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Author’s note
ОглавлениеThis short book was conceived and written after the 2016 referendum on the UK’s membership of the EU, and the US presidential election. But the idea of writing a polemical defence of popular democracy against its modern enemies did not occur to me overnight.
For some time, I had been aware of the widening gap between the rhetorical support for democracy in Western societies, and the attempts to restrict it in practice. And I had become particularly concerned by the Western left’s effective abandonment of the defence of democratic freedoms.
Similar concerns motivated the writing of my previous book, Trigger Warning: Is the Fear of Being Offensive Killing Free Speech?, to which Revolting! can be seen as a companion, if not a sequel.
In contrast to today’s state-centred leftism, the British left-wing tradition with which some of us identify has always taken the fight for democracy and free speech seriously: from the Levellers to the radical wing of the Suffragettes.
Those who believe in progress have fought for more democracy and freedom, not just as a good idea or an end in itself, but also as the means to help change the world. The left’s abandonment of those historic causes marks the end of that era.
The need now is to bring the politics of democracy to life and start a new public debate about the sort of society we want. This book is intended as a contribution, and a call to arms.
Revolting!’s argument for more democracy has been developed through my years as a campaigning journalist in both the mainstream and alternative press, not least as the editor of Living Marxism magazine from 1988 (relaunched in the 1990s as the taboo-busting LM until it was forced to close after being sued under England’s atrocious libel laws in 2000), and then as the launch editor of Spiked (spiked-online.com), of which I am now editor-at-large.
Like anything to do with mass democracy, however, this book is no solo effort. It would not have been possible without the contributions of others. I want to extend my thanks and admiration to my hard-working colleagues at Spiked – Tom Slater, Tim Black, Viv Regan and Ella Whelan, led by the inimitable editor Brendan O’Neill. They are true pioneers breaking new ground in the struggles over democracy and free speech.
Although this book is critical of the way that experts are now empowered to give orders rather than advice, it is itself reliant on the invaluable expertise of other writers and historians, past and present. I am indebted to the work of Bruno Waterfield and James Heartfield on the European Union.
Thanks are also due to Joseph Zigmond, my editor at William Collins, for helping to make the idea behind Revolting! into a reality. Finally, I would like to offer sincere thanks to my old friend and collaborator Frank Furedi, for the inspiration and advice to focus on the arguments that matter.
When it comes to taking responsibility for the text, warts and all, I remain of course in a minority of one.
Mick Hume, London, February 2017