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1823. July 6
Constitut. Code.III Rationale
Ch. 5. Constitutive
§. [Universal dislocation – why]
By the explanation of the manner in which government is
carried on by under the in England both those modes of remuneration
may be exemplified and explained.
An unjust and unnecessary War is murder, devastation extortion and oppression
carried on all together upon the largest scale. An unjust
war, to the peoples interest are unnecessary, to the Monarchs sinister
interest a necessary one is about to be commenced: commenced,
suppose in a parochial manner without previous declaration, commenced
in that manner for the purpose of putting placing at the individual disposal
of the Monarch the profits of the piracy: Judges located by the Monarch
Judges a certain species of Judge exercising by each one of them singly by his own authority
a power to this effect equivalent to legislative, having in the condition
seen by their decree his decree invested the Monarch with a right to those
same profits: securing thereby at the same time to himself a share in
them: a share sufficient to secure to himself a seat in the House of
Commons and thereby the means of giving by his eloquence support to abuse in this and every other of its shapes.
A Peer who, to his own seat in the House of Lords, adds
the command of half a dozen seats in the House of Commons,
and has half as many sons, for a suitable provision for one
of them, desires and hopes to see him made a Bishop's promotion a high
grade in the army, together with some of the army being looked destined
for in like manner for the another. A war of the above description has been commenced
and is carrying on. The Of the Poor, and of his six
commoners the votes are consequently with all the whatever degree of punctuality
belonging belongs to his character given in favour of it. If in addition
to the above use object the war has promises that of excluding all over
the world the example of a form of government less hostile to the people
less promotive of the sinister interest of rulers than the English, the
purpose both of King and Poor will be so much the more amply
and effectually promoted by it.
When the Honorable Reverend ones and Reverend is ripe
for a Bishoprick, and the time for corruption be consequential remuneration on the
instance of his preferment is come, a Bishoprick being vacant
and at the same time the pressure of the war in case the higher classes
having become so heavy that it is become in many such one of a number of their minds
a matter of doubt which is of greatest value, the certain loss by the
continuance of the war, or the probable profit by in the shape of lucrative
offices and other shapes for self and friends by concurrence in that same continuance.
Identifier: | JB/037/212/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 37.
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jeremy bentham |
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jonathan blenman |
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