Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 150 total)
  • The British Empire
  • Solo
    Free Member

    No need for sarcasm. Let’s have some proper discussion.

    Yes, that would be a good thing.
    I agree with a lot of what you have posted.

    The moralistas appear to over look that 400 years ago, the world was a much tougher, blood thirstier place in general.

    I happen to also think that if you could bring a person through from then to our time and afford them the luxury of modern civilization and morality.
    That they’d likely look back and regret some of the awful things that happened.

    But as you point out, increasing trade, basically having a very big group of people all working with and trading with one another wasn’t an entirely bad thing and especially in the case of India.
    United a nation and laid down substantial infrastructure.

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    Let’s have some proper discussion

    if you want proper discussion come up with a better standpoint than……

    the empire was good because it gave the world the things that we believe in.

    if you really think that……….

    increasing trade and providing markets for export goods for the colonies?

    ……….was a good thing, take a look at the effect of the markets causing mass starvation in victorian india and consider the anti charitable contributions act brought in to stop relief donations affecting the grain markets.

    on top of which, who do you think might have actually benefited from exports from the colonies, british investors or the average man in sarawak ?

    especially in the case of India.
    United a nation

    india was entirely a construction of the british empire and if you think for one moment that this created a united nation i suggest you take a minute to briefly wiki the savagely bloody partition of india in 1947.

    BaronVonP7
    Free Member

    What really fascinates me is how the environment -actual,social and historical view affects peoples decision making processes, at personal and society level – What was required for the individual or the group to think that slavery was a necessary evil/ok/right?

    What has changed to ensure we don’t create such an environment – have we really achieved this or are we even more culpable given that we have so many tools available (universal suffrage, available information)?

    If I didn’t have to work and if it didn’t cost £9000 quid a year, I’d love to got to uni….

    hmmmm….

    Solo
    Free Member

    average man in sarawak

    Whos to say that bloke would have had a job at all, were it not for trade.

    Also, did he have any other career choices in the 19th century ?.
    To what degree is HE responsible for how much he earns ?.

    If you’re upset because one man makes very little money while another accumaltes great wealth.
    Well, I understand your objection.
    But isn’t that just one of the unpleasant facets of the Human condition ?.
    As opposed to being the fault of the British Empire.
    Because we all know that had India been subjugated by the Japanese Empire.
    Things would have all been wonderful.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    what he said

    especially in the case of India.

    United a nation and laid down substantial infrastructure.
    united them in wanting us to leave whilst building enough infrastructure to enable the company to exploit the hell out of it.

    But isn’t this that just one of the unpleasant facets of the Human condition ?

    no it is capitalism we dont all need to have more than others and plenty of tribal societies are cooperative over wealth/resources.

    it is what capitalistic trade does not what humans do – though humans do try and justify it

    Solo
    Free Member

    ***sighs***

    india was entirely a construction of the british empire and if you think for one moment that this created a united nation i suggest you take a minute to briefly wiki the savagely bloody partition of india in 1947

    I was referring to the many squabbling little principalities the British encountered when they arrived.
    In the region of what we now call India.
    🙄

    Solo
    Free Member

    But isn’t that just one of the unpleasant facets of the Human condition ?.
    As opposed to being the fault of the British Empire.

    no it is capitalism we dont all need to have more than others and plenty of tribal societies are cooperative over wealth/resources.

    No, it is GREED.

    All humans have it.
    How much of a slave to greed they allow themselves to become is a personal matter.

    deadlydarcy
    Free Member

    Can’t join in now as on phone…my “never forgive, never forget” thing was kind of a joke (yeah, Bristirish Defence) about my nation’s preposition towards maudlin sentimentality and bitterness.

    I forgot my 🙂 😉 😐 etc.

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    Whos to say that bloke would have had a job at all, were it not for trade.

    who’s to say he wanted one.

    which is what i’m trying to say here, the only argument that anyone seems to be putting forward in support of the empire is that it enabled the world to see and do us we do, as though there is something inherently right about our own worldview that the rest of the world needs to subscribew to it. then, as if that argument wasn’t so incredibily flawed, some are saying that not only is it a good thing but it actually outweighed the multiple catastrophies that occurred along the way.

    elzorillo
    Free Member

    well, i’ve just completed an 8 month ou course on empire so i’d like to think that my opinions on the matter are based on more than prejudice.

    That explains a lot.. It’s prerequisite for any OU course to include a substantial amount of anti British retoric regardless of the subject at hand.

    Solo
    Free Member

    TM.

    Burning your wife alive, after you die.

    If I want to stop that.
    I’m doing wrong am I ?.

    You may note.
    Wife burning isn’t anything to do with trade.

    Or may be you won’t.
    🙄

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    That explains a lot.. It’s prerequisite for any OU course to include a substantial amount of anti British retoric regardless of the subject at hand.

    probably because academia can’t hide the truth

    Burning your wife alive, after you die.

    If I want to stop that.
    I’m doing wrong am I ?.

    you think the british were in india to stop sati ? either way i hardly see that imposition of values was valid any more then than it is now.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    No, it is GREED.

    All humans have it.

    that is like saying everyone has empathy it is just not true as this thread and others show.

    elzorillo
    Free Member

    probably because academia can’t hide the truth

    Or more to do with the fact academia is riddled with 60’s inspired self hatred.

    BaronVonP7
    Free Member

    There is a selfish point of view – my hell is better for me than your hell…

    BaronVonP7
    Free Member

    “probably because academia can’t hide the truth” – flippin heck! – was that a humour? All nations rewrite history to a greater or lesser extent!

    sootyandjim
    Free Member

    …..that is like saying everyone has empathy it is just not true as this thread and others show.

    Oh don’t get me going on empathy, especially not if it involves discussing whether it can be taught.

    Bloody Nursing Standard letters page seems to be awash with folk who think it can be taught in universities.

    yunki
    Free Member

    good result TM.. when you out and about..?

    mogrim
    Full Member

    plenty of tribal societies are cooperative over wealth/resources

    That I seriously doubt.

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    Or more to do with the fact academia is riddled with 60’s inspired self hatred

    oh right, i see that you’re coming at this with a well reasoned point of view rather than just knee jerk reaction.

    if you think that the modern historiography is all about self hatred, read niall ferguson. you’ll love him.

    “probably because academia can’t hide the truth” – flippin heck! – was that a humour? All nations rewrite history to a greater or lesser extent!

    are you under the impression that history is about one point of view ?

    you’ll be telling me that the victors always write the history next.

    Solo
    Free Member

    You anti capitalists.

    You do realise that you appear to be the wettest losers in history.
    For complaining about people who just happen to be better at making money, then you are.

    Thing is, theres a flip-side to this coin.
    A side from which you might pity them for not seeing things differently.

    Or, you can just go on being wet and whimpering about capitalism and how bad it is.

    So, go on then.
    Stop your whinging.
    Give us something better !.

    Oh and btw, start another thread when you do.

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    yunki, soon brother real soon.

    maybe tomorrow if you’re around ?

    BaronVonP7
    Free Member

    “you’ll be telling me that the victors always write the history next.” 😀

    Solo
    Free Member

    either way i hardly see that imposition of values was valid any more then than it is now.

    Rriiiieeeeet !.

    You really are a mess.

    Why don’t you come in from the left and get real.

    To serve your agenda, you can try to convince the weak minded that it was imposition of values.

    I’m proud to know that I’d happily save a life and to hell with ritual and tradition.
    In this context.

    And no, the British didn’t go to India for that specific reason.
    As I’ve already pointed out.
    The British had no idea they’d be there when the whole business of Empire began.

    I can just imagine you now, standing there watching that poor woman burn to death and muttering.
    No, its OK, its what they do here in this part of the world.
    And we must let it go on.

    So, thats me.
    I can’t debate with an idiot who fails to distingiush between respecting other peoples beliefs and everyones right to life.

    theotherjonv
    Full Member

    I really didn’t want this to turn into such a bitter argument. My error, clearly.

    The facts.

    it’s not my daughter, it’s a friends. Her task was to conduct a survey (no THM, not read a textbook or research the internet, to ask some people….) about whether they think the Empire was a good or bad thing, and why. She asked me, because she knows i have opinions on many things. I was suitably interested to see what others thought.

    She’s not been asked to write an essay, or to answer the question once and for all. Reading between the lines, almost certainly the purpose of the task is partly historical, partly to develop question and answer skills, partly to show that complex questions like this don’t get yes/no answers.

    Another thought. Without the empire – if we’d all stayed at home, then britain would be far less multicultural and diverse. At extreme – it would be almost entirely caucasian. Is that not a massively positive outcome to the empire? Still not outweighing the bad aspects, i’ll agree, but would britain be better with no immigrant population?

    molgrips
    Free Member

    Genuine LOL is that one without evidence for our views?

    Er, you can still have a dicussion without evidence.

    I meant one where we put forward ideas and discuss them, hard facts not required but thought and ideas shared…

    slackalice
    Free Member

    Standing even further away to observe….

    🙄

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    TOJ – thanks for the clarification but my OP was very much tongue-in-cheek.

    FWIW, I enjoyed The Guardian’s review of Paxman’s first Empire episode:

    But now that the British empire is safely in its grave – for almost 50 years now — it’s time we got a better grip on it, instead of being torn between Telegraph-esque sentimentality, snarling leftie loathing and the faint embarrassment (can that really have been Grandpa patrolling the Suez canal?) that is probably the response of most people. Fact is that, as usual, there was good and bad, heroism and sacrifice, greed and brutality – much as there would have been if no British soldier’s boot had touched the local soil.

    There would also have been fewer canals or railways – just as colonial Britain (“Britain was Rome’s Afghanistan,” says naughty Cambridge professor Mary Beard) plunged into post-imperial disorder after the legions went home but lived off its Roman roads for 1,400 years. The graffiti Paxo reported from British mandate (1919-48) Palestine says it all. ” Tommy, go home” underneath which a British soldier – a Tommy in the jargon of the time — had scrawled: ” I wish we **** could.”

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    yes we could do that lets discuss things we dont have any evidence for … I will let the physicist start that one 😉

    You anti capitalists.

    You do realise that you appear to be the wettest losers in history.
    For complaining about people who just happen to be better at making money, then you are.

    Thisis just your imposition that i want what they have* when what I actually want is wealth spread equitably throughout the world so that people do not die form starvation and preventable disease because some people are better at make money than they are.

    It is like the politics of envy argument you [ i assume as usual you are just trolling] cannot see that some people are just not as greedy as you are. Personally I just think it is fairer that poor people dont starve than billionaiires have another yacht or purchase another island.

    * self centred greedy capitalists are so arrogant that they cannot believe that some peole dont think like they do and really we are just jealous. It is a very weak and lazy argument. I suspect Molly will ike it after all there is no evidence to prove it 😀

    THM we needed infrastructure to exploit the country, people and resources.. We did not do it for their benefit but for ours.
    Of course some things were good …what have the romans ever done for us….but they were done to enable us to “trade” or make more money than to improve the welfare of the indigenous population.

    Tommy could have if we wished it to happen

    trailmonkey
    Full Member

    I can’t debate with an idiot who fails to distingiush between respecting other peoples beliefs and everyones right to life.

    i rather suspect that the truth is that you can’t debate with anyone that has a different point of view from yourself.

    but that’s ok with me, i’m ok with everyone’s worldview, even yours, well so long as you don’t force it on me then tell me it’s for my own good.

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    JY thanks, I think I understood my own quote (and the subtle ironies in it) !!!!! But thanks for the clarification 😉

    molgrips
    Free Member

    yes we could do that lets discuss things we dont have any evidence for

    We could share thoughts instead of fight each other…?

    We did not do it for their benefit but for ours.

    However that sounds like a claim that could do with some evidence.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    you can nevr take that for granted on STW 😉
    i gave the evidence then the quote you used
    we needed infrastructure to exploit the country, people and resources.

    do you want me to prove that infrastructure helps trade?

    teamhurtmore
    Free Member

    JY – your confusing me again, go gently pls! The quote I used is saying the same thing but in a slightly more subtle manner. So not sure what you “feel” you need to prove.

    Trade not too bad in A levels this morning by all accounts!

    cookeaa
    Full Member

    I’s all about context of course; the British Empire was in and of its time;

    The British were for a long time quite clear on an overall strategy for extending our cultural and ecconomic grip around the world, we weren’t the only nation attempting to do so at the time either, that’s not to excuse any acts that took place under Empire, but perhaps it is more useful to try an dispasionately understand the period of history that it took place during, we were competing with various other nations for access to the same resources and trade oportunities, around the globe, and nobody involved in this was whiter than white…

    The British Empire used a combination of free trade, Military muscle, Slavery and Political engagment/imposition of governance to do this as each region as local circumstances dictated.

    Those applying the Empire’s “policies” overseas were not quite so encumbered by things like Human rights legislation or more modern humanitarian concepts, and of course global media coverage of attrocities were not a concern, without these things I’m sure there would still be even more “Out of sight, out of mind” Empire building policies/conflicts being undertaken by various nations today…

    20/20 Hindsight and Current beliefs and ethics are wonderful when trying to assess past cultures impact, but a 21st century high horse doesn’t give a proper appreciation of the prevailing circumstances.

    There will have been plenty at the time who saw the part of Emire’s role as “modernising” other reigions of the planet (in line with british culture and values), who will have genuinely believed they were improving the planet for all, Slavery, subjugation, conflict were just part of the (at that time acceptable) deal…

    We don’t presently live in such a faultless, enlightened age as some seem to believe; yes some lessons have been learned from our own histories, but not universally and I think its fair to say that current British culture and living standards are built,to a certain extent on various forms of subjugation carried out overseas. We no longer have an Empire but we do excercise international influence both positive and negative, depending on your perspective…

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    Unfortunatley, the teaching of the history of the Empire, is second only to the teaching of the history of the First World War in replacement of fact and ‘big picture’ analysis with lying, lefty, nauseating, 60’s pacifist hand wringing, guilt ridden, simplistic, sentimental crap.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    You really a charming example of humanitarianism at work…hope you never end up in slavery having someone shit in your mouth as punishment …i would hate to think you would turn into a hand wringing lefty who objected if it happened to you.
    You really are an amoral swivel eyed loon at times.

    who will have genuinely believed they were improving the planet for all

    its true that they did no think they were bad like some/most of us do , However they were wrong.

    they used to think child abuse never happened and you could not rape your wife. I could talk about the times as well here but it was wrong.
    they used to think child labour was ok but it is not
    Etc

    It is true that it is fraught with difficulties view their times and cultures by our own standards . I do believe that certain things are always wrong though at times they may have been acceptable
    slavery, spousal rape for example.

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    I do believe that certain things are always wrong though

    But you’re viewing them through the eyes of a 21st century first world citizen from a judeo-christian background

    Had you lived several hundered years ago, or in a different society today, then your viewpoint would more likley than not be different.

    Things aren’t ‘fundementally’ wrong, its just the way that society (if there is such a thing) see’s them.

    imnotverygood
    Full Member

    It is always a good idea to approach complex wide-ranging historical debates with as small minded an attitiude as possible.

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    It is not a view without some merit* but you are not the person I would choose to discuss it with.

    * some morals may be of the time but some are always wrong

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