[xxxvi. 59]
1821. July 3.
Constitut Code
England
First Lines
Constitutional
1. Army in 1753, 20,000. Army in 1821, 100,000.
2. Navy in 1753, 15,000. Navy in 1821, 60,000
So far as aggressive power is concerned, to say that it is no greater now than it was in 1753 is to say that one hundred thousand is no more than twenty thousand: or that sixty thousand is no more than fifteen thousand.
[xxxvi. 47]
1821 May 15
Constitut. Code
First Lines
Ch Delusion
Instruments [...?...?...?...?...?...?]
\PS\ Instruments of misrule - their comparative mischievousness.
1. Force is on this occasion out of the question.
2. Intimidation, on this occasion the question is, between intimidation, or say force and intimidation on the one hand and corruption and delusion on the other.
1. Evils produced by force and intimidation are -
1. Pain of actual sufferance, in so far as they are actually applied. This is confined to the actual sufferers and their immediate connections.
2. Pain of apprehension: viz. of like sufferance from like causes. This pervades the whole community, applying to every individual member of it.
A 3. A sense of coercion: viz compulsory and restrictive: A more particularly restrictive. This operates in a more particular manner in repression of productive labour and thence in diminution of the matter of abundance and means of subsistence: the sense of insecurity being general, the sense of insecurity in respect of property and thence in respect of the fruits of labour is involved in it.
In the case of corruption where corruption is the only instrument employed no one of all these evils has place.
So likewise in the case of delusion, where delusion is the only instrument, or corruption and delusion are the only instruments, none of all these evils has place
A Note stating the state of the Turkish and Spanish Government as compared with that of England in the misgovernment of which corruption and delusion have the greatest share.
[xxxvi. 48]
1821 May 15
First Lines
Constitutional Instruments
2. Evils of corruption.
By corruption considered in itself, no one of the evils which as above have been seen produced by force and intimidation are produced. But as compared with force and intimidation, corruption has the same object and effect, viz. sacrifice of the greatest interest of the greatest number, to the interests real or imagined of the ruling one with or without the interest of the sub-ruling few.
Moreover of the sub-instruments of corruption viz money, power and factitious dignity, money the most surely and extensively influential is not obtained but by means of force and intimidaton: thus far then in the evils of coruption, the evils of force and intimidation are involved.
If the influence of force and intimidation is more irresistible, and, for the present, the most effective, the influence of corruption is more permanent: and the exclusion of it the more hopeless.
By force and intimidaion, resentment is excited; and, in deisr and endeavour, retribution called forth: by corruption, no such hostile passion, no such hostile endeavour or desire are produced.
By corruption - by corruptive influence on the one part, and corrupt obsequiousness on the other part - the irritation produced by force and intimidation is allayed.
Corruption, though a deadly poison, is a slow one: a poison by the progress of which no particular alarm at any particular period is produced: no alarm at any period in any degree approaching in magnitude to that of the real danger or the real mischief.
By every atom added to that of the existing mass of the matter of corruption, the effective force of the whole is of course encreased: by every addition made to it, the faclity of making further additions to it is thereby encreased: the less sensible are the subject many at whose expense the matter extracted, not only to the mischief produced by it, as above, but also to the evils produced by the force and intimidation by which it is produced: and while on the part of the sufferers themselves - while on the part of those by whom the suffering is experienced the sensibility to it is diminished, no wonder if on the part of those by whom the suffering is inflicted, the reluctance, whatsoever, if any, may at any time have existed, is diminished likewise.
Note, making exemplifications from the English Government.
[xxxvi. 49]
1821. May 15.
First Lines
Constitutional Instruments.
2. Delusion. In so far as corruption is barren of the evils which, as above, have been seen produced by force and intimidation, in so far as applied to the evil purpose in question, so, with the exception of that delusion which has religion for its sub-instrument as above /below/, is delusion.
Delusion operates partly by means of the matter of corruption as its sub-instrument, partly by other means. In so far as, for the purpose of delusion, no other means than those employed for the purpose of corruption are employed, in so far to the purpose of delusion no addition is made to the amount of the evils thereby as above produced: on the contrary, in so far as in addition to the quantity employed for the purpose of corruption any quantity of money is extracted for the special purpose of delusion, over and above whatever would have been extracted for the purpose of corruption, here then is so much evil to be set down to the account of delusion alone.
[xxxvi. 50]
1821. May 14.
First Lines.
Constitutional Instruments.
Delusion
John Bull is Gulliver under Liliputian chains insensibly applied.
One great misfortune attendant on the use made of corruption and delusion is, the extreme facility with which the fabrication of these instruments of misrule is attended. Force and intimidation are not applied without special and strenuous exertions on the part of possessors of power, specially directed to the production of obsequiousness - the desired effect. Corruption and delusion are produced by him not only without any strenuous exertions, but without so much as any expence in the article of thought: are produced by him just as well when asleep as when awake.
To exercise corruptive influence to any amount - to produce corrupt obsequiousness to any amount - it is not necessary that either endeavour, or so much as desire so to do, should have place in his mind. All that is necessary, is - the desire and the endeavour which, in his situation, is of course followed by accomplishment - the endeavour to produce and of course the production of waste. In a word, all that is necessary to him is, on every occasion that presents itself, to yield to the appetite for money in his own breast, or in the breasts of any individual or individuals connected with him in the way of interestor sympathy: for the purpose of their individual gratification, the money is put into their pockets: thereupon, by the eventual expectation of the like benefit from the like source, corruptive obsequiousness is produced in the breast and conduct of ten, twenty, or perhaps fifty times as many breasts as those in which the gratification attached to the receipt and expenditure of the money was produced.
[xxxvi. 51]
1821 May 1.
Constitut. Code
First Lines
Instruments incorporeal
2 Instruments
Notes to p.1.
(a) [Force.] Understand physical force, as where an officer of justice seizes the body of a person accused and conducts him to prison, or seizes the goods of a defendant and conducts them to a place where they are to be sold, to raise money to be applied in satisfaction for the debt due to the plaintiff.
(b) [Intimidation] By intimidation understand the production of apprehension of eventual evil as about to be applied by some functionary or functionaries of the Government in question in the name of punishment to the individual in question in the event of his performing any act of the sort in question: it being the intention of the Government in question and thereby to prevent him from so doing
(c) [Remuneration] Understand By remuneration understand
(d) [Well applied] Understand in such manner as to be conducive to the greatest happiness of the greatest numbers
(e) [Ill applied] Understand in such manner as to be detrimental to the greatest happiness of the greatest number: whether subservient or not to the interest real or supposed of the ruler or rulers by whom or by whose orders it is applied
[xxxvi. 52]
1821 July 5 1822 Aug. 10.
First Lines
Constitut Cod.
Constitutional
/[...?] Good [...?]
Incorporeal instruments
2. Delusion/
\ZA\Employ this in the Chapter of [...?] on Examinations.
Delusion is either introductive /positive/, or say insertive, or exclusive.
1. Introductive /Positive/, by introduction of false and mischievous lights.
2. Exclusive, by exclusion put upon true and useful lights.
Exclusion is either direct or indirect.
1. Direct, for instance viz by prohibition enforced by punishment, as in case of libel law.
2. Indirect: viz by invitation enforced by reward, applied to produce the introduction of such lights as are either say positively mischievous or useless and thence in a sort of negative way mischievous by drawing of, that attention and those exertions which otherwise would have been employed in the acquisition & introduction of useful lights.
Of introductive delusion an example is afforded by the encouragement given to despotism - supporting newspapers, reviews and other periodicals.
Of the indirectly exclusive delusion an example is afforded by the pains taken in both the Church of England Universities, to apply the whole time and labour of all young men of distinguished talents to the study of the most useless parts that can be found in mathematics & the greek language. This is done by attaching rewards in the shape of rich fellowships and scholarships, to what is thus held out in the character of merit: of which merit such as it is the Degrees are established by what is really the most effectual method or rather the only effectual method, viz. public examinations. In fact in Cambridge such is the effect of this device that of the whole number of three or four thousand students, all those possessed of the strongest talents are made to bestow the whole of their disposable time to the acquisition of these useful points of learning, if learning it is to be called: and such is the energy thus produced, that by it, many a healthy constitution has notoriously be injured not to say destroyed by it.
This is one of the means by which the whole [...?] of that seminary for Public men, has most effectually been abstracted from the study of government and religion through any other books than those which are put into their hands for the delusive purpose.
[xxxvi. 53]
1821 April 3
Constitut Code s
Adend.
No existing form is perhaps compleatly and [...?] unmixt It may be considered as unmixt when the [...?] is not great enough to prevent the production of the distinguishable effects.
\PS\. Constitutional Law
Considered with reference to the allotment made of the powers of government, all forms are either pure /unmixt/ or mixt Of unmixt forms of government three sorts are commonly held in view distinguished from the number of the persons to whom those powers are allotted
A /An unmixt/ democracy is that form of government in which the whole aggregate composed of all the members of the community are considered as partaking /partakers/ in the powers of government.
An unmixt Aristocracy is the form of government in which an aggregate composed of /no more than/ a portion only of the members of the community, are considered as partaking in the power of government.
An unmixt Monarchy is the form of government in which one member of the community possesses of himself /has at his own comand/ all the powers of government.
Note
The adjunct commonly employed on this occasion is pure. It has two inconveniences. One is - that to the idea of thing /object/ which it is employed to designate it adds the idea of approbation as bestowed upon that object by the speaker: the other is that it does not so clearly bring to view as does the word unmixt the relation between the hing in question, and its oposite from which the thing in question is to be distinguished.
[xxxvi. 54]
1821 April 3
First Lines
Supreme Operative
Of the Constitution in creation
I The United States American nation have a constitutiion.
Thay have a Constitutional Code: the Constitution is the system of arrangement delivered in their Code.
It has for its object the greatest happiness of the greatest numbers
In pursuit of that object the powers of government are distributed /alloted/ by the greatest number
II The Spanish nation has a Constitution
It has a Constitutional Code: the Constitution is the system of arrangement delivered in this Code
III The French nation has a Constitution It has a Charter granted by the Monarch. The Constitution is the system of arrangement delivered in that [...?] /[...?]/.
IV. The English nation has a Constitution. It has no Constitutional Code.
[xxxvi. 55]
1821 April 3
First Lines
Ch. Codification Law
/Supreme Operative.
Reform/
\ZA\ This comes after Constitutional Law
\PS\. Of Reform.
Reform, considered as compleat in the [...?] of a form /system/ of government which has for its end /object/ in view the happiness of a portion [...?] /no more than a portion/ of its members of the community with a form /system/ of government which has for its end in view the greatest happiness of the greatest number
Reform, considered as [...?] or incompleat, is every sort of [...?] what have for their end /object/ in view any [...?] made would [...?...?] as above.
[xxxvi. 56]
1821. April 9.
Constitut Code
First Lines
Constitutional Law
/Supreme Operative/
They obtain land for munificence: munificence is depradation
\PS\ To every Monarch, the people are an object of hatred and contempt.
In the view taken of the field of legislation by the scribe of the absolute Monarch, it swarms in every part with rebels. To afford security to him against the enterprises of adversaries in this shape is the most anxious of his cares. He is encompassed with enemies on all sides and at all times: the very form of his Government - the objects and designs so undisguisably evidenced by it suffices to convert into adversaries to him all men who are not so to their fellow countrymen and themselves. Of their hatred, he assures himself: of the justness of it, as well as of the impossibility of keeping it from coming into existence, he is fully conscious. The utmost he can hope for is to guard himself against that part of its effects which is most formidable to him. In this view, he scruples not to appoint punishment for the manifestation of it: punishment for all those who, seeing what he is, make known to others what they see\; punishing all who, on any occasion on which their sentiments are other than favourable to him make known those sentiments. If there be any sure methods of creating hatred, this is one of them: but seeing love hopeless, seeing every affection better than hatred inconsistent with every rational view of the case, he is content thus to draw upon himself hatred, for the additional chance which he thus thinks to give himself of escaping from the effects of it.
Thus in the case of the absolute Monarch. And in this respect the case of the limited Monarch is not materially different.
Turn now to the case of representative democracy. In the Representative Democracy, there are no rebels. In the penal code of the representative Democracy there is Government: there may therefore be resistance to Government. In the representative Democracy there are rulers: there may, therefore, be resistance to rulers. Under one Government as well as under another, resistance to rule must be punished or there is no rule. But it is punished as such and only as such, and not as rebellion. Suppose even a conspiracy to overturn the Government, and substitute to it an absolute Monarchy: for under every such democracy the supposition may be made, though under the only established democracy as yet exemplified the fact is morally impossible.
[xxxvi. 57]
1821. April 9.
Constitut. Code
First Lines
Constitutional Law.
/Supreme Operative/
Suppose then a conspiracy thus to destroy the Government. The Conspirators are enemies, but they are not rebels. The State they have placed themselves in with relation to the rulers and the rest of the community is a state of war. Being enemies, the care of self-defence renders it necessary they should be treated as such. They must be opposed, and, if possible, by any means, disabled from carrying /giving effect to/ their mischievous endeavours. But, as in the case of external enemies, so in the case of these internal ones, such means of self-defence as are least mischievous to both parties taken together, are the only means suitable or justifiable.
As to hatred - hatred fixed on one fixed object, here there is no such thing.
[xxxvi. 58]
1821 June 19
Constitut Code
England
First Lines
Supreme Operative
[...?] Reform [...?] yield
of [...?] Monarchy [...?...?]
[...?] for [...?] - Security
against [...?]
Duplication negative.
Note the check to Geo. 1. and 2. by the Pretender's party
In defence of the system of misrule as at present carried on, a plea in bar against Reform, and a plea that seems to be most generally employed and relied on, is - that the system at present pursued and acted upon /that has lace now/, is the same as that by which all the good effects that have ever been experienced, have been produced: the same on which all the praises that have ever been bestowed upon it by foreign nations as well as its own have been bestowed.
If things themselves are to be considered, and not mere words - the tings themselves and not merely the words employed in speaking of them /they are called by/, nothing can be further from the truth. The assertion, if it be any thing to the purpose, amounts to this: viz. that to the power exercised by the ruling one in conjunction with the sub-ruling few over the subject many, there exists at present checks and securities against abuse either the same as or not less effectual than, any which ever had place at any former point of time.
This will be found compleatly false and groundless whether the power of aggression on the part of the one and the few be considered or the power of self-defence on the part of the many. On the part of the rulers, the power of aggression may be distinguished into /is either/ the power of violence and the power of corruption: On the part of the people /subject many/, the power of self-defence to be distinguished into that which they exercise by their Representatives, meaning always their actual deputies and delegates freely chosen by them, and that which they exercise by themselves.
First, as to the power of aggression by violence. It consists in, and in its amount is proportioned to, the standing force of a military nature, under the absolute command of the ruling one. Of this force there are two branches: the land force and the sea force. For the period of comparison take, in the first place, the year 1753 being the fifth year of the death of George the second. /peace -/ the fifth year after the war that ceased /terminated/ in the peace of 1748.
1. Army.
[xxxvi. 59]
1821. July 3.
Constitut Code
England
First Lines
Constitutional
1. Army in 1753, 20,000. Army in 1821, 100,000.
2. Navy in 1753, 15,000. Navy in 1821, 60,000
So far as aggressive power is concerned, to say that it is no greater now than it was in 1753 is to say that one hundred thousand is no more than twenty thousand: or that sixty thousand is no more than fifteen thousand.
[xxxvi. 61]
1821 June 20
First Lines
Constitutional
Corruption Progress
1. As to the modes of nominating these Commissioners, there are two, by the Crown or by Parliament: by the Crown: is by the Ministry in his closet, or by the Parliament i.e. by the Ministry in the House of Commons, the result being equally at command in both instances, a question that naturally occurs is, wherein can consist the difference, what is it that should render it an object to either party, that either course should be chosen in preference to the other.
To give the answer, another distinction must be brought to view. In the number of these Commissioners it is thought or not thought advisable by Government to place a Member of Parliament: a Member of Parliament i.e. one who is already of the number of their own adherents, or one who by this means is to be made so. If there be no member of Parliament all they get by the business is the confirmation of the abuse the impunity of those concerned in it, the increase given to the quantity of the matter of corruption employed as such: if a Member of Parliament who was not before of the number of adherents is put into the Commission in that case they get the additional advantage of this addition to the list.
[sheet attached to xxxvi. 61]
18 June 1821
Instances
1. [...?] Church
2. Public Money[?]
3 Courts of Justice
4. Offices in general
Progress of corruption and Abuse
1 If no notice is taken and Abuse goes on perpetually encreasing
2. If notice is taken currency is given to it another way. After reluctance real or feigned a Commission is appointed to report. The Commers are appointed by those whose interest it is to keep up the abuse and who accordingly foster it. These Commissioners are paid: and thereby bribed: the addition thus added to the matter of corruption applied is certain: the lessening the abuse in any degree [...?]
[036.062]
1821 July 9
Codification Offer? or First Lines Constitutional.
'.9 Pay of Useless places
1. Useless official situations.
The whole of the establishment kept up for the service of the person of the Chief functionary in the state in a Monarchy: kept up, as the phrase is, for the support of his dignity: for the maintenance of the lustre, the splendour of his throne.
Proof of the uselessness of this office: the peaceful and flourishing condition of the Anglo-American United States, in which, in the federal state, the pay of the Chief functionary is no more than ,6,000 a year: and it is rather by imitation and prepossession, it should seem, than by any clear proof or view of a real and adequate demand to that amount, that, in that instance, the allowance of so large a sum was determined.
This Office is not merely useless: it is a great deal worse than useless. It is positively mischievous, and in a transcendent degree. Of the mass of the matter of wealth thus employed, the effects are corruption and delusion, corruption applying itself to public functionaries of all other shapes: delusion applying itself to them and to the subject many.
The delusion has for its effect, and object, the causing the several individuals on whom this lustre is stood to be regarded, contrary to the truth of the case, as being in moral as well as intellectual acquirements superior to the rest of the community - superior in the scale of [...?] benevolence, in that of wisdom, appropriate information, discernment and active talent. That this notion is opposite to the truth is matter of demonstration. For to his acquisition of all these endowments, self-denial in the shape of mental labour and other shapes is altogether indispensable: for self-denial is self-annoyance, and that which a man can obtain without self-annoyance, he will not expend self-annoyance on the obtainment of. By power, by money, by factitious dignity, a man is rendered an object of respect and even of affection to other men: especially to those whose place is below the level of his in those several scales: they are placed in a state of dependence with relation to him: he is exempt from dependence in relation to them. In respect of any services it may happen to him to be desirous of receiving at their hands, he is in so much a greater degree independent of his good behaviour in relation to them: of his good behaviour: i.e. of the degree in which he is in the habit of rendering to them services in both shapes, positive and negative: by negative service understand abstinence from inflicting annoyance in all its several shapes.
1821 July 9
Codification Office
'.9.
I. Pay of Useless places
List of Useless places.
1. The whole of the establishment kept up for the service of the person of the Chief functionary in the state in a Monarchy: kept up as the phrase is for the support of his dignity: for the maintenance of the lustre the splendor of his throne.
Proof of the uselessness of this office: the peaceful and flourishing condition of the Anglo-American United States in which in the federal State the pay of the Chief functionary is no more than /not so much as/ ,6,000 a year: and it is rather by imitation and prepossession, it should seem, than by any clear proof or view of a real and adequate demand to that amount, that in that instance the allowance of so large a sum was determined.
2. In every country in which the great body of the people profess to believe in the religion of Jesus in any shape, the whole of the pay allotted at the expence of the subject many under the notion of pay for teaching it and performing the ceremonies that /which/ have been attached to /connected with/ it. And note that pay produced by the occupation or rent of property in an unmoveable shape is so much received /extracted/ at the expence of the subject many: for by applying that same money to the provision made for real exigencies /the production money to that same amount /the suffering produced by the exaction/ might be saved /spared/.
Proof of the needlessness of pay drawn /forced exactions/ from this source, is the non-existence of any such system of exaction for the support of the Catholic Members of the Ecclesiastical establishment in Ireland.
Proof that no such contributions /exactions/ are ordained by /conformable to/ the religion of Jesus. No /text speaking of him as/ such exactions did he ordain: no text of the New Testament speaking of him as ordaining any such exaction is to be found: texts ordaining perfect equality among all professors of his religion are to be found /in existence/
1821 July 9
'.9.
2. Factitious mischievous
Pay of useless places /offices/, pay of needless places /offices/, overpay of overpaid places /offices/, pay of places to which no duty is attached /sinecures/ - practices, in maintenance of subject matters of property in an unmoveable or immoveable shape: sale upon disadvantageous terms of subject matters of property already in the hands of government these are the sources from which /shapes in which/ at the expence of the greatest happiness of the greatest number money is drawn /in excess is extracted/ into the hands /palms/ of /by and for the benefit of/ public functionaries
1821 July 9
'.9
2. Factitious mischievous
1. Useless Places
3. In every branch of the administrative Establishment, at the head of each branch of the administrative Establishment all Offices over and above one in /of/ every Board every Member except the President /Presiding Member/
4. Proof of the uselessness. In the Anglo-American States there are no such additional Offices: there are no Boards
1821 July 9
'.9
2. Factitious mischievous
4 Useless power what
2. Useless power. It is by correspondent obsequiousness and obedience on the part of those on whom it is exercised that all political power is constituted. It is at their expence that it is exercised. To a greater or less degree, being the result of coercion obedience and obsequiousness and obedience paid to power is attended with suffering /uneasiness/ on the part of whose by whom it is paid It is therefore at their expence that it is exercised and maintained. If after deduction made of this suffering /uneasiness/, a balance on the side of happiness - positive and negative together understand by negative exclusion /prevention/ of unhappiness - the creation and preservation of it is not conducive to but on the contrary detractive from the greatest happiness of the greatest number.
All power over and above the least quantity that is sufficient and necessary and sufficient to enable the possessor to contribution /make his contribution/ & according to the nature of his situation to minister towards that all comprehensive end is useless: useless, and at the same time mischievous. Suffering being among the inseparable effects of it in so far as it is useless it is worse than useless, it is purely mischievous.
1821 July 9
'.9.
2. Factitious mischievous
II. Useless Power
All Power for the exercise of which the holder /possessor/ is not responsible to those at whose expence it is exercised is greater than power for the exercise of which it being in other respects of the same description in other respects the holder is responsible to those on whom it is exercised. Power to the possession of which it does not depend upon the will of those on whom it is exercised to put a period is greater than power to the possession of which it being in other respects of the same description in other respects it does depend upon their will to put a period. Useless is the whole amount of the difference between the quantity of the power in the one case and the quantity of the power in the other case. Useless: and much worse than useless.
/In a man's/ /In /the idea of a man's/ being at the same time on the one hand subject to the exercise of power, and on the other hand at the same time partaker /a sharer/ in the possession of it there is nothing inconsistent /of inconsistency/ or incongruity in any other shape. Yes: if of the share of power possessed by him the effect were to destroy the effect of the power exercisable over him: but that is not the case. In a political state all power is either operative or constitutive: operative is that, by the immediate exercise of which, obsequiousness and obedience are called for at the hands of individuals: constitutive is that by the exercise of which, operative power is created and conferred.
1821 July 9
Codification Offer
'.9.
Factitious mischievous
IV. Encouragement of Fine Arts
IV. Encouragement of the Fine Arts.
Under the denomination of the Fine Arts are comprized those arts by which amusement is afforded and nothing else. If in this amusement the greatest number were partakers and at the same time the amusement could not be obtained by them otherwise than by forced contribution, imposed on all, something might be said if not in justification in apology for the power exercised by the exaction of forced contribution, of money from unwilling contributors for this purpose. But in these /the enjoyment derived from these/ amusements it may be said without any exception that the greatest number are not partakers. The individuals and the only individuals that are partakers of them are individuals that belong to the class of those who are in affluent or at the least in easy circumstances: who in a word belong to the class of the ruling and influential few. In many an instance out of the taxes money has been employed for the defraying the expence of some source of an amusement in which not one individual in a hundred not one individual in a thousand are partakers.
Money thus employed is money taken /obtained/ in the way of robbery from the poor by the rich for their own use, obtained by false pretences: obtained by the false pretence of employing it for the service of all or at any rate of the greatest number when in truth it is only to the use of the smaller number, almost in every instance an extremely small number /proportion/ that it is applied: in the way of robbery taken from the defenceless by the class of the pretended wise and good /of those by whom a superiority in the scale of wisdom and goodness is assumed./