The Abolition of Britain
by Peter Hitchens
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As vast and radical constitutional change follows decades of moral and cultural reform, Hitchens examines the many changes of this slow motion coup d'etat and asks if Britain can be saved from demolition.Tags
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I suppose if Peter has taught me anything, and mind you he has uncovered a fair amount concerning these wonderful British isles that I was thus far happily unaware of, is that there really is a need in this country for true opposition between political parties. The tepid nature of both Labour and Conservative parties, especially at the time of writing this, seem to both champion the same basic lukewarm, myopic, disunited schema of culture (of course one must bear in mind that beneath the callous veneer, which the Tories do ever so enjoy brazenly displaying as some powerful spectacle, so much of what they espouse concerning immigration seems to me to be just thin-skinned rhetoric, serving up largely impractical proposals which merely show more pander to their home base - just look at Rwanda). As much as I mourn the lost future of Corbyn’s true to form socialist vision of the Labour Party (roll on Mick Lynch) I also have a deep empathy for true card carrying Conservatives (like Hitchens here) who go unrepresented by the embarrassingly shameless MP’s who currently constitute the Conservative party. Peter’s a real thorn in the side for someone like me: but you really do have to admire his barnacle-like tenacity, suctioned on to the sinking ship of this country with his frequent accurate assessments (much to my ideological chagrin) that you can’t help but end up respecting him — even if I disagree with a fair number of his positions. show less
I suppose if Peter has taught me anything, and mind you he has uncovered a fair amount concerning these wonderful British isles that I was thus far happily unaware of, is that there really is a need in this country for true opposition between political parties. The tepid nature of both Labour and Conservative parties, especially at the time of writing this, seem to both champion the same basic lukewarm, myopic, disunited schema of culture (of course one must bear in mind that beneath the callous veneer, which the Tories do ever so enjoy brazenly displaying as some powerful spectacle, so much of what they espouse concerning immigration seems to me to be just thin-skinned rhetoric, serving up largely impractical proposals which merely show more pander to their home base - just look at Rwanda). As much as I mourn the lost future of Corbyn’s true to form socialist vision of the Labour Party (roll on Mick Lynch) I also have a deep empathy for true card carrying Conservatives (like Hitchens here) who go unrepresented by the embarrassingly shameless MP’s who currently constitute the Conservative party. Peter’s a real thorn in the side for someone like me: but you really do have to admire his barnacle-like tenacity, suctioned on to the sinking ship of this country with his frequent accurate assessments (much to my ideological chagrin) that you can’t help but end up respecting him — even if I disagree with a fair number of his positions. show less
Hitchens - madman or seer? Always vulnerable to an attack of DailyMailism, there are nevertheless plenty of valid points made in this attack on our muddled society. The first chapter, which looks back to London at the time of Churchill's funeral in 1965, is particularly effective.
Engaging, effective look at the decline of Britain since 1945, especially in the area of education. Hitchens contrasts the funerals of Winston Churchill in 1965 and Princess Diana in 1997 to particularly good effect.
A conservative looks back at what is fondly recalled of "Old England" (which was "Old Britain"). He doesn't forget to deride what he considers shallow attitudes in numerous facets of modern British life.
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13 Works 1,033 Members
Peter Hitchens is a British journalist, author, and broadcaster. He currently writes for the Mail on Sunday, where he is a columnist and occasional foreign correspondent, reporting most recently from Iran, North Korea, Burma, The Congo, and China. A former revolutionary, he attributes his return to faith largely to his experience of socialism in show more practice, which he witnessed during his many years reporting in Eastern Europe and his nearly three years as a resident correspondent in Moscow during the collapse of the Soviet Union. He lived and worked in the United States from 1993 to 1995. Hitchens lives in Oxford with his wife, Eve. They have three children. show less
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- The Abolition of Britain
- People/Characters
- Winston Churchill (Churchill, Winston Leonard Spencer); Diana, Princess of Wales
- Important places
- United Kingdom
- Dedication
- For Rebecca, Daniel and Jonathan
- First words
- This book was originally published with an entire chapter missing. - Preface
'I am a modern man...' - Introduction
The final days of imperial Britain are bracketed - appropriatey enough - by the funerals of an old man and a beautiful young woman. - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)In the brief space left before the next general election, I urge all responsible citizens to consider whether they wish to endorse the burial of a great and civilized nation, or whether they wish to halt a process which they never asked for or voted for, or were even asked if they wanted, which has brought about misery, decadence and ignorance, and which threatens to abolish one of the happiest, fairest and kindest societies which has ever existed in this imperfect world.
- Original language
- English
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, History, Sociology, General Nonfiction, Politics and Government
- DDC/MDS
- 941.085 — History & geography History of Europe British Isles Historical periods of British Isles 1837- Period of Victoria and House of Windsor 1945-1999
- LCC
- DA566.4 .H5 — History of Europe, Asia, Africa and Oceania Great Britain History of Great Britain England History By period Modern, 1485- 20th century
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 227
- Popularity
- 142,310
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.79)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
- 1



























































