Search This Blog

De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Slavery Reparations: An Exercise in Occam's Razor

By Sean Gabb @ Free Life For Life, Liberty and Property  

 The Daily Telegraph reports that the Foreign Office has opened discussions regarding the payment of reparations for slavery. According to the article, the government is considering financial compensation to nations and communities affected by the transatlantic slave trade, a move influenced by pressure from Caribbean nations and international advocacy groups. While no formal policy has been announced, the discussions signal a potential shift in British Government policy on historical accountability.

The article notes that this development follows previous gestures of atonement, including symbolic apologies and funding for educational projects. Critics of reparations argue that such payments would set a dangerous precedent, making governments liable for historical injustices committed by past generations. Supporters, on the other hand, claim that economic disparities in former colonies are a direct consequence of slavery and that Britain, having benefited from the trade, has a moral duty to compensate affected populations.

However, the push for reparations ignores the basic facts of human nature as evidenced in universal human history. It also appears to serve a more contemporary ideological and political agenda, one that has little to do with justice and much to do with a project of rewriting British history as a story of perpetual villainy and guilt.

One of these basic errors in the reparations argument is its selective moral outrage. Slavery was a universal institution until the early 19th century. Every major civilisation, from Ancient Egypt to Imperial China, practised some form of coerced labour. The Greek and Roman economies were built on slavery, as were the Arab Caliphates and the African kingdoms that supplied slaves to European traders.

Human beings are hierarchical and self-interested creatures. Those with power have always sought to dominate and exploit those without. The notion that slavery was an aberration unique to European colonialism is historically illiterate. If reparations are to be paid for historical slavery, should Italy compensate the descendants of Germanic tribes enslaved by Rome? Should Turkey compensate the Balkan nations for centuries of Ottoman enslavement? The entire notion is absurd.

The first great power to decide that slavery was morally indefensible was Britain. Slavery was declared illegal in England by the Somerset v Stewart judgment of 1772, which established that no person could be both in Britain and a slave. The slave trade was abolished throughout the British Empire in 1807, and slavery itself was abolished in 1833, and British taxpayers paid for this.

Unlike other empires, which tolerated or even expanded slavery well into the 19th century, Britain used its global power to eradicate slavery. The Royal Navy established the West Africa Squadron, which patrolled the Atlantic, seizing slave ships and freeing those aboard. Between 1808 and 1860, the Royal Navy intercepted over 1,600 ships and freed more than 150,000 African slaves. Britain engaged in diplomatic and military pressure against countries that continued the trade, straining relations with powers such as Brazil, Spain, and the United States.

If reparations are a matter of historical reckoning, then Britain has already paid its debt. The British people have no reason to feel ashamed of their history on this matter.

A central claim of the reparations lobby is that the wealth of Britain and other Western nations was built on slavery. This is demonstrably false. If slavery were the key to economic success, then Spain and Portugal, nations with deeply entrenched and long-lasting slave economies, should have been the richest nations of the 19th century. Instead, they were economically stagnant. Meanwhile, Germany, which had no significant involvement in the transatlantic slave trade, underwent an industrial transformation that outpaced many nations that had historically engaged in slavery.

Britain's Industrial Revolution was driven not by slavery but by technological innovation, property rights, and free markets. The expansion of industry and finance occurred after the abolition of slavery, not before. Slavery was an archaic system incompatible with the efficiencies of industrial capitalism.

If reparations for slavery are to be demanded, why are they not being demanded from every civilisation that practised it? Where are the calls for reparations from Islamic nations, where slavery continued into the 20th century? The Ottoman Empire ran a vast slave trade in white Europeans, capturing men and women from the Balkans, the Caucasus, and even as far as Iceland. Catherine the Great's conquest of Crimea in the 1780s ended the Crimean Khanate's lucrative trade in Slavic slaves, but there has been no campaign for Turkey to compensate the descendants of those enslaved.

Similarly, African kingdoms that sold slaves to European traders do not seem to be held accountable. The Kingdom of Dahomey (modern Benin) was one of the most aggressive slave-trading states in history. Yet, no one is demanding that the descendants of these African rulers pay reparations to their own people.

The reparations movement is not about justice; it is about politics. And it is a politics that operate with a selective sense of historical responsibility.

Occam's Razor suggests that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one. Why, then, is Britain being pushed towards reparations for slavery when many other nations, just as complicit (if not more so), are not?

The answer is simple: Britain's ruling class is not motivated by a mistaken understanding of history. Nor is it driven by genuine remorse. It is engaged in an ideological project to delegitimise British history, demonise the native population, and redistribute wealth in ways that serve the interests of a globalist elite.

The modern British state, proximately controlled by a managerial class that despises its own people, sees historical guilt as a useful tool. It uses it to weaken national identity, to justify mass immigration, and to entrench the belief that the native population has no legitimate claim to its own institutions. Reparations are not about compensating the descendants of slaves; they are about furthering an agenda of demographic transformation and wealth extraction from ordinary working people to benefit a parasitic ruling class.

This is not historical justice. It is a racket.

Britain owes nothing to those demanding reparations. The British people should be proud of their country's role in ending slavery, not ashamed of it. The entire reparations movement is an exercise in political manipulation, not historical redress.

Slavery was a universal human institution. Britain was the first great power to abolish it and fought for its suppression across the world. If reparations are owed, they are owed by every civilisation that ever practised slavery. Selectively targeting Britain, and, by extension, white Europeans, exposes the true motive behind this campaign: not justice, but anti-white politics.

The answer to this push for reparations should be a firm and unapologetic "no." Of course, there should also be a revolution, one purpose of which should be that no one active in this evil demonisation of British history and the British people should never again be allowed to come so close to power in Britain. To be sure, so far as they may be one, and there is not, Britain has already paid its debt through its moral leadership, and through its power when this existed. It should not be forced to pay again merely to further the modern attempt to enslave the British people.

No comments:

Post a Comment