Edmund Burke is recognised as one of Britain’s senior statesmen.
He has made formidable contributions to Britain’s policy in Ireland, America, India,
and France, as well as to the ongoing discussion regarding parliamentary
government. The stance of his most recent intervention regarding the Lesbian Gay
Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) revolution has surprised some, but it is entirely
consistent with Edmund Burke’s keen awareness of man’s fallibility. Below is a
summary of his book, ‘Reflections on the LGBT Revolution’.
Edmund Burke is in no doubt about the importance of his subject. Early in his book he writes that the LGBT Revolution is 'the most astonishing that has
hitherto happened in the world’, however he has ‘grave doubts’ as to its
benefits.
No connection between anti-racism and LGBTism
Before turning to those ‘grave doubts’, Burke demolishes the
argument that there was any connection between the cause of coloured people in
places like South Africa, and the cause of people who like to use the label
‘LGBT’. This argument has found its way into many speeches and articles, and
Burke rightly believes it is wholly mistaken to connect the two causes. They are
entirely different. The cause of anti-racism rests on the dignity all men have as
creatures created in the image of God, regardless of the colour of their skin.
The cause of LGBTism rests on the assumption that all men and women have a
right to have orgasms with whoever they want and however they want. One is
about racial equality, the other about freedom to have sexual pleasure in
different ways. To connect the two just because both black people and people
who like to use the LGBT label have faced opposition, is, according to Burke,
‘facile’.
LGBTism a ‘fabrication’
Burke now turns to those ‘grave doubts.’ One is that LGBTism
is a ‘fabrication’. It has just appeared. There has been no looking back, and
receiving from past wisdom. This unnerves Burke. He fears it is new for the
sake of being new. This indeed was made clear by the disgraced former Prime
Minister, Boris Johnson, when he gave his support to LGBTism. His only argument
was that marriage had not changed for a long time. Burke writes wisely - ‘A
spirit of innovation is generally the result of a selfish temper and confined
views.’
Morally dubious
Another ‘grave doubt’ that Burke is about the wanton way the
LGBT Revolution has destroyed all the old morality surrounding marriage and
children. ‘You begin ill’, he writes, ‘because you began by destroying
everything that belonged to you.’ Closely connected to this for Burke is the
way the LGBT Revolution and in particular their ‘Pride’ marches brazenly reject
the precepts of Christianity. Burke accuses the LGBT revolutionaries of
doubling ‘a ferocious dissoluteness in manners and an insolent irreligion in
opinions and practice.’
Burke questions the moral decency of the LGBT leaders for he
believes they practised a deceit on the British public. Those who respected
traditional marriage were told they had nothing to fear from the success of the
LGBT cause. That was not true. For now, ‘fury, outrage, and insult’ are heaped
upon anyone who in a ‘mild and lawful’ way criticises the tenets of LGBTism.
Obscure people ‘intoxicated with unprepared greatness’
In his usual thorough way Burke has researched the
background of the leading lights of the LGBT Revolution. He is not impressed.
He notes that most of these people come from the entertainment industry where some
have made money out of publicising their lewdness. Many were obscure musicians,
made rich by the record industry, and they became ‘intoxicated with their
unprepared greatness.’ As a group Burke views them as a ‘momentum of ignorance,
rashness, presumption and a lust for pleasure which nothing has been able to
resist.’ These people want to pull everyone else down to the level of their own
sexual morality. They are ‘levellers who pervert the natural order of things.’
The need for ‘infinite caution’
Burke, a devout Anglican Christian, is extremely frustrated
by preachers, such as the Unitarian Richard Price, and others in West London,
whose sermons lend support to the LGBT Revolution. He mocks the idea that this
revolution has anything to do with the cause of liberty, listing all the
terrible things that have happened since the pink flag has been flying in
Westminster. Burke cites incidents such as children being given harmful
medication to change their sex, the confusion in schools over what is now a
proper marriage, the insults heaped on the great writer J. K Rowling for saying
our sex is biological, and, most disgraceful of all, the sending of a male
rapist to a female prison in the name of LGBT rights.
All of this militates against common sense. Burke insists
that the rules of society must be based ‘practical experience, not abstract
theories.’ He writes, ‘It is with
infinite caution that any man ought to venture upon pulling down an edifice
which has answered in any tolerable degree for ages the common purposes of
society’. This is perhaps one of the most important sentences in Burke’s
‘Reflections’. Sadly neither Blair nor Cameron showed ‘infinite caution’ when
it came to traditional marriage which has served Britain in a ‘tolerable
degree…in the common purposes for society’ for our entire history. Instead they
pulled it down, recklessly sending society into wholly unchartered seas where
there are no lighthouses, and a great likelihood of wild weather erupting from man’s
carnality. He writes that, ‘The LGBT leaders are so taken up with their
theories about the rights of man that they have totally forgotten his nature.’
A male rapist is sent to a female prison
Burke returns in more detail to the case of Adam Graham, the
male rapist who decided to pretend he was a woman, and so was sent to a female
prison. Burke asks us to imagine the outrage and betrayal the other women would
have felt when Graham was brought into their midst. Burke also looks at the
case of Andrew Burns, another violent prisoner who pretended to be a woman and
who caused great alarm when he was moved to a female prison due to the dictates
of LGBTism.
In perhaps the most eloquent section of his ‘Reflections’
Burke laments that the age of common-sense and chivalry has passed. He mourns
for the time when gentlemen would fiercely defend the privacy and dignity of
their wives and daughters, and how in previous generations ‘ten thousand swords
would have leaped from their scabbards’ to defend them from the onslaught of predators
like Graham and Burns.
Having made sure that his readers have fully taken in the
terrible disgrace of these government actions Burke then asks a simple
question: ‘In the midst of these insults to common-sense, how can these LGBT
leaders claim to be ‘forming plans for the good order of future society?’ The
answer of course is that they and their ideology is wholly unfit for
contributing to the good of society.
Civilisation destroyed by intellectuals
After dealing with these specific cases, Burke then surveys
what will happen to Britain because of the LGBT revolution. He asserts that
civilisation rested ‘upon two principles, the spirit of a gentleman and the
spirit of religion.’ LGBTism relentlessly attacks both principles, and so Burke
concludes that Britain will end up as ‘a nation of gross, stupid, ferocious,
and, at the same time, poor and sordid barbarians destitute of religion,
honour, and manly pride’. For this Burke blames the atheistic intellectuals.
They write to destroy, not to build. ‘With them it is a sufficient motive to
destroy an old scheme of things because it is an old one…. they are at
inexplicable was with all establishments, including the establishment of
marriage.’ Indeed Burke believes that this cabal of intellectuals seek ‘the
destruction of the Christian religion’ and ‘these atheistic fathers have a
bigotry of their own and they have learned to talk against monks with the
spirit of a monk.’
While it is children who are the main victims of the LGBT
revolution, Burke highlights the cases of many hard-working professionals –
teachers, doctors, clergy, civil servants – who have been hounded out of their
work by LGBT fanatics working with the state. Burke has taken the time to
interview many of these people and finds them ‘in general persons of moderate
minds and decorous manners.’ There is nothing harmful about them, but they have
been unjustly harassed because of the LGBT revolution.
'Ready to cut up the infant’
Drawing to a close Burke asserts that the LGBT fanatics are
flirting with illegality because they are experimenting with other people’s
lives with ‘untried speculations.’ And especially children. They are not asked
whether they want to have two men or two women bringing them up, and yet this
is allowed, even encouraged. And research has shown that children are happiest
when brought up by a husband and a wife. Burke’s conclusion is damning for
adults who play with the lives of children in this way. They are ‘ready to cut
up the infant for the sake of an experiment’
Good order
In his final paragraphs Burke underlines that, ‘Good order
is the foundation of all good things’. And this means that marriage must be
honoured and respected. LGBTism has torn apart the meaning of marriage. The
fanatics of this creed have talked about liberty, but without wisdom or virtue,
which means their cause becomes ‘the greatest of all possible evils.’
Already Burkes ‘Reflections’ has caused an uproar amongst
ardent supporters and sympathisers of the LGBT revolution. He is dismissed as
being a bigoted patrician and an enemy of social progress. Some have painted
him as the cruel persecutor of all those who struggle with the paradigm of
marriage between a man and a woman as being the norm. That is not fair. As in
his previous writings, Burke had no hostility towards the down trodden poor of
Paris, he wished them well, and that meant ‘good order’, not anarchy, the
guillotine, and a military dictatorship that crushed them in the wake of the
French Revolution. So now, Burke has no hostility towards those who, do not
feel able to marry someone from the opposite sex. He wishes them well, but that
means maintaining ‘good order’. LGBTism destroys the foundations of that ‘good
order’ and without any caution is trying to build a new society on the sand of
untested speculations about human sexuality. Burke sees that this will come
crashing down, probably with terrible violence. And in that cruel chaos, both
the traditionalist and the radical LGBT supporter will suffer.
Burke was right about the French Revolution.
He is probably right about the LGBT Revolution.
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