Courage and Consequence – The Interrogation Transcript That Outlived the Interrogators

One Lincolnshire gentlewoman. Three arrests for heresy. Both shoulders pulled from their sockets by the Lord Chancellor of England. A condemned prisoner racked illegally by two of the highest officers of the realm, with their own hands, to extract the names of the queen’s friends. Anne Askew named no one. From a Newgate cell, with her hands ruined, she wrote down every question and every answer. She got the manuscript out of England. Bale printed it in Wesel under a false imprint. Foxe placed it at the center of his Book of Martyrs. The men who tortured her are remembered today as characters inside her narrative. She turned the mechanics of Tudor coercion into evidence against the regime that used them. Anne Askew needs to be remembered.

Read More…

Courage and Consequence — A Miller’s Universe on Trial

A miller in a Friulian mountain village. A wife and eleven children. Eleven books, mostly borrowed. A cosmology of the universe built from cheese and worms. A pope who signed his death warrant in the same year he signed Giordano Bruno’s. They warned him to keep his mouth shut. His own family begged. He could not. He talked through one trial, twenty months in prison, thirteen years marked by a cross-stitched robe, and then a second trial that ended at the stake. Under torture he refused to name anyone — because, he said, he had thought it himself. Bruno is on the syllabus. Menocchio is not. He stood for the right of an ordinary man to use his own mind on the largest questions. Domenico Scandella, called Menocchio, needs to be remembered.

Read More…

Courage and Consequence – The Jury Said Not Guilty. The Judge Hanged Her Anyway.

An old woman, deaf and sick. Thirty-nine neighbors who signed their names to defend her, knowing they could be accused next. A jury that heard the case and acquitted her. Then a judge who refused the verdict and sent the jury back until it returned the word he wanted: guilty. Rebecca Nurse never confessed. A confession would have saved her life — it was the one move that bought time at Salem — and she would not lie about herself to live. The men who hanged her are footnotes now; her granite stone was the first monument in America to anyone the witch trials killed. She turned a courtroom into the case the law could not defend, and the Fifth Amendment’s shield against double jeopardy is in part the answer to what was done to her. Rebecca Nurse needs to be remembered.

Read More…

Courage and Consequence — He Said Nothing, and Broke the Court

Eighty-one years old. A wife awaiting the noose. A court that had already hanged eleven. A field beside the Salem jail and two days of stones. On September 17, 1692, Giles Corey was asked to plead before the Court of Oyer and Terminer. He pled innocent. Then he refused the second question — the one that would have let the court try him. Under the common law that Massachusetts had adopted, a defendant who refused to submit could not be tried. So the court ordered him pressed instead. He is remembered as a folk horror story and a line in The Crucible. What he actually did was deny a court its legitimacy by refusing to consent to it. Within six weeks that court was dissolved. Giles Corey needs to be remembered.

Read More…

The Wealth Gap or the National Debt: Which Is Worse for the Republic?

Two figures, fifty years apart, tell the story of an American republic that cannot bring itself to decide. The top one percent now holds 31.7 percent of household wealth — the highest concentration since records began in 1989. Federal debt has crossed 99 percent of GDP, on track to break the 1946 wartime record by 2030. The public debate sees one figure or the other; almost no one looks at them together. This essay does. It treats each pattern alone, then together, then renders a candid verdict — in three parts, because the question has three answers and the citizens of a republic are owed all of them. The closest historical analogue is not 1929. It is the Gilded Age proper, 1873 to 1893, when a republic ran two patterns at once until something forced an answer. The data is on the table. The levers are named. What has been deferred is what comes due.

Read More…