Fabian Freeway by Rose L Martin (1966) - Part 3
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Grammar – What They Say
- After World War I, the Labour Party, guided by Fabians, replaces the Liberal Party and becomes the main vehicle for socialist reform.
- “Every social reform introduced by the Fabian-steered Labour Party was carefully contrived to weaken… the national economy.”
- Fabian socialists are shown alternating between gradualism and cooperation with communists, depending on political opportunity.
- ⚠️ “All that distinguished many a Fabian socialist from the local communist… was the lack of a Communist Party card.”
- The Zinoviev Letter crisis exposes links between Labour, Fabians, and Moscow, temporarily collapsing the Labour government.
- During the interwar years, Fabians dominate education, publishing, and research, especially through the London School of Economics and the Left Book Club.
- “Its trend was frankly Marxist and clearly catastrophic.”
- World War II is framed as the long-awaited opportunity for socialist takeover.
- ⚠️ “The coming cataclysm was a priceless opportunity for socialist expansion.”
- The Fabian Research Bureau becomes the central planning body for postwar Britain.
- “Privately controlled research… applied with explosive effect.”
- The Beveridge Report is presented as a Fabian psychological operation promising “cradle to grave” security.
- “A species of state-administered insurance extending from the womb to the tomb.”
- After 1945, a Fabian-dominated Labour government dismantles the British Empire and restructures the economy.
- “One jewel after another was plucked from the Imperial Crown.”
Logic – How They Argue
- Fabian success is attributed to elite capture, not popular mandate: universities, research, media, and bureaucracy shape outcomes in advance.
- Political parties are treated as instruments, not ends; Labour is the “chosen instrument.”
- Research and welfare promises are used as tools of mass persuasion, especially in wartime fear.
- ⚠️ Welfare is framed as benefit, while dependency and taxation are deferred.
- Fabian anti-imperialism is argued to weaken Britain while strengthening Soviet influence globally.
- Fabian democracy is shown as procedural rather than genuine, using uninstructed delegates and co-opted executives.
- ⚠️ “A strange example of political democracy at work.”
- The parallel between Fabian socialism and other totalitarian movements is made explicit.
- “Hitler’s party had been elected no less legally and democratically.”
Rhetoric – Why It Persuades
- Heavy use of war, betrayal, and deception metaphors frames Fabianism as internal subversion.
- Welfare language is exposed as emotional manipulation, exploiting fear, hope, and wartime exhaustion.
- Fabian leaders are portrayed as cold planners vs. a trusting public.
- ⚠️ “A cruel farce perpetrated… on a hungry and hopeful nation at war.”
- The Empire’s collapse is narrated as self-inflicted, achieved peacefully where enemies failed by force.
- The chapter closes with elegiac irony, turning patriotic slogans into lament.
- “What had once been a stirring victory march became… a dirge.”
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