Skip wrote:I'd hate to see that notion put into legal effect against the British. ...
Why?
Skip wrote:Because the nation, as a whole, and its ruling families in particular, benefited from the destruction of other societies.
As I said elsewhere, most countries have a de facto aristocracy. Ours is a bit special, largely thanks to Magna Carta. Often held aloft as a stepping stone to popular democracy, it was actually a contract between warlords. The deal was that the various barons and whatnot joined a bigger gang, with the monarch as the leader, in return for a share of the proceeds; basically it was a truce in gang warfare and the losers were the ordinary people. The intervening 800 years has to some degree been the battle of the majority to regain control of their destiny. The descedents of this bunch of thugs still owns a third of the land in Great Britain. Wars of conquest, Empire building, have always been fought for the benefit of the ruling classes, the hoi polloi have little to gain, but astonishingly, the ruling elite has managed to persuade enough people that their personal identity is enhanced by the brutality and ruthlessness of others.
The UK is still the 5th richest nation on Earth, thanks in part to the plundering of large parts of the rest of the world that you refer to, Skip. The other main historical factor is industrialisation, which the UK is largely responsible for. Practically all mature industrialised western democracies have a more equitable share of wealth than the UK and a higher standard of living for the majority. The glaring exception is the USA, where the ruling classes are content to allow millions of citizens to endure grinding poverty in the name of 'freedom', but astonishingly, the ruling elite has managed to persuade enough people that their personal identity is enhanced by their freedom to be dirt poor. A lot of the wealth of the ruling elite in the USA was built on the trade of commodities like cotton and tobacco, farmed by slaves on land stolen from native Americans. As much as freeing up the legal system to deal with current crap, statutes of limitations are put in place by people with a lot of power and money, to ensure they don't have to give it back. That, I would suggest, is true on both sides of the Atlantic.
There is a UN Convention on the Non-Applicability of Statutory Limitations to War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity. Quite right too; as ArisingUK has suggested, don't let the bastards doing it now think it will ever be forgotten.