An English
Nationalism
Tony Linsell
This
is a handbook of modern English nationalism. The focus is on English
nationalism but it looks at wider issues that affect all nations. It
sets out a worldview that deals with the issue of globalism and the
uniformity it promotes. The nationalism advanced here is a defensive
nationalism concerned with protecting national communities and promoting
communal democracy. The ideal world is one of independent nation-states;
a place where nations organise their political and economic systems
as they choose; a place where each nation is able to live by its own
ways in freedom. This ideal is contrasted with the reality of an aggressive
globalism that destroys communities and diversity in its constant striving
for ever more centralisation and uniformity. The English battle for
recognition as a nation in its homeland is part of that wider struggle.
The theme of this book is that a nation is a group of people who share
a communal identity, culture, language, ancestry, and history. If a
nation is to survive it must maintain its communal boundaries and constantly
regenerate itself.
Part 1- The origins of the English and the creation of England. An outline
of early English history, beliefs and way of life.
Part 2 - A World View - includes: nationalism, states, nations, nationality
& citizenship, civic-society, sovereignty, globalism, elites, realpolitik,
ethnicity, race, elites.
Part 3 - Community & Survival - includes: evolution and natural selection,
community, society, chaos & order; instinct v ideology, democracy, an
English Parliament.
Part 4 - The Great Upheaval - Liberals and multi-culturalism, immigration,
looking to the future.
£16.90 - 432 pages - paperback - 245 x 170mm 7"
x 10" - ISBN 1-903313-01-5
Foreword
We live in an age when many English people, and
in particular the young, know next to nothing about their history, and
are uncertain about their national identity. One of the reasons for
this sad state of affairs is that for many years the English have been
encouraged to think of themselves as being primarily British and, more
recently, as Europeans or even as citizens of the world; a term that
reveals the confused thinking of those who use it. In schools, English
history has been replaced with British and World history, and any promotion
of an English national identity is treated as subversive of an inclusive
state ideology. Those righteous individuals who promote the official
creed are so convinced of the universal application, and everlasting
nature of their ideology that they feel no need to defend it with rational
argument. Instead, unbelievers who openly question the assumptions that
underlie the modern liberal world-view are treated either as evil heretics
or as fools.
A simple illustration of the propaganda used to promote a correct view
of the world is to be found in the experience I had early in the 1990's
when I visited a school and saw a large poster which proclaimed, We
British are a rich mixture. It listed in a random manner many national
and other groups including: Bangladeshi, Jamaican, Welsh, Nigerian,
Somali, Turkish, Scots, Indian, Cypriot, Irish. When I asked a teacher
why there was no mention of the English, I received a blank look and
a shrug of the shoulders. His surprise at being asked such a question
changed to suspicion, and it became obvious that I was seen as a troublemaker.
No answer was given and I left the school puzzled as to whether the
teacher really believed that there is no English nation or he simply
preferred its existence to be downplayed or denied. Perhaps he was confused
about the difference between being English and being British or maybe
he found the notion of an English nation distasteful or ideologically
inconvenient. Whatever the reason, it made me wonder what justification
there could be for displaying that poster in a school. The motives of
those who produce such propaganda are clearly ideological but to question
their right to introduce it into schools, or to suggest that Englishness
and English history be presented in a positive way, is to invite facile
insults. A more hostile response can be expected to the suggestion that
there is more to being English than being born in England or living
there.
The school poster has given rise to this book, which has been written
on and off, mostly off, from 1993 until 2000. The delay means that many
of the events referred to in the text were happening at the time of
writing but are now history. The great speed with which attitudes have
changed over recent years became apparent during the process of revising
and updating the text for publication. For instance, when I started
I found it difficult to understand why English football supporters waved
Union flags and sang the UK state anthem. Since then, the Euro 96 football
championship and the creation of a Scottish Parliament has helped to
change perceptions. The Union flag and the Britishness it represents
has suddenly become a relic of the past. Perhaps by the time Euro 2008
arrives, the English will have a national anthem and England will be
nearer to regaining a Parliament of its own - but I doubt it.
My thanks go to those who encouraged me to say what needs to be said,
and to the many people who in various ways give their time and energy
to awakening the English from their communal slumber.
Nationality and Citizenship
Nationality
Nationality is the condition, or fact, of belonging
to a body of people sharing a common descent, culture, history and language.
Nationality as used here does not mean citizenship - it means membership
of a nationa - a community.
Nationality is normally acquired at birth; individuals are normally
born into a community. It is the perception of a common ancestry and
shared communal experiences that binds a nation together. At the heart
of nationality is a feeling of belonging and oneness that marks out
a communal boundary. The 'we' sentiment is not, as many wish us to believe,
evil and deserving of eradication. On the contrary, it is at the heart
of any community anywhere in the world, and gives rise to positive communal
thoughts and deeds. It is difficult to frame exact rules for determining
who is a member of a given nation but a useful guide, which can be used
for any nation, is as follows: I am English if I believe that I am English
and if I am accepted as being English by the members of that group of
people who are commonly recognised as being English. It is a two-way
instinctive relationship between individual and community. I could,
for example, assert that I am Japanese but if I have physical and cultural
characteristics that are not Japanese, as determined by the Japanese,
I will not be accepted as part of the Japanese community. No amount
of law-making, sulking or haranguing will alter that.
The
two-way process of selection for inclusion or exclusion helps provide
an answer to the question often thrown at nationalists, "What does it
mean [for example] to be English?" The aim of the questioner is to draw
out a list of characteristics that identify the English. Those asked
are usually stumped for an answer, which is not surprising because the
process of inclusion and exclusion is not a conscious one and does not
work in the way implied by the question. The English, like all other
nations, first see characteristics that exclude people because that
is a more efficient way of working when analysing vast amounts of information.
Most of the Earth's population can be quickly excluded from membership
of any given nation on the basis of appearance and language. If necessary,
other tests of varying degrees of sophistication can be used until we
are satisfied that the person is either an insider or an outsider. If
the person is accepted as an insider, the instinctive assessment process
goes on and makes other judgements about the person, including such
things as their social class. At this insider level of assessment, the
filtering process can make finer distinctions because we have far more
experience of dealing with insiders and can make better use of small
amounts of information. For example, if a Russian gives me his home
address it will tell me little, if anything, about him because my knowledge
of Russia and things Russian is poor. An address in my hometown will
tell me far more about the person who lives there.
Nationality
is a total experience that starts in the family, which is the smallest
community. Children are born into both a family and the wider communities
of which that family is part. They are immersed in and soak up like
a sponge the language, culture and history of the communities to which
they belong. That experience helps mould children and gives them an
identity and sense of belonging. They pick up habits of behaviour and
thought that are part of what is meant by national character. That character-building
process, if that is what it can properly be called, works best when
there is cultural immersion and socialisation from a very early age.
Once a national identity has been absorbed, it is embedded for life.
It shapes values and perceptions in a way that makes it impossible for
a member of one nation to completely shake off that identity and take
on another. Learning another nation's customs, history and language
is not enough because the new information is laid on old foundations.
The
link between kinship, identity and loyalty can be illustrated as follows.
An adopted child reared from a baby by loving adopted parents is likely
to feel love and affection for those parents. When the child learns
of its adoption it will normally want to seek out its biological parents.
If they are found, the child is likely to feel an attachment to them
that is different from that felt for the adopted parents, who it will
probably continue to love as before. This need to know our origins is
instinctive and essential to our sense of identity and belonging. It
is therefore understandable that when a child learns that its real parents
belong to a nation different from the one it has been raised in, it
is likely to be drawn to that other nation's culture, and identify with
it. This can cause difficulties that are made worse when differences
of race are added to those of nationality. The experience of many children
involved in cross-race adoptions is one of confusion in adulthood due
to conflicting communal identities and loyalties. Having been immersed
in one culture from birth and having had that identity imprinted on
them they find it difficult, if not impossible, to feel totally part
of another culture to which they are subsequently drawn. They cannot
overcome the fact that the first all-important immersion in a communal
identity is a one-off experience. In a similar way, children with parents
of the same race but different nationality have to deal with conflicting
attractions and loyalties. However, the problem is usually not so great
for them because they are generally drawn to, and accepted by, at least
one of the nations to which they are linked by kinship. A child raised
in the national homeland, culture and language of one parent is likely
to be drawn to that nation and be accepted by it. However, physical
appearance can sometimes play a more important part than upbringing
in determining which community a person is drawn to and which community
accepts them. If a person's physical or cultural characteristics differ
greatly from the norm for a particular nation, that person is unlikely
to seek acceptance in it or to be accepted by it. Liberals feel the
need to put a positive slant on these things and suggest that children
with parents of different nationality or race have the advantage of
two identities and two cultures. But is it really possible to immerse
oneself in two cultures, identify with two histories, feel an insider
in two communities, and, more difficult still, be accepted as a full
member of two communities? The answer is probably, no.
To
feel an insider and be accepted as an insider it is usually necessary
for a person to be immersed in the culture of that community from birth
and to be free of traits that would cause that person to be seen as
an outsider. A nation is an extended family and like a family it has
a life greater than that of any single member. Nations, like families,
are bound together by the bonds of empathy and loyalty that come from
a shared identity. Those bonds are not only with the living but also
with those who have gone before and those who are yet to come. That
link between past, present and future encourages the living members
of a national community to protect the memory of earlier generations
and safeguard the position of future generations. That sentiment is
not something that can be learned or feigned.
Citizenship
Using nationality as a synonym for citizenship
can cause confusion and misunderstanding. Nationality denotes membership
of a particular community, while citizenship denotes membership of a
civic-society. The two identities are sometimes complementary (in nation-states)
and sometimes they conflict or have no close association (in multi-nation-states).
A civic identity is like a national identity in that it is usually acquired
at birth with no opportunity available for opting out or negotiating
terms. Those who were born in the Soviet Union usually acquired Soviet
citizenship and, like other Soviet citizens, became a part of Soviet
society and were subject to the rules of the Soviet state, which like
other states deemed that it had the right to demand obedience and loyalty
in certain things. Soviet citizens also belonged to a nation (e.g. Russian,
Latvian, Armenian) and a family, both of which are communities that
endure despite the coming and going of states. In a similar way, a British
citizen (more properly called a British subject ) might be English,
Scottish, Welsh, Nigerian, Bangladeshi, Jamaican, Italian or a member
of any nation you care to mention.
Citizenship
indicates a person's relationship with a state (political structure)
and is usually defined in a legalistic form of words that is embodied
in the state's constitution. Nationality indicates a person's relationship
with a nation (community and its culture) and cannot be formally defined.
Each state determines who are its citizens and how non-citizens can
qualify for citizenship. The acquisition of citizenship is a legal formality
that gives an individual civic rights and obligations. It is a legal
procedure and because of that it is possible to be a citizen of two
or more states and have dual citizenship, which is often inaccurately
termed, dual-nationality. Some states permit their citizens to hold
dual citizenship but others do not.
