“Other states in the past sought to conceal this truth from themselves by the exercise of projection - customarily onto a dynasty with supposedly extraordinary powers of healing and unification. This did not save them: indeed historians usually attribute part of the magnitude of the eventual smash to the ingrained, faithful, fatalistic fixation. The supplanting of monarchy, in those circumstances, by new forms of despotism was not the negation of monarchy but the replication of it by societies not yet cured of the addiction.”
1990s, The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish
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Christopher Hitchens 305
British American author and journalist 1949–2011Related quotes

Part V, The Merchant Princes, section 4
The Foundation series (1951–1993), Foundation (1951)

Introduction to 1891 edition of Karl Marx's, The Civil War in France

Source: The Characteristics of the Present Age (1806), P. 213-214

1930s, Speech to the Democratic National Convention (1936)
Context: It was natural and perhaps human that the privileged princes of these new economic dynasties, thirsting for power, reached out for control over government itself. They created a new despotism and wrapped it in the robes of legal sanction. In its service new mercenaries sought to regiment the people, their labor, and their property. And as a result the average man once more confronts the problem that faced the Minute Man.

1990s, The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish

Letter to Lord Holland (9 January 1804), quoted in L. G. Mitchell, Charles James Fox (London: Penguin, 1997), p. 194.
1800s