Steelman · slot A
Stewardship is conservatism's core
A traditionalist Tory in the Roger Scruton mould would argue —Conservatism, properly understood, is the disciplined exercise of power on behalf of what cannot defend itself — the unborn child, the inherited landscape, the parish church, and yes, the beagle bred for the laboratory. The 1822 cruelty act and the founding of the RSPCA in 1824 are not progressive imports; they are British conservative achievements, born of the same instinct that protects ancient hedgerows and country churchyards. To shrug at the conditions inside MBR Acres or at intensive dairy farming in the name of market freedom is not toughness but decadence — a refusal of the limits that make a civilisation worth conserving. If we cannot articulate why a creature in our care deserves humane treatment, we have forgotten what stewardship means.