"Back To Titus Oates" In Britain
Received Monday, 8.50 p.m. LONDON, Nov. 7. In a Note of the Week headed "Back to Titus Oates," The Economist says: "To many people the Chancellor of the Exchequer's announcement — it carae out quite casually in a written answer to a Parliamentary question — that 'in suitable cases,' rewards will be paid to persons who give information to the authorities which leads to eonvictions under the Exchange Control Act, must seem like the last straw. "When Mr. Churchill in the course of the last general election predicted that the principles of Labour Socialism must inevitably lead to the ereation of a British Gestapo he was very widely derided. It couldn't happen here. It begins to look as if the country owes Mr. Churchill an apology: It is happening here. Exchange control is one of those departments of the law for which the public may — or may not— be prepared to concede a justification in expediency. It has no moral basis. "How could it — since it prohibits transactions which were perfectly legal only ten years ago and still in most people's minds honest (though illegal) today? Yet this new branch of the law interferes at countless points with the ordinary Iife of the ordinary citizen. It prohibits him from going abroad when he wants to. It prohibits her (if the ordinary citizen is a woman) from taking her normal jewellery with her. It involves such absurdities as the prohibitipn of sending of stamp collections to schoolboys abroad. "To enforce this collection of irritating restrictions the secrecy of mails can be, and is, violated in peacetime. And now there are to be rewards to informers and relators. The state is deliberately to put a premium upon private spying and grudge-bearing, not among the criminal classes but throughout the whole population. No form of economic control is worth this price. Away with it!"
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Chronicle (Levin), 8 November 1949, Page 5
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315"Back To Titus Oates" In Britain Chronicle (Levin), 8 November 1949, Page 5
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