“ But Peter and the other apostles said: We ought to obey God rather than men. ” Acts 5. 29. 1.— Introduction. To those who keep an ear on modern political discourse, there is often much clout behind the assumption that there is a prominent dichotomy of financial interests in British society: between a wealthy few and a mass of disenfranchised people. Common parlance has it that the latter are the sworn enemies of the former, and that the democratic process fundamentally reflects a desire for a perceived restorative justice in one form or another. More than that, candidates from across the political spectrum present their case in various manifestos designed to appeal to such hysteria and ultimately court public favour. Such can trace their roots back to the majoritarian system of democracy, which holds that any governmental legitimacy is entirely derived from whichever political party can sustain more than 50 per cent. of public favour, as meas...
" Therefore do not defile the land which you inhabit, in the midst of which I [the LORD] dwell " Numbers 35. 34 1.— Introduction. The concept of a land question does not often enter into political discourse through this age; nevertheless, it is still as significant as all other considerations, as the land is the foremost of all material resources, enabling the existence of just about everything else. Without it, humanity would perish. In fact, we would not have been able to exist in the first place. We are completely interdependent upon it. Yet, it does not receive the consideration which it should— and many modern conservative movements inherit the blame for this as well. The British Conservative Party itself, as noted most directly in Th e Case for Conservatism (Quintin Hogg, 1948), would not have succeeded " had it not been for the consistent championship of agriculture by the Conservative Party ". Times have since changed, a...