Originally Posted by: stuart 
I object to being called common. Can we change the name of the House while we are at it please? I also object to people being called Lord. It kind of makes me feel, well, common.
I support Dr.N's comment about the need to avoid unnecessary change.
On another note, I find Stuart's comment interesting: in realtion to the stereotypical power that accrues to labels. Fact is, we are primarily concerned with the reality that the real scum in this country continues rising inexorably to the top. The new "Lords and masters" are of now the lowest quality we can produce. And whoever they are--- such rulers are always going to invert the reality to as to re-present us others as inferiors. That's the nature of the competitive predator.
Soooo... whatever label we stick on a group, unless that group is number-one-head-honcho-big-chief-wuppy-wup-el-jefe: the content of tin behind the label will be deemed unworthy.
Certainly, the etymology of "Common" implies a sense of
serving or obliging a general purpose, but.... that's what the HoC is supposed to do; and that's what we aim to have them do. Furthermore, the same sense includes "belonging equally to more than one" (
Chambers) ---which is what we, the majority, are claiming: joint ownership of our own country.
That's why I would support the idea of slinging "common" in the governmental faces at the very intro to the Declaration. The word prepares the ground for re-inverting the superior/inferior dynamic. To that end, I fancy a suggestion by Tarka the Rotter (over on Raedwald --I still have to re-check whether it's on the 'Constitution' thread here): "
We, the freeborn commoners...". That aims right at the presumptuous posture of the self-styled "elite"; it also attacks the supercilious euro-yank stance... which 'prefers' the use of "citizen."
So I'm glad Stuart's comment highlights the problems inherent in the word "common." In present day Britain, all the electorate are treated as crude ignoramuses, but the worthier classes especially resent this disenfranchisement and demotion to irrelevance. I think, then, that most people could support the ironic force behind the word "common" if we develop it as a paradox that contains its own solution. That's especially apt if we retain the concept of redemption. [Remembering that another colonial power, the Romans, treated the Lord of all creation as the commonest of criminals. Crucifixion was reserved for the lowest of the low.]
[[[Dr.N --- this relates to the 'constitution thread,' too. So I hope you won't mind if I take part of it over there.]]]
Edited by user 22 July 2012 20:00:06(UTC)
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