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On the British Constitution
Posted: Friday, February 25, 2011
by John O'Loughlin
Centretruths
The British have never been a free people; they are subjects of the reigning monarch who are permitted to vote - without having the benefit, naturally, of a Bill of Rights – provided a government can be formed, within the parliamentary oligarchy, that will swear an oath of allegiance to the British throne which, in comparative terms, is alone free, in that it, and its constituent branches, including the Lords, upholds the sovereignty of somatic freedom, of the free female, metachemically speaking (that is, speaking in relation to the element of metachemistry), and her right to exploit society in general but males in particular.
There have been those, incidentally, even within the parliamentary executive, who have spoken of doing away with the House of Lords, as though one could abolish the upper chamber and still have a connection with the monarchy. This is patently absurd, since the monarch could not venture into the Commons to address parliament, but is dependent on the Lords in what amounts to a royal/aristocratic overlap or, better, juxtaposition. Nor, for that matter, could a government that swears oath to the monarchy subsequently do away with it, as though parliament were free to act independently of that oath and its subordinate status within the overall political establishment. Playing to the gallery with political rhetoric is one thing, facing up to the realities of parliamentary democracy within a constitutional monarchy quite another.
John O'Loughlin is a self-taught philosopher who has been writing mostly works of a philosophical nature for over three decades. Besides publishing himself through his company Centretruths Digital Media, he has been published by Lulu.com (ePub) and Clickbank.com (PDF), as well more recently by Amazon.com (Kindle), on the Internet, and considers himself to be the founder of the ideological philosophy of Social Theocracy and/or Social Transcendentalism, the former term having more political and the latter more religious significance, as though a distinction between state and church. Both, however, appertain to what he terms 'the Centre', a concept which transcends state/church relativity as we generally understand it. His works explain and justify Social Transcendentalism in relation to the concept of religious sovereignty, which he regards as the ultimate mode of sovereignty. Mr O'Loughlin is 58 and lives alone in north London.
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