[Political Thought in England from Locke to Bentham by Harold J. Laski]@TWC D-Link bookPolitical Thought in England from Locke to Bentham CHAPTER V 63/65
Whiggism was the offspring of the devil, the "negation of all principle"; and he seems to have implied that it led to atheism, which he regarded as the worst of sins.
He did not believe in the honesty of republicans; they levelled down, but were never inclined to level up.
Men, he felt, had a part to act in society, and their business was to fulfil their allotted station. Rousseau was a very bad man: "I would sooner sign a sentence for his transportation than that of any fellow who has gone from the Old Bailey these many years." Political liberty was worthless; the only thing worth while was freedom in private concerns.
He blessed the government in the case of general warrants and thought the power of the Crown too small. Toleration he considered due to an inapt distinction between freedom to think and freedom to talk, and any magistrate "while he thinks himself right ...
ought to enforce what he thinks." The American revolt he ascribed to selfish faction; and in his _Taxation no Tyranny_ (1775) he defended the British government root and branch upon his favorite ground of the necessity of subordination.
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