a court of law, they are required to make a solemn declaration – or an oath before God – obliging them to tell the truth. Is it reasonable of us to expect that they should therefore tell the truth as far as they know it ? Or are they then permitted to forget their declaration or their oath, and say whatever they please ?

    Most people have a moral conscience. They don’t need doctorates in ethics to know what is right and what is wrong.

    But the Governing Body of Exeter College in the University of Oxford evidently have their own particular view of such matters.

    All the dons on the governing body of that College were required to take a solemn, and presumbly binding declaration before taking up their posts as Fellows of the College and therefore as custodians responsible for the administration of the College according to the Statutes and the intentions of the Founders and Benefactors of that College.

    The Statutes required them to retire at a certain age, normally before the age of 68. The head of College known as the Rector was also required to make such a solemn commitment and to retire before the age of 68. As the person who is effectively the College’s executive leader, the Rector has particular responsibilities under the Statutes to settle disputes and make critical decisions.

    The Rectorship carries a particular responsibility, then. As you might expect.

    What are we to think then, when the person who occupies that position is still in post 5 years+ beyond his required retirement ? What are we to think when such a person takes the view that he is not required to uphold and maintain the Statutes of the College with regard to his own position and his own retirement ?

    What are we to think when he makes himself judge in his own cause ? What are we to think when he refuses to acknowledge his obligations to the College – freely entered into with solemn declaration – and chooses instead to remain in post; to remain entitled to receive a 6 figure salary with rent free accomodation and certain expenses paid by the College Charitable Trust ?

    What are we to think of the Fellows of the Governing Body of the College who refuse to trigger the Statutory process for removal of a man in breach of his obligations under the Statutes of the College ?

    What are we to think when both the Fellows of the Governing Body of Exeter College, Oxford and the person occupying the Rectorship agree together to revise radically the Statutes of the College, using that occasion to legitimise a circumstance which is in breach of their obligations under the pre-existing Statutes ?

    Are we to view this as observing the Rule of Law ? Or is this a breach of the meaning of the Rule of Law ?

    Is this an example of how business should be done in our Universities – is it a worthy and just way of doing business in what is arguably the nation’s principal University ?

    Is this an example to emulate ? Is this what we should set up as an example to the young and to future generations ?

    Is it ‘legitimate’ for dons already extremely privileged by virtue of their natural gifts and their exceptional position in this world, to claim yet more personal  advantage by pleading their own personal Rights under Equality law ?

    Graham R. Catlin

    alumnus of Exeter College, Oxford