Archive for March, 2006

Roger Crab [1621 - 1680]

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

Hermit, pacifist, vegetarian, ascetic, celibate, teetotaller, herbalist, agitator in the Parliamentarian army, hatter, follower of (the extraordinary and charismatic blasphemer[1]) John Robins, member of the Philadelphians, Familist, standing 6' 7" (approx. 2m) tall.

In 1641, the year before the English Civil War broke out, Roger Crab became a vegetarian, as 'Eating of flesh is an absolute enemy to pure Nature'. He joined the Parliamentarian Army, where he served for seven years. Condemned to death by Oliver Cromwell, presumably for political agitation, perhaps an involvement with the Levellers, he spent two years imprisoned, but was released without the execution taking place.

In 1648, during the battle for Colchester, he received a near-fatal blow to the head, leading to his discharge from the army, after which he denounced violence and became a pacifist. He moved to Chesham and set up as a hat seller for three years, before disbanding his business and giving away his property to his poorest neighbours. Keeping just enough, he leased some land at Ickenham, near Uxbridge and built himself a house, taking up the life of a hermit, making his own clothes from sackcloth. Here he became known as a herbal doctor and received many patients.

Put in stocks, whipped, imprisoned four times for breaking the Sabbath, yet never silent. He published four pamphlets, The English Hermite [1655], Dagons-Downfall [1657], Gentle Correction for the High-flown Backslider [1659], and A Tender Salutation [1659].

In 1657 he moved to Bethnal Green, then a small hamlet about 2 miles outside of London, continuing to follow his ascetic lifestyle, subsisting on bran broth, turnip leaves, mallow leaves, herbs, roots, grass and water. He lived in a small cottage, still rejecting authority, (the "Whore-Master"), and convention, pursuing his mystical Christian vision, until his death in September 1680. He was buried in Stepney Churchyard.

Crab referred to the Church as the Whore-House and the clergy as the Pimps, in rejection of their hypocritcal use of religion. "You may observe the Whores houses in every Parish where her Pimps come to vent their Traffick to the Merchants and Beast." "If the elect are chosen from all Eternity, why do Priests take our money?" He was also critical of hypocrisy in his fellow common-man, the "labouring poor Men, which in Times of Scarcity pine and murmur for Want of Bread, cursing the Rich behind his Back; and before his Face, Cap and Knee and a whining countenance."

[1] The Declaration of John Robins and other writings. [Aporia Press 1992] Writings originally published in 1651.

Leaving the 20th Century, The Incomplete Work of the International Situationist

Sunday, March 5th, 2006
Leaving the 20th Century, The Incomplete Work of the International Situationist Leaving the 20th Century, The Incomplete Work of the International Situationist
Translated and Edited by Christopher Gray
[Rebel Press 1998]

If any single idea lay at the heart of May '68 it was Situationism. The search of a 'Northwest Passage' from the banal tyranny of the modern bourgeois order into the 'world that has never been' was signposted most early by the Situationists. Through a thousand acts of refusal and rebellion the route is revealed. The task was simple - to 'reconstruct' life itself.

It's Official : Tony Blair Is Insane

Saturday, March 4th, 2006

In a UK TV chat show interview, to be screened tonight, Blair claims that his decision in sending the country to war was divinely inspired, God told me to do it. This is crazy talk on so many levels. He's in danger of suggesting that Britain's involvement in the Iraq war is some kind of religious crusade with such a statement. The UK being a secular society, he is likely to have driven a huge wedge between himself and the general public. In the UK there has been a clear divide between the state and the church for many years, as history affirms. Tony Blair comes across as a fool; perhaps his advisors are working towards his demise. God says it's OK to kill thousands of people, the majority of them civilians? I don't think so.

This is an insult to the British public, Iraqis, Christians, and others.

Meanwhile, the new Liberal-Democrat leader, Campbell, says he prefers open minds to open-neck shirts. [.........what?] And the Tory leader, whose name I forget, (basically he's the Conservative's Little Tony), apparently has nothing to say.

BBC News items:
Blair 'prayed to God' over Iraq
PM attacked over Iraq war prayers

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