Five Ideas to Fight For: How Our Freedom is Under Threat and Why it Matters

by Anthony Lester

Paperback, 2017

Call number

3

Publication

Oneworld Publications (2017), Edition: Reprint, 256 pages

Description

Human Rights - Equality - Freedom of Expression - Privacy - The Rule of Law. These five ideas are vitally important to the way of life we enjoy today. The battle to establish them in law was long and difficult, and Lord Anthony Lester was at the heart of the thirty-year campaign that resulted in the Human Rights Act, as well as the struggle for race and gender equality that culminated in the Equality Act of 2010. Today, however, our society is at risk of becoming less equal. From Snowden's revelations about our own intelligence agencies spying on us to the treatment of British Muslims, our civil liberties are under threat like never before. The Internet leaves our privacy at risk in myriad ways, our efforts to combat extremism curtail free speech, and cuts to legal aid and interference with access to justice endangers the rule of law. A fierce argument for why we must act now to ensure the survival of the ideals which enable us to live freely, Five Ideas to Fight For is vital study on the state of freedom and the law in the world today.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member gmicksmith
As it is said, no country ones having lost its freedom can ever regain it. This work examines freedom and how Americans are allowing it to slip away. The last regime has been disastrous for the bill of rights and basic American civil rights.
LibraryThing member pomo58
Five Ideas to Fight For is Anthony Lester's case for continuing the fight for five essential ideas which together constitute the foundation of any society that claims to care about it's citizens. Lester has long been engaged in the fight and has been instrumental in many of the changes in British
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law.

While the ideas and history is told primarily from a UK perspective the arguments and progress (or lack thereof) pertain to all of society and actually closely parallel progress in some other countries. The takeaways from this book are the foundational nature of these ideas to freedom, how they have come under fire in recent years and why they are important for every generation to vigilantly protect, defend and fight for. These concepts are not restricted by international boundaries though the battles will certainly be different in every nation.

The writing is quite good, almost too good in that it can easily be read and understood at a rapid reading pace, yet these ideas should be pondered while reading as well as revisited after reading. I highly recommend this book to anyone interested in what falls under the largely abstract concept of freedom, and it also would be of particular interest to those interested in recent UK political and legal history and how things have gotten to the point they have.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via the LibraryThing Early Reviewer program.
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LibraryThing member ryven
THE SUBJECT:
Human Rights. Equality. Free Speech. Privacy. The Rule of Law. These are the ideas Lord Anthony Lester presents as under threat today, as well as what must be done to counteract the threat.

THE SCRIBE:
A British barrister and politician, Anthony Lester is Baron Lester of Herne Hill, who
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currently sits in the House of Lords as a Liberal Democrat (in the British sense) and serves on the Joint Committee for Human Rights.

THE STYLE:
Part memoir, part polemic, Five Ideas to Fight For narrates Lord Lester's role and beliefs in the development of British freedoms in today's world.

THE SUBSTANCE:
"Human rights are not the gift of governments. They are our birthright. Some believe human rights are part of natural law and religious teachings; for others they are the fruits of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment; for pragmatists they are the basic freedoms of the individual. Philosophers and theologians reflect about origins and sources of fundamental rights. I am neither a philosopher nor a theologian. What matters to me is whether they are observed in practice and whether there are effective remedies for victims when they are breached."

THE SPECIFICS:
The cognitive dissonance espoused by Lord Lester is staggering: "[British courts] interpret legislation in accordance with contemporary values and conditions to avoid statutes becoming ossified relics of a bygone age." Yet at the same time he pens those words he mourns the lack of a written constitution and bill of rights. To what purpose, if they in turn will be interpreted in accordance with contemporary values and conditions? As noted by Jefferson: "The constitution, on this hypothesis, is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary, which they may twist, and shape into any form they please."

THE SCOOP:
Perhaps the unwritten British constitution necessitates that such a book is written. Americans are afforded the protections codified in our Constitution and the Bill of Rights, whereas British courts "treated all Acts of Parliament as equal and equally able to be trumped by a future Act of a future Parliament." Nevertheless, it is difficult to disentangle the legitimate concerns of Lord Lester from his political and worldview leanings. For what happens when rights are in conflict--say the religious rights of the Abrahamic faiths versus the sexual rights championed under equality? If Lord Lester is neither a philosopher nor a theologian, then he can only resolve conflicting rights as a pragmatist. And therein lies the great flaw of this book--the quest for cosmic justice, be it under the auspices of pragmatism, utilitarianism, or any other -ism, is a fallacy.
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LibraryThing member Avogt221
I'll start this review by saying that after reading this book, I suspect that I would very much enjoy meeting the author at a dinner party. Based on his career and the few stories he put in the book, I suspect that the stories that he could tell would be fascinating. I only wish that the book had
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been as interesting or as passionate as it should have been. It occupies an odd space somewhere between memoir, light history of British parliament acts in relation to his five ideas, with the barest hint of why it matters. For a book with the subtitle "How Our Freedom is Under Threat and Why it Matters" I got remarkably little evidence of how freedom is under threat nor why these specific freedoms matter to the author. Although I didn't always agree with Baron Lester the few times he expressed and opinion (he believes that the United States 1st Amendment may be too expansive, I do not, the few times he expressed his opinion I was interested to hear what he had to say. I just wish that the book had contained a little more of that and a little less parliamentary history.
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LibraryThing member JessicaGalleske
It took me literally months to read this book. Normally it takes me one month, if that. Maybe it was because the first two parts of the book were so boring, I couldn't read more than a few pages at a time before getting incredibly bored. The rest of the book was really good though, and flowed
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nicely.
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Language

Original language

English

Physical description

256 p.; 5 inches

ISBN

178607088X / 9781786070883

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