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Beginning
Legislators
En Colonies 1792
Your predeci
made one a ich
citizen: hear me
iate-like own.
War thickens round
you: I offer you
a great resource.
Emancipate qu
Colonies.
—
A just sense
It is argument
of the dignity should
keep France from
Colony holding;
on her part it is a bad copy
of an exploded
original
Nothing can be more
incontestable than
that Judas )
Blam, it is well
known does not
shrive a farthing
from her Colonies:
the ripening of the
civil establishment
which is great, and
of the one Colony establishment)
which is greater
is all her own: not
to maintain the expence
of occasional wars
which is incalentable.
This only
of she her Colonies as
to make plans, and
paid wars, fragment
with more plans
The action as elapsed
to pay the Colonists
for ing the Monarchy
to govern them
The to
from a fund for corrupting
its own servants
—
---page break---
V. Judgements
—
have sent
£15,000 more than
- what are they designed
for who
are they designed
to cope with - not
the English: of them
you had then no
fears: only the Islanders
themselves
If 15000 men are
necessary to cope
with the Islanders
alone, how many
more must you
have to cope with
the English?
—
Monopoly
Banishes &c
A Minister
throws capital
to a spot by prohibitions,
and
drags it thither
by bounties,
and when the
Image is big
enough to be
seen, all their
sa be, is my
erection.
—
Monopoly
Observe new what
you get by all
this monopoly.
You get the less you
aresuffer at by the armaments
you amply
argument smuggling
in the vain hope of
smuggling
All there is no moral
ch less, add to
which the waste &
necessary attendant
after confiscation.
II Ar
Oh but it is not
to oppress the Aristocracies
that we sendpursue))
the business the armament, it
is only to defend
and rescue the good
republicans, whom
the Aristocratics
keep under oppression
-. The good
republicans are the
great majority: we
do not doubt of it
and if they were not
it comes to the same
thing, for as the aristocrates,
leaveleaving no
forfeited all re- claim to the rights
of men and citizens,
millions thousands of aristocrates
go for nothing.
Answer
No need of sacrificing
either party: independence
is a middle
term in which they
would all be ready
to agree sake 9.the
other course, do what
you will, half the
people are miserable
take this course, they
are all happy.
---page break---
IV Aristocr
, but as must not
presence guilty
we must not presume
aristocracy
- and rection for what can be
greater guilt
Answer - It is so
far true that we
must not presume
men to all against
conscience.
We are not to presume
active against conscience
because: we are not
to be most forward to
be presume what is
most least improbable
Rebellion or no rebellion
depends upon
good or ill
not upon good or evil
conscience.
No crime more mischievous
than rebellion:
but in a
civil war as no crime
nothing is is more frequent,
so no crime nothing
is less improbable.
---page break---
Identifier: | JB/108/111/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 108. |
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1792 |
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108 |
emancipation spanish |
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111 |
emancipate colonies |
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002 |
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rudiments sheet (brouillon) |
3 |
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recto |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::w [crown motif] [lion with crown motif]]] |
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35614 |
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