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British Anarcho-Syndicalist and CNT-FAI Activist during the Spanish Civil War
 : A lifelong trade unionist he fought Mosley's blackshirts; actively supported the Spanish revolution's anarchist communes and militias and the German anti-Nazi resistance and was a key player in the second world war Cairo mutiny.  (From: AInfos.ca Bio.) 
• "Nobody is fit to rule anybody else. It is not alleged that Mankind is perfect, or that merely through his/her natural goodness (or lack of same) he/she should (or should not) be permitted to rule. Rule as such causes abuse." (From: "Anarchism: Arguments for and against," by Albert ....) 
• "If Government is the maintenance of privilege and exploitation and inefficiency of distribution, then Anarchy is order." (From: "Anarchism: Arguments for and against," by Albert ....) 
• "If we accept the principle of a socialized society, and abolish hereditary privilege and dominant classes, the State becomes unnecessary. If the State is retained, unnecessary Government becomes tyranny since the governing body has no other way to maintain its hold." (From: "Anarchism: Arguments for and against," by Albert ....)
Why ex-Kings are Dangerous
    The Royal Family are exposed as having covered his unpunished criminal 
record up but some nagging questions remain. The entire British 
Establishment, royal and otherwise, was fascistic and pro-Nazi before the 
war, except for a tiny number. Earl Mountbatten,
though his close German relatives were active Nazis, some even in 
the SS,  was the only anti-Nazi in the Royal Family (his wife's 
grandfather was a German Jew married into British aristocracy,  he himself 
was pro-Communist). But how did Edward differ from a logical mold with
which Prime Minister Baldwin had certainly no 
difficulty? When the pre-Abdication crisis came, Sir Oswald Mosley backed 
the King but they did not become friends until after the War when both 
were in comfortable retreat in France for much the same reason. The support Edward in crisis solicited at 
home, against the Establishment was not from the street fascists but from 
those who saw the military menace of Nazi Germany, especially Winston 
Churchill (then a back-bencher out of line with his party). Mountbatten enlisted the aid of those who wanted 
Churchill as PM. His go-between, double-agent/journalist Claud Cockburn, 
later described it as an unofficial Conservative-Communist front. It aimed 
to appeal to a much wider segment of the public than Mosley. Allied to the natural monarchists and those swayed 
by his owns charms, they were thought by the king to be 
irresistible.
    He was brought up in the monarchical tradition and hedged about with 
the divinity that surrounded it. He was worshiped at home and overseas 
throughout his youth on a scale now unbelievable. He could do as he 
wished, and was built up as a demi-god even among the deprived as someone who was concerned about them (he never 
actually did anything) who asked only for their devotion. Hitler had to 
work hard to get comparable status. It is understandable Edward liked what 
he saw in Germany but had no desire to be a stooge like the King of Italy under Mussolini.  It irked him to be 
one under Baldwin. The Government only asked him to respect the 
'Constitutional obligation not to marry a dubious American  divorcee'  
lest it destroy the monarchical mystique. The 
Establishment, Government and Labor Opposition defeated him. The 
'irresistible coalition' vanished. His upper-class friends dropped him 
immediately,  with sudden engagements in far off corners of the world. 
They had wanted to be his closest courtiers and but did not want to fall out with the vindictive new consort who had a 
still-unexplained grudge against him (she is now the revamped cozy dear 
old 'Queen Mom' of newspaper hype). Edward retired bitter. Even his 
staunchest champion, Churchill, ditched him after 'National Rat Week' (Osbert Sitwell) when the moronic new king and 
his formidable wife put the boot in.
    The subsequent repeated treasons and criminality were inevitable. He 
was brought up to do as he wished. What need to obey laws which were 
passed for his subjects?  The Government recognized he was an attractive 
prize for the Nazis who could use him to 'legitimize' an Occupation government. A king is always a king. If the 
Russians had not wiped out their royals, the Nazis would certainly have 
imposed the 'rightful Emperor'. The Japanese invaders did exactly that in 
China. A century and a half before, 
the French wiped out their royal family, but not sufficiently. There was 
still an heir who led the enemy forces against the French, and later 
executed as traitors those like Marshal Ney who had fought for their own 
country under Napoleon. The latter died 
under suspicious circumstance in the hands of the British, who knew from 
their own repeated experience that ex-kings, even frustrated kings,  like 
tigers wounded by hunters, are dangerous.  Nobody should ever again 
question the danger', to conservatives no less than revolutionaries, of allowing deposed monarchs and even their 
heirs the luxury of being 'kings over the water', even on a coral reef, 
even to live at all.
   Two corollaries follow, the first being to reconsider the case of 
Trotsky, still worshiped by legitimist Bolsheviks.
     It seems every anti-Stalinist including anarchists thought the trials 
a frame-up, but I personally always suspected what they were judging was 
not Trotsky but Stalin, on the basis that someone so ruthless must always 
be truthless. I always felt that 
though Stalin was a vicious dictator,  it does not follow that everyone 
with whom he came into conflict was by that token any good (Hitler for 
one), and hardly those on whose legacy he attained power. 
      Why is it unthinkable that Trotsky (with more tragic family reasons 
for bitterness) did not do an 'Edward VIII' like most others in his 
position?   In power, his policy was that the Soviet revolution could  be 
spread abroad by armed intervention. So
far as the Soviet Union was concerned he never until his dying day (and 
his disciples thereafter) advocated internal revolution against Stalin, nor 
did the Old Bolsheviks who came up for trial. The 'soviet revolution' had 
made Russia a 'workers state', he
argued,all it needed was the overthrow of Stalin's dictatorship and 
bureaucracy. How do you overthrow or alter a dictatorship except by 
revolution or by foreign armed intervention?  If the first was out, there 
was a Leninist precedent of accepting help from Imperial Germany. On the German side there was no more reason why they 
should refrain from helping Trotsky (before Hitler) than they had with 
Lenin, while after Hitler, once he started planning war, Trotsky was no 
more unacceptable  a partner than Litvinov or Molotov later with whom they undoubtedly did collaborate.
      There is plenty of evidence, including confessions, that Trotsky 
and  all of his associates or former colleagues in Russia did collaborate 
with the Nazis. The only problem with the evidence is that it was given in 
a Soviet court, under Stalin, and nobody believes it for that reason.  At any rate, Stalin certainly believed 
what he is supposed to have invented himself, and had Trotsky murdered, at 
a time when the exile was calling for defense of the USSR, lest he was 
placed as the nominal head of an invading army, whether from the West or the center of Europe. 
albert meltzer
From : Hack.org
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