Did King George III Deserve To Be Overthrown?
by Jonathan M. Kolkey
by Jonathan M. Kolkey
Recently
by Jonathan M. Kolkey: Japanese
Leaders Welcomed Hiroshima Atomic Bombing
Numerous men
and women sprinkled throughout the Conservative/Libertarian movement
have taken inspiration from the original Tea Partyites of December
1773 – the good Patriots of Boston who dumped 342 chests of British
East India Company tea into Boston Harbor as symbolic resistance
against imperial taxation. Politics is indeed theatrical. And what
would otherwise have been an ordinary act of waterfront vandalism
has been elevated to the lofty status of the quintessential American
political protest.
Courtesy of
my ex-wife Peggy who worked on his American Tax Reduction Movement
staff, I had the distinct privilege of knowing personally Howard
Jarvis, the late-leader of the modern American tax-revolt movement
– an outstanding gentleman who spearheaded the passage of Proposition
13 in California and its progeny nationwide. Jarvis, a self-styled
student of American history, bandied about a very effective slogan
– "Death and taxes may be inevitable. But getting taxed to
death isn’t!" – which cleverly tapped into the Boston Tea Party
legend along with an echo of Virginian Patrick Henry’s famous cry:
"Give me liberty or give me death!"
Today it’s
a cardinal article of faith that the America colonists were completely
justified revolting against King George III and British colonial
rule. However, the beauty of comparative history is that it allows
us to look at this episode in broader perspective so that the alleged
uniqueness of events often fade as larger patterns are identified.
In fact, the American Revolution looks a great deal less wholesome
– indeed rather unnecessary – upon sober reflection.
Now it goes
without saying that some regimes are clearly so evil that they deserve
to be overthrown. The American people may oftentimes lack sophistication
regarding foreign affairs, but they instinctively know despotic
government when they see it. The list of suspects who justly earned
the opprobrium of the American citizens include such rogues as Kaiser
William II, Benito Mussolini, Adolf Hitler, Joseph Stalin, Fidel
Castro, Ferdinand Marcos, Manuel Noriega, and Saddam Hussein, to
name just a few.
So just how
bad was the British Government in April 1775 when hostilities erupted?
A number of criteria might be employed to answer this question.
(1) Political
Prisoners: Despotic regimes fill their jails with political prisoners.
But the exact number of political prisoners held by the British
colonial authorities in the ten years of intense agitation leading
to the outbreak of the American Revolution was exactly zero. Equally
significant, British authorities made no effort to interfere with
the assembling of the First Continental Congress of 1774 in Philadelphia.
One doubts if, say, a Mussolini, or a Castro would have ever permitted
such an independent gathering to convene unmolested.
(2) Suppression
of Free Press and Public Opinion: The American colonies (like the
British homeland itself) enjoyed a vigorous press that helped stimulate
a lively public debate.
(3) Free Elections:
Reflecting one of the world’s most-advanced 18th-Century parliamentary
systems, Americans seem to have voted in higher numbers (percentage-wise)
than the Brits at home. Every colony featured popular assemblies
and a considerable degree of self-rule. Meanwhile, Americans did
not vote for their colonial governors who were either royal appointees
or appointees of the proprietor/owner (the Penn family in Pennsylvania
and the Calvert {Baltimore} family in Maryland). However, as an
indication of a maturing American political culture, some royal
governors on the eve of the Revolution were colonial Americans –
the most prominent being William Franklin, Ben’s son, the Governor
of New Jersey and, when the Revolution came, a firm Tory supporter.
In addition,
Americans did not vote for members of the British House of Commons.
But the Brits had a different theory of representation – M.P.’s
were seen as representing the interests of the entire empire not
merely their individual constituencies – surely a point of dispute
on both sides of the Atlantic but hardly worth an eight-year war.
Be that as
it may, regardless of any theory of representation, American colonial
interests were well advocated in London and American sensibilities
were often taken into consideration. As a prime example, when the
Parliament enacted the highly unpopular Stamp Act Tax of 1765 on
the Americans, after much brief vehement agitation the Parliament
repealed the unpopular measure.
(4) Trial by
Jury: Virtually without precedent elsewhere, citizens of both Britain
and her colonies enjoyed trial by jury. And some of the few civil-liberty
violations (such as warrantless searches that seemed to alarm the
colonists) could be seen by London, not as a campaign of oppression
and infringement on their rights, but as a justifiable measure taken
against the chronic and highly profitable smuggling trade with enemies
that Americans routinely engaged in during wartime.
(5) Troops
Patrolling City Streets: Stretching back to Oliver Cromwell, Anglo-Americans
had exhibited a healthy suspicion of military occupation of their
cities. And the modern world has sported far too many instances
of soldiers demanding that citizens produce identity papers, engaging
in petty harassment or arbitrary arrest, or committing outright
murder.
In the ten
years of ceaseless agitation prior to the Revolution, British troops
"occupied" only one city – that of Boston – for a period
after October 1768, in response to the severe gang situation. Indeed
the good law-abiding citizens of Boston welcomed the occupation.
Soon two of the four regiments were actually removed from Boston
the following year.
Inevitable
friction between soldiers and civilians led to street confrontations,
the most famous being, of course, the March 1770 Boston Massacre,
which left five Bostonians dead. The victims were hardly angels
as Patriot propaganda later depicted. For Sam Adams’ Patriot faction
had long recruited street thugs to intimidate its political adversaries.
At any rate, regrettably, but probably in self-defense, the beleaguered
soldiers panicked and fired into the mob.
The redcoats
did stand trial for murder, but only a pair of them were convicted
– and on the lesser counts of manslaughter. The Patriots afterwards
claimed that the soldiers had gotten away with murder due to the
connivance of colonial authorities. Indeed in his Declaration of
Independence, Thomas Jefferson mentions the incident as a charge
levied against the British king: "For protecting them, by a
mock Trial from punishment for any Murders which they should commit
on the Inhabitants of these States." Of course, Jefferson and
his cohorts must have appreciated the irony of the charge since
John Adams, who helped edit Jefferson’s draft, had served ably as
one of the soldiers’ defense attorneys! (Imagine attorney Johnnie
Cochrane screaming that O.J. Simpson had gotten away with murder.)
Interesting
enough, even if the Boston Massacre had been an egregious case of
cold-blooded murder, it remained the only such incident in a decade-long
period of intense political agitation – a remarkable demonstration
of restraint on the part of the supposed British "oppressors."
Forget for the moment the 1989 Chinese Community crackdown of demonstrators
at Tiananmen Square. How many innocent bystanders have been "mistakenly"
killed by rogue cops in any number of big American cities in just
the past year alone?
Meanwhile,
the allegedly unresponsive British Government immediately withdrew
its troops from Boston proper for the next three-plus years until
the Boston Tea Party forced them to return.
Elsewhere,
speaking of British troops, only about 8,000 men were ever stationed
permanently in the American colonies during peacetime prior to 1775.
And many of those soldiers were stationed on the frontier primarily
to prevent the White settlers from encroaching on Native American
lands. Look at your map. How much repression could 8,000 men inflict
on the American mainland which north to south stretched 2,000 miles?
By comparison, roughly 40,000 cops patrol New York City and you
still can’t ride the subway without being mugged.
So who was
defending colonial America? Why Americans! The various colonies
had at least 100,000 men (at least on paper) who were enrolled in
the various colonial militias. So in 1775 Americans with muskets
outnumbered British redcoats 12 to 1. No wonder when the fighting
broke out at Lexington and Concord, the British government had such
a difficult time stamping out the incipient rebellion.
(Incidentally,
for you Second Amendment devotees, this lesson was well learned
by the Americans once the United States was formally organized as
a nation. For up until World War Two, during peacetime it was always
viewed as a prudent policy for the various state governors to have
at their collective disposal more potential men under arms than
did the central government.)
As a matter
of record, far from disarming the colonists, London had long favored
a policy that had regarded the militias as an integral part of imperial
defense against assorted North American threats emanating from the
French and Spanish, marauding Caribbean pirates, along with restive
frontiersmen, hostile Indian tribes, and rebellious slaves.
At any rate,
even the Redcoat ranks contained a good measure of native-born colonial
American recruits. And during the last year of the War of Independence,
when General Washington’s Continental Army had been reduced to 9,000
men (as per some calculations), it appears that an equal number
of American colonials were enrolled in the British ranks.
It’s a huge
mistake to see the American Revolution as a struggle between the
home-grown Patriots and a bunch of foreign British "oppressors."
In actuality, the conflict was more akin to a civil war waged between
two groups of Americans – one of which (the Loyalist or Tory faction)
welcomed the British Army for support while another faction (the
Patriots) called in the mighty French. Guess which side prevailed?
Here’s a hint: Picture the Statue of Liberty.
(6) Commercial
Restrictions: It has been fashionable to see the Revolution as the
handiwork of a group of entrepreneurial-minded colonials chafing
under various British imperial commercial restrictions. In other
words, the Patriots of ’76 struck a telling blow for freer trade.
But the single strongest bastion of Patriot support – Tidewater
Virginia – benefited enormously from the imperial tobacco monopoly
that restricted cultivation of the weed elsewhere. And many of the
New Englanders who objected to imperial restrictions directed their
ire at the insistence that American colonials suspend their lucrative
(and illicit) trade with Britain’s foreign enemies during wartime.
Elsewhere,
while politically connected colonists were doubtless often in cahoots
with the royal or proprietary governors and their clique (and hence
received economic favors), the same dynamic regrettably holds true
today. Just check who recently got huge federal government bailouts.
Again we are talking about proportion – a measured response – to
sweetheart insider deals and market distortions. Would an eight-year
war be the appropriate remedy?
The same holds
true for taxes – the grievance so near and dear to contemporary
Tea-Party folks’ hearts. Without the Leviathan state, colonial Americans
enjoyed a very light tax burden compared to that extracted today.
In fact, the colonists appear to have been among the lowest-taxed
citizens in the entire civilized world.
The Stamp Tax
of 1765 engendered much opposition from Americans – not just from
future-Patriots but from colonists who wound up a decade later firmly
in the Loyalist camp. The reason: The Stamp Act was very unpopular
and colonial politicians of all stripes tried to utilize the issue
in order to make political hay.
Soon the issue
was framed as a principled stance against the idea of "No taxation
without representation!" Indeed Pennsylvania colonial agent
Benjamin Franklin made an eloquent plea before the Parliamentary
leaders in London that helped galvanize sentiment for repeal. Of
course, Ben’s hypocrisy was manifest. Before he discovered how unfair
the Stamp Tax was, he had recommended one of his friends back in
Philadelphia to become the stamp distributor – a lucrative patronage
job. It was only later, when a member of a better-connected clique
was awarded the franchise, that Franklin discovered his strident
opposition to the measure!
By the way,
there was no item that was subject to the Stamp Act that nowadays
would not be subject to some sort of tax or fee – probably one much
higher percentage-wise than that of 1765. At the outset of the American
Revolution many of the imperial taxes had been reduced or eliminated
altogether. But the modest Tea Tax had become a lightning rod for
colonial protest. Again it’s a simple issue of proportion. Should
one live by such narrow abstractions that one would rip apart a
well-functioning empire over the issue of "No taxation without
representation" – especially involving such a non-essential
item as tea?
Meanwhile,
some regimes evidently do deserve to be overthrown, but it’s difficult
to locate any substantial economic, civil liberty, or human rights
grievances to galvanize the American colonists to revolt. So what
gives?
Historians
and other observers have long made a serious mistake attempting
to identify the supposed "issues" at stake – the so-called
"causes" of the American Revolution. For, in actuality,
there were no "issues" at stake – at least none of the
traditionally listed ones.
Here’s where
comparative history comes in. If we look at, say, the city-states
of late-Medieval and Renaissance Italy, we can identify a very similar
political dynamic at play. In both we find an assortment of states
under lax imperial supervision. For neither the Holy Roman Empire
nor the British Empire had enough muscle on the ground to dictate
affairs. In what constituted a power vacuum, the various mischievous
political factions ran wild – indeed in the case of Italy, the factional
infighting often lead to foreign wars – as my ambitious war-research
study – www.worldwidewarproject.org
– amply demonstrates. City-state "wars" don’t have any
real "causes" other than the fact that various issues
– some often very mundane – somehow become intertwined with the
vicious political infighting. Such dynamics can be found in Florence
of 1400 as well as in Sam Adams’ Boston of 1775.
Within traditional
city-states (or the American colonies) family feuds (stylized by
William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet featuring the Capulets v.
the Montagues) often create the pivot around which politics revolve.
The fact that in New York the Livingston family and their entourage
embraced the Patriot cause in 1775 had more to do with the fact
their traditional adversaries, the De Lancey family, had remained
in the Tory camp than a dispute over any supposed "issue."
History frequently chronicles this "agitation for agitation’s
sake," which emanates from ceaseless political jockeying.
At any rate,
by examining the flash points for hundreds of wars, it becomes quite
apparent that Sam Adams and his Boston faction sought to score points
by continually tweaking the nose of the British. And if a skirmish
did erupt, Adams was under the misperception that the mere news
of the outbreak of hostilities would bring down Lord North’s Tory
regime in Parliament to be replaced by a regime more favorable to
his cause – known, appropriate enough, as the "Friends of America."
But Adams miscalculated and wound up provoking a full-scale war.
In passing, such delusions are quite frequent, historically speaking.
The South-African Boers launched a military attack on the powerful
British in 1899 fully expecting to instigate a cabinet crisis in
London. Of course, this never happened and the Boers eventually
suffered a total defeat. A similar delusion seems to have infected
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in early September 1939
when he acquiesced in a declaration of war against Germany thinking
that the mere inauguration of formal hostilities would induce "responsible"
Nazis in Berlin to overthrow that unscrupulous adventurer, Adolf
Hitler.
Curiously enough,
Sam Adams and other American Patriots were ultimately rescued from
their own folly by these same "Friends of America" alluded
to above. For the British Whigs, prayed for – indeed actively sought
to undermine their own nation’s war effort – lest the British Army
subdue the colonists and then, flush with "victory," return
home and assist George III in establishing military-style rule to
suppress domestic political adversaries in the fashion of Julius
Caesar, Oliver Cromwell, or the future Napoleon Bonaparte.
Then too, in
the aftermath of the British defeat at the Battle of Yorktown in
October 1781 the Opposition Parliamentary Whigs, who had actively
schemed for years for the British to "lose" the war, somehow
managed to cobble together enough of a Parliamentary majority to
bring down Lord North’s Tory administration and replaced it with
a new one committed to "peace." Elsewhere, despite the
Yorktown debacle, the British had hardly lost the struggle and could
very well have continued had political support for prosecution of
the war held firm in London. Curiously enough, in similar fashion,
the Johnson administration began the process of abandoning the Vietnam
War in March 1968 even though – despite the temporarily setback
of the Tet Offensive – the United States had hardly been "defeated."
On another
front, while so-called "gentry republics" have been far
fewer in number than city-states, we should view colonial Virginia
in such fashion. Factional politics likewise played a crucial role,
but the presence of slaves – a full 40% of the population in 1775
– made it much less likely that Virginia would cavalierly opt for
war. A foreign invasion leading to conquest would be the only realistic
way that the Blacks might work themselves free – a situation which
eventually did come to pass in 1865 at the conclusion of the American
Civil War when advancing Northern troops (unwittingly or not) emancipated
the slaves.
Nonetheless,
if we survey the assorted grievances that the colonists raised prior
to 1775, most appear to have originated in Massachusetts (or to
a lesser extent in New York) and involved issues of a more commercial,
maritime nature. And so only the gravest threat to Southern slavery
itself would have induced the plantation colonies to take up arms
against their traditional protector – the British.
Did the British
government pose some sort of existential threat to the South’s "peculiar
institution?" I believe the answer is yes, which if true, serves
to place the American revolutionaries, not only on the "wrong"
side of history (so to speak), but clearly on the wrong side of
an ever-evolving appreciation for basic human rights.
In truth, the
British government circa 1775 led the world in the protection of
the rights and the concern for the well-being of the so-called natives.
As an example, the Proclamation of 1763 designed to prevent White
settler encroachment on Indian lands naturally provoked opposition
from land speculators and frontiersmen. Indeed the Proclamation
of 1763 is lumped together with other assorted colonial grievances.
But its purpose was in part humanitarian – to protect Native Americans
from rapacious Whites.
Meanwhile,
the legal status of American slaves brought by their masters to
the British Isles proper remained somewhat ambiguous until the historic
1772 Somersett Decision rendered by the King’s Bench (the equivalent
of the British Supreme Court) appeared to strike a blow for freedom.
Chief Justice Lord Mansfield had issued a narrow verdict in favor
of the particular slave in question, James Somersett, in this one
specific case. Indeed Lord Mansfield (by his own admission) had
never intended to effect a general emancipation of all British slaves.
Nonetheless, exaggerated news of the Somersett ruling quickly reached
the colonies and surely alerted Southern colonists to the alarming
possibility that if, say, Virginia or South Carolina remained part
of the empire, Parliament might someday decree the abolition of
slavery – a development which ultimately came to pass in 1833.
In the Declaration
of Independence, Jefferson lists as one grievance against King George
III: "He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us"
– a clear reference to the panicky decision by the out-gunned Virginia
Royal Governor Lord Dunmore, who, at the outset of the revolution
in an effort to frighten slave owners from joining rebellious Massachusetts,
invited local Blacks to abandon their masters and enroll in the
British army and receive their freedom for their effort. So Tidewater
Virginia wound up enthusiastically joining the American Revolution
in order to protect slavery, not to abolish it.
All told, it
remains doubtful that the majority of the inhabitants of the American
colonies actually benefited from the Revolution. Surely the 20%
who were Black slaves (and largely remained so until 1865) or the
20% Native Americans destined for displacement if not outright extermination,
hardly benefited from the severance of their connection with their
potential or actual imperial protectors. Elsewhere, approximately
100,000 Loyalist refugees fled the country during and immediately
after the war – a higher percentage than later fled from either
the French Revolution of 1789 or from the Russian Revolution of
1917. Finally, a good number of American colonists remained scrupulously
neutral but still suffered the adverse effects from an eight-year
struggle having been waged on their soil.
Granted, the
legendary giants of the Patriot cause – men such as George Washington,
Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson – surely deserve
their stellar reputation as visionary thinkers. But two points must
be noted that remain largely forgotten today. First, the soaring
rhetoric of the American Patriots was matched by equally soaring
rhetoric from their adversaries, the American Loyalists. This was
the eighteenth-century style and the words "freedom" and
"liberty" were frequently employed by both sides in political
debates. The Revolution’s ultimate losers, the Tories, were no less
"American" than their opponents and no less committed
to a set of human rights and civil liberties that had long made
Britain one of the world’s most advanced nations.
Surely there
must be something unsettling about the American colonists speaking
the language of the Enlightenment while holding 400,000 Blacks in
slavery. If any government circa 1775 deserved to be toppled for
gross oppression it was the planter slaveocracy throughout the South,
not the relatively mild British colonial administration.
Second, far
too much attention has been focused on the Continental Congress
and on General Washington’s Army which, at many points during the
struggle, played a very marginal role. In contrast, the Revolution
centered in the individual states where the local Patriot faction
(led by many now-forgotten vicious state politicians) managed to
terrorize the other faction into submission. It wasn’t pretty but
it was extremely effective.
Nowadays American
Tea-Party enthusiasts entertain many justifiable grievances against
their own dysfunctional government. Nonetheless, they might consider
evoking the memory of far better role models than the Patriots of
’76.
February
4, 2010
Dr.
Jonathan M. Kolkey [send him mail],
founder of the World
Wide War Project, received his Ph.D. in History from UCLA and
has long worked as an author and political campaign consultant.
Copyright
© 2010 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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