Downton Abbey, the Corruption of the Great Families and the Future of Freedom

For much of Downton Abbey, viewers are treated with glorious eye candy of British aristocratic life in a mighty estate, robust at first but fading as the seasons progress. What we are not given is a rationale behind the whole cultural structure of the house and the social order surrounding it. This is particularly important for American audiences who know none of this from modern experience.

Over time, particularly after the Great War brought Labor governments to power, some of the workers in the house get restless in “service” and seek out new professions and political systems. Viewers are hard-pressed to disagree with them, even if our sense of nostalgia and affection for the Crawley family elicits a protective sense.

It’s not until the sixth season, episode four, when we get the full theory behind the structures as they exist at Downton. The Dowager Countess is being pushed to turn over control of their own private hospital to a municipal government. Of course all the ‘progressives’ in the family and estate support this move but she is intransigent. Control must remain with the family, she insists.

The supposition is that this is all about her pride, control, and irrational attachment to tradition above good sense and modern sensibilities.

Finally, in the course of a conversation in the library, she lays out her thinking. In a short soliloquy, she summarises 800 years of British history in a paragraph, and elucidates the understanding of such great thinkers as Bertrand de Jouvenel and Lord Acton. It’s the kind of history that is routinely denied to students and has been for decades. It’s a good lesson in political science too.

“For years I’ve watched governments take control of our lives,” she says, “and their argument is always the same: fewer costs and greater efficiency. But the result is the same too: less control by the people and more controlled by the state, until the individual’s own wishes count for nothing. That is what I consider my duty to resist.”

“By wielding your unelected power?” asks Lady Rosamund Payneswick, the daughter of the Dowager Countess.

Ignoring the swipe, the Dowager answers: “See, the point of a so-called great family is to protect our freedoms. That is why the Barons made King John sign the Magna Carta.”

Surprised, her distant cousin Isobel responds: “I do see that your argument was more honorable than I’d appreciated.”

And her daughter-in-law Cora, an American who doesn’t understand what’s at stake, answers too: “Mama, we’re not living in 1215. The strengths of great families like ours is going. That’s just a fact.”

The Dowager continues: “Your great-grandchildren won’t thank you when the state is all-powerful because we didn’t fight.”

Now we know why she cares so much about this one seemingly small issue. For her entire life, she has seen the state on the march, most especially during the Great War, and then the pressure of the state mounted against all the old estates, as they fall in status and wealth year after year, as if by some inexorable force of history.

The Dowager, on the other hand, sees not some Hegelian wave at work but a very visible hand, that of the state itself. In other words, she sees what nearly everyone else has missed. And whether she is right or wrong on the particular matter of this one hospital (and later history proves her correct), the larger point is precisely right.

As the great fortunes of the nobility declined – the very structures that had not only carved out the rights of the people against the rulers and protected them for 800 years – the state was on the rise, threatening not only the nobles but the people too.

Incidentally, this history of freedom is not entirely alien to the American experience either. New history likes to point out with great ire that the prime movers of rebels against the crown in 1776 were larger landowners and businessmen along with their families. They were the Founding families and the main influencers behind the Revolution, which Edmund Burke famously defended on grounds that it was not a real revolution but a revolt with a conservative intent. By this he meant that the colonies were merely asserting rights forged in British political experience (which is to say, they were not Jacobins).

And there is a point to that. The rights-based fervor that birthed the War of Independence gradually mutated into a Constitutional Convention 13 years later. The Articles of Confederation had no central government but the Constitution did. And the main controlling factions of the new government were indeed the landed families of the New World. The Bill of Rights, a thoroughly radical codification of the rights of the people and lower governments – was tacked on by the ‘Anti-Federalists’– again, a landed aristocracy – as a condition of ratification.

The issue of slavery in the colonies massively complicated the picture, of course, and became the main line of attack on the American system of federalism itself. The landed gentry of the South in particular always had grave doubts about Jefferson’s claims of universal and inviolable rights, fearing that eventually their ownership claims over human persons would be challenged, which indeed they were and less than a century after the Constitution was ratified.

That aside, it remains true that the birth of American liberty rested with the U.S. version of the nobles, but also backed by the people at large. So the Dowager’s history of British rights is not entirely inconsistent with the American story at least until recently.

This has also been the prism with which to understand the broad outlines of the terms ‘Left’ and ‘Right’ in both the U.K. and the U.S. The ‘Right’ in a popular sense has represented mostly the established business interests (including the good parts and bad parts such as the munitions manufacturers) and tended to be the faction that defended the rights of commerce. The ‘Left’ has pushed the interests of labor unions, social welfare, and minority populations, all of which happened also to be aligned with the interests of the state.

Those categories seemed mostly settled as we entered the 21st Century.

But it was at this point that a titanic shift began to take place, especially after 9-11. The interests of the “great families” and the state began to align across the board (and not just on matters of war and peace). These family fortunes were no longer attached to Old World ideals but to technologies of control.

The paradigmatic case is the Gates Foundation but the same holds true of Rockefeller, Koch, Johnson, Ford, and Bezos. As the main funders of the World Health Organisation and ‘scientific’ research grants, they are the main forces behind the newest and largest threats to the freedom of the individual. These foundations built from capitalist wealth, and now fully controlled by bureaucrats loyal to statist causes, are on the wrong side of the crucial debates of our time. They fight not for the emancipation of the people but rather more control.

With many sectors of the ‘Left’ naively signing up with the bio-medical state and the interests of the pharmaceutical giants, and the ‘Right’ triangulated into going along, where is the party to defend the freedom of the individual? It is being squeezed out in an attack from both ends of the mainstream political spectrum.

If the ‘great families’ have fundamentally shifted their loyalties and interests, in both the U.S. and the U.K., and the mainline churches can no longer be relied upon to defend basic freedoms, we can and should expect a major realignment to take place. Marginalised groups drawn from the older versions of both Right and Left will need to mount a major and effective effort to reassert all the rights forged and earned over many centuries.

These are completely new times and the Covid wars signal that turning point. Essentially, we need to revisit the Magna Carta itself to make it clear: government has definite limits to its power. And by ‘government’, we cannot just mean the state but also its aligned interests, which are many but include the largest players in media, tech, and corporate life.

The groups that want to normalise the lockdowns and mandates – thinking of the Covid Crisis Group – can count on the financial support of the ‘great’ families, and freely admit it. This is a problem completely unlike what freedom fighters have faced over the long course of modern history. It’s also why political alliances these days seem so fluid.

This is ultimately what is behind the great political debates of our time. We are trying to make sense of who stands for what in times when nothing is as it seems.

And there are some strange anomalies extant too. Elon Musk, for example, is among the richest Americans but seems to be a backer of free speech that the establishment hates. His social platform is the only one among the high-impact products that permits speech that contradicts regime priorities.

Meanwhile, his competitor in riches Jeff Bezos does not join him in this crusade.

So too when Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. – a scion of a ‘great family’ – has broken with his clan to support the rights of the individual and a restoration of the freedoms we took for granted in the 20th Century. His entry into the race for the Democratic nomination has disrupted our whole sense of where the ‘great families’ stand on fundamental questions.

The confusion even impacts political leaders like Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis. Is Trump really a populist who is willing to stand up to the administrative state or is his appointed role to absorb the energies of the pro-freedom movement and once again turn them toward authoritarian ends, as he did with the lockdowns of 2020? And is Ron DeSantis a genuine champion of freedom who will fight lockdowns or is his appointed role to divide and weaken the Republican Party in advance of the nomination fight?

This is the current fight within the GOP. It is a fight over who is telling the truth.

The reason conspiracy theory has been unleashed as never before in our lifetimes is because nothing truly is what it seems to be. This traces to the reversal of alliances that have characterised the struggle for liberty over 800 years. We no longer have the barons and lords and we no longer have the great fortunes: they have thrown their lots in with the technocrats. Meanwhile, the supposed champions of the little guy are now fully aligned with the most powerful sectors of society, yielding a fake version of the Left.

Where does this leave us? We only have the intelligent bourgeoisie – products of the middle class that is currently under assault – that is well-read, clear-thinking, attached to alternative sources of news, and only now in our post-lockdown world has become aware of the existential nature of the struggle we face. And their rallying cry is the same which has inspired the freedom movements of the past: the rights of individuals and families over the hegemon.

If the Dowager Countess were around today, let there be no doubt as to where she would stand. She would stand with the freedom of the people against the controls of the state and its managers.

Jeffrey A. Tucker is Founder and President of the Brownstone Institute, where this article first appeared. He is also Senior Economics Columnist for Epoch Times, author of 10 books, including Liberty or Lockdown, and thousands of articles in the scholarly and popular press. He speaks widely on topics of economics, technology, social philosophy, and culture.

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stewart
2 years ago

Very interesting.

However, the task of resisting the state is far harder than simply standing up to it.

The state has set up a system of taxation that for all intents and purposes is a giant money hoover, sucking money away from individuals towards a central authority.

When that started to show its limits, the state loosened all the borrowing and money production mechanisms to give it virtually unlimited access to more money. First public debt, then quantitative easing which is basically a modern version of reckless money printing.

The power of the state comes from all that money.

And unless the taps are shut off, it will be impossible to curtail the power of the state.

Smudger
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

Conversely, if in the event the taps run dry the state’s power evaporates.

Kornea112
Kornea112
2 years ago
Reply to  stewart

All of the NGOs, fake charities, Foundations and government funded agencies such as UN are all funded by this same source of money through tax deductions. Even the mega rich oligarchs set up non profits and charities to direct their political goals. Many fake charities get direct funding from governments. A whole class of elites make a handsome and protected livelihood from this money as they move from elected office back to an NGO or other agency. Climate change crisis is all driven by this huge excess of money.

EppingBlogger
2 years ago

I have noticed a considerable difference over the years between old money and new money. Old money (often without much left except contacts, status and a sence of duty) is almost always more courteous to those of us that do not belong in either category.

Too often new money is arrogant and selfish.

These characterisations are inevitably subject to exceptions but the rule is still worth noting, at least my experience of it.

Mogwai
2 years ago

Is it possible to have too much evidence that the world’s population was lead a merry dance and basically well and truly shafted by governments and ‘TPTB’, and that democide did and continues to occur as a result? Of course not! A good one from the PANDA team; ”In summary, since we know that the experimental Covid injections increased the rates of infection among the vaccinated, and since there is no scientific evidence of a corresponding reduction in the IFR, in all probability the rollout of the Covid vaccines actually increased the number of Covid deaths. However, to be conservative, to give the shots every possible benefit of the doubt, and because factual and specific data in this regard is lacking in the scientific literature, it is best to say that the injections probably prevented no Covid deaths. To put things into the proper perspective, the strange aspect of the past few years is not that the vaccines were such a dismal failure. Rather, what is odd is that any manufacturer claimed to have developed a vaccine for Covid at all. We are reminded that despite years of research and efforts previous to December 2020, “no effective vaccine has yet… Read more »

prod_squadron
prod_squadron
2 years ago

Other “great” families include the Sackler family currently settling lawsuits for fuelling the opioid crisis with their pharma company and the Pritzker family, of which Jennifer (formerly James Nicholas) Pritzker is a billionaire funder of the transgender medical complex.

FerdIII
2 years ago

Excellent article. Very thoughtful and I agree with most of it. The Dowager’s scence was my favorite in the entire series, and how right she was. Tucker is clearly unconviced by Drumpf – as am I. He was the vaccinator and lockdown fanatic in chief and still hisses that his stabs saved 100 mn lives – the actual IFR was 0.3% so maths is not his strong suit.

My belief is that a revolution is the only way out. It will be both peaceful and violent. Watt Tyler + Cromwell + Wilberforce with some much needed Churchill.

Mogwai
2 years ago

This is interesting. An increase of 40% during the first quarter of this year in people going to their doctor because of cognitive problems compared with 2019, but it’s because of the ”pandemic”. In fact, whenever Covid isn’t getting the blame for health-related matters here then the culprit is always red meat. 😮 ”There has been a remarkable increase in the number of people who go to the doctor with memory and concentration problems, according to a large-scale study by the RIVM and the Netherlands Institute for Healthcare Research (Nivel) into the consequences of the coronavirus pandemic. In the first quarter, 40 percent more adults aged 45 to 74 went to the GP with cognitive problems than in the same period of 2019, NOS reports. In the 25 to 44 age group, the increase was 31 percent. Young people under 25 did not seek help more often. “It is a development that worries us,” said Michel Dukers, professor by special appointment of Crisis, Safety, and Health in Groningen and the research leader on behalf of the RIVM and Nivel. “We still don’t know much about the long-term effects, but the picture is now emerging that the pandemic can lead to faster aging… Read more »

DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

Most of it is caused by the lockdowns and restrictions. It’s terribly unhealthy to isolate people for long time periods and to limit their movement. It’s also a recorded fact that people spending too much time on electronic devices suffer diminished concentration. A Kindle reader has far less recall of a book than a reader of a physical copy. iPads, iPhones and computers cause a variant of ADHD and sleep problems.

We’ve had the better part of three years of people not being able to see each others’ full faces, not talking to each other in person, not going away or even going out somewhere different for the day. People have become isolated, they’ve been glued to the internet. The lockdown ‘caging’ experiment, which is mutating into 15 minute cities will shatter societies and make people easier to control.

huxleypiggles
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

15 minute Ghettos.

Mogwai
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

Yes there is evidence to support that. The most cruel and damaging experiment done to people of such magnitude in my lifetime. And the jabs of course. I think these findings are due to a combo of things. Especially as they only relate to this year and restrictions ceased ages ago now. Lasting effects plus vax damage is my opinion. In the article they’re just too keen to pin everything on a virus. But there’s also autopsy evidence demonstrating spike crossing the blood-brain barrier and found in brain tissue.

7941MHKB
7941MHKB
2 years ago
Reply to  Mogwai

There is also the detail, that statistics of ‘those who report problems’, obviously excludes those who recognise they have a problem, but are sufficiently aware that the probability of getting a helpful response (or indeed any response) to their concerns from our saintly NHS (with its George Cross) is precisely zero point zero.

DomH75
2 years ago

Fantastic article! The issue really boils down to two incompatible world views: one very statist and one (and I hesitate to use the term, due to its wide definition) libertarian. We’ve reached the point where people of these two world views can’t live with each other anymore. I know it’s a drum I always bang, but there’s going to have to be a formal creation of new countries. Many people – perhaps a majority – want to live in a security state and are happy to sacrifice liberty and privacy in favour of a quiet, risk-free existence and will tolerate the diminished existence caused by Year (Carbon) Zero. The other side is willing to accept risk as part of living everyday life and that cheap fuel and ability to ‘do’ means trade-offs for their environment. Never before in peacetime human history have we had supposedly ‘free’ First World people locked into their nations by passports, unable to emigrate somewhere that suits their world views better. In the USA, the modern Democrats and establishment RINOs broadly think the EU is the way they want their country to be, with Washington DC as the US version of Brussels. Modern, populist Republicans and… Read more »

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

In the USA, the modern Democrats and establishment RINOs broadly think the EU is the way they want their country to be, with Washington DC as the US version of Brussels.

So they want to abolish the federal government, turn the USA into a confederation of souvereign states which are free to regulate their internal affairs as they see fit and with policy decisions affecting all states of the confederation to be made by a council of state governments supported by a tiny executive in Washington? And they further want to eliminate the armed forces of the USA and leave it to individual states to spend whatever money suits them on their individual armed forces whose organization independence is to be jealously guarded by state-level military bureaucrats?

One of the reasons for the dismal state we’re in is that it’s really difficult to judge whose phantasy universe is more disconnected from reality, that of the wokesters or that of their so-called opponents.

DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

The EU’s claims about subsidiarity – Major’s favourite word to justify signing us up to Maastricht – have collapsed into nothing. If you can honestly look at the last three years and not see the EU for the hellish police state it is, I pity you.

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

You’re statement has absolutely no relation to my text and also no relation to the plainly ludicrous claims you had been making. But since you’re still making ludicrous claims: Sweden is in the EU, Britain isn’t. Yet, Britain became a (hellish) Corona police state and Sweden didn’t.

To use that Sun Tsu quote again: If you know neither yourself nor the enemy, all of your battles will end in defeat. If you know yourself but not the enemy, each of your victories will be followed by a defeat. If you know yourself and know the enemy, you won’t have to fear for the outcome of a hundred battles.

DomH75
2 years ago
Reply to  RW

You’re (sic) statement has absolutely no relation to my text and also no relation to the plainly ludicrous claims you had been making.

Since I read what you wrote four times and it made no f***ing sense whatsoever and had no bearing on what I wrote either, I improvised! 😀 Bored afternoon, below the line jazz riffs! Don’t kid yourself into thinking Sweden will be allowed to dissent next time, once we’re all under the jackboot of the WHO’s Pandemic Treaty. I’m sure you’ll be the first to line me up against the wall when the revolution comes!! 😉

To use that Sun Tsu quote again…

Sun-Tsu was a violent barbarian whose work is passed off as philosophy. That’s why Chiang Kai-Shek and Mao Zedong – the bloodiest mass murderer in human history – worshiped him. Why not quote from Mein Kampf or The Communist Manifesto as an encore?

RW
RW
2 years ago
Reply to  DomH75

And since you’re so good at improvising, you’re now copying me in a pretty verbose manner.

My original text was an (incomplete) list of differences between the EU and the USA supposed to illustrate the idiocy of your claim that

the modern Democrats […] think the EU is the way they want their country to be, with Washington DC as the US version of Brussels.

formed as a rethorical question. The Sun Tsu quote (an ancient Chinese general, by the way) was supposed to tell the intelligent being you could well have been that until you’re willing to learn something about your enemies, they will keep beating you.

RW
RW
2 years ago

Event from Germany which recently came to my attention: A so-called Syrian refugee was caught on a bus without a valid ticket. He first quarrelled with the conductor about the unjust fine imposed onto him for that and then went outside to puncture the tyres with a knife. When the conductor tried to stop him, he stabbed him twice in the gut and fled on a bicycle (he presumably stole on the spot). This resulted in him being sentenced to 2 years and 8 months in prison as he obviously didn’t want to kill anyone, just break free from the conductor who survived the attack because he was fat enough that his guts weren’t punctured so that he could flee from the scene of the crimes he had committed. He’ll only need to spend 25 of these 32 months in prison and for now, he’s again free provided he reports daily to police until the police considers it convenient to actually put him into a prision. Thank God that the glorious Anglo-Saxon saviours of all of mankind who have freed us (twice) from the kind of brutally overreaching state which had otherwise either prevented such an event or punished it… Read more »

James.M
James.M
2 years ago

Jeffrey Tucker’s excellent article identifies the need for a system of government that limits the power of the state over the fundamental rights of the individual. His suggestion of the need to revisit the Magna Carta and adjust it to the modern age is timely.

https://www.conservativewoman.co.uk/we-need-magna-carta-2-0-to-regain-control-of-our-future/

Hound of Heaven
Hound of Heaven
2 years ago
Reply to  James.M

Your comment goes straight to the heart of the matter. Governments are comprised of flawed human beings. As A Huxley pointed out, of all the appetites, the one unique to humans is for power and wealth and it can never be even temporarily sated. For many people, it is a constant, relentless desire and unless it is checked and limited the personal freedoms of the majority will vanish. People who lack ability are not immune to this addictive longing, which is why gambling in all its forms is so popular. To think that the suggestion that power should be limited and controlled still has to be made is truly remarkable. Complacency will be the death of us. Excellent, thought-provoking article, for which thanks.

adamcollyer
adamcollyer
2 years ago

Mr Tucker as perceptive as ever.

However he does view all this through an American lens. History has repeatedly been the King allied with the people, against the barons. That is what Magna Carta was actually about: protecting the barons by curtailing the power of the King.

The modern State is surely more akin to the barons and ruthlessly exploits the ordinary people. The super-rich are really part of that State.

The Kings are gone now, explicitly in the US and effectively (by neutering their power) in the UK. Which just leaves the people against the powerful. It is not right to imagine the intelligent middle class as the fighters for the people. On the contrary, they mostly want a place with the powerful. That is why it is the middle class who support trendy Left causes like wokeism, and who tried to prevent Brexit.

If there is hope, it lies with the proles, as ever.