Britain was the largest and richest military, economic and political power the globe had ever seen.
Are you referring to a self-reinforcing pretense of significant truth? The use of redundant words? A universal truth in formal logic? Or a rule of replacement for logical expressions?
No. Plato spoke and wrote in Greek; and Voltaire and Verne both spoke and wrote in French.
Not now, they aren't. English is now the dominant global language and looking to remain that way for a long time to come.
Latin is extinct; and the only people who speak Greek now are the Greeks and dusty university professors.
In Canada, a guy got 36% of the votes, and with that was able to wrangle
majority-house status, which gives him despotic powers a President can only
dream of.
As long as he got more votes than anyone else then what's the problem? If you don't want him in power don't vote for him.
He did not get a majority of the votes, but he's allowed to rule
as if he had a majority. That is a flawed system.
He's allowed to rule because his party got a majority of the seats in Parliament.
Really. Do you think Chinese victims of the opium wars would agree?
I don't give a damn how the Chinese feel. It's not something I really think about, to be honest with you. And they of all people have no right to talk.
How do Boers feel about you inventing the concept of Concentration camps and using it on them?
I don't know how Boers - who started apartheid - feel about the British inventing concentration camps.
But if one of them said that nonsense to me I'd correct him.
And what about India... the only colony to actually make a profit (the profits from which are what subsidized the rest of the empire)... what do they have to say about it... they're the ones who did you the favour of adding foods to your quisine that have flavor.
Indian food is only good for Indians and constipation sufferers. Other than that, I wouldn't touch it with a bargepole. I'd stick to egg and chips, if you don't mind. I don't touch foreign muck.
it made American belly's swell with enough vomit to make them puke you out
in the late 18th century
So? Ain't my problem.
Come to think of it, how does your pride-swollen chest reconcile abolishing [/QUOTE
slavery in the 1830's, while supporting the American Confederacy in the 1860?
And what was wrong in supporting the American confederacy? Lots of Americans supported it. And a lot of the cotton for our cotton mills came from the American South. They were big trading partners.
The sense of pride you feel is the same chest-swelling pride Germans got to feel
for a couple years under the Nazis. Psychologists call that emotion"Elevation"
[/QUOTE]
I call it "patriotism".
Alrighty, this should be fun. How would a re-empowered British Empire deal with [/QUOTE
[QUOTE
rising sea-levels from global warming? Build dikes like Holland?
I would hope that the leaders of a new British Empire would concerns themselves with other, more important things rather than mythological things like global warming.
Do they really? Got any stats to compare your crime rate t
modern industrial democracies that don't constantly spy on their citizens?
The vast majority of Britain's CCTV cameras are in private hands.
In fact, there are 70 times more cameras operated privately by businesses and others using the devices for reasons including the protection of property, crime detection, or safety than cameras operated by "the state".
There are around 5 million CCTV cameras nationwide, but only around 70,000 are in public (police and local authorities) control.
So basically, Britain's CCTV cameras are not to "spy on the citizens" but are used by the citizens to spy on the citizens' property in order to protect that property.
French political philosophers.
They based it on Magna Carta, a copy of which is at the National Archives in Washington D.C.
British political philosophers such as John Locke were also a large influence, as well as Englishmen Sir Edward Coke and Sir William Blackstone.
The due process clause of the US Constitution was partly based on common law and on Magna Carta (1215), which had become a foundation of English liberty against arbitrary power wielded by a tyrant.
Both the influence of Edward Coke and William Blackstone were evident at the Convention. In his Institutes of the Laws of England, Edward Coke interpreted Magna Carta protections and rights to apply not just to nobles, but to all British subjects. In writing the Virginia Charter of 1606, he enabled the King in Parliament to give those to be born in the colonies all rights and liberties as though they were born in England. William Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England were the most influential books on law in the new republic.
British political philosopher John Locke following the Glorious Revolution was a major influence expanding on the contract theory of government advanced by Thomas Hobbes. Locke advanced the principle of consent of the governed in his Two Treatises of Government. Government's duty under a social contract among the sovereign people was to serve them by protecting their rights. These basic rights were ......... life, liberty and property.
And many Canadians are striving to change that, i.e., they want
an elected Senate
So? That's your problem, not mine.
What country is Scotland trying to
get more autonomy from
[/QUOTE]
None, because the vast majority of Scots are against independence. And those against Scottish independence will win by more than the half-a-percent that those against Quebec independence won by.
You're thinking Canada is like
Australia or New Zealand. It's not.
It's exactly like them. It's one of the 16 Commonwealth Realms with Elizabeth II as its Head of State and run by the Westminster style of government and it's an Anglo-Saxon member of the Anglosphere. You have more in relation to them that that largely alien country to the south of you.
Canada has so much from the French...
You got so much more from the British. 50% of you are Brits; most of you speak English; you have the British monarch as your Head of State, not that useless little socialist Hollande; you have the democratic Westminster style of government; you have the fair English Common Law in which you are innocent until proven guilty and tried by a jury of your peers, rather than that barbaric Napoleonic Law in which you are guilty until proven innocent and are not judged bya jury of your peers; your military is modelled on the superior British model, not the inferior French model.
And now they're embracing other cultures, including some retroactive fixes like renaming the Georgia Strait to the Salish Sea.
All of Canada's historical embarrasements, like the head-tax on Chinese
immigrants, and the initial refusal to allow Sikhs to immigrate, and the native
residential school system, came from Anglo-Saxon influences, and Canadians are
now doing everything they can to fix those mistakes and distance themselves from
the British influences that caused it.
Yeah. Alright then.
If you tax Chinese immigrants and refuse to allow Sikhs into the country that's not the fault of the British or the freedom-loving Anglo-Saxon system. That's the fault of whichever government you had in at the time.
Nope... they're just the ones who happened to be in charge
whenthe Soviets imploded on themselves.
And they helped defeat Communism.
In fact, along with destroying the left-wing, socialist, strike-ridden Stalinist British State of the 1970s, defeating Communism was Mrs Thatcher's greatest legacy.
Why do you think the Soviets gave Thatcher the nickname "The Iron Lady"? She terrified those big hard Soviets leaders. In 1987 she even went to Moscow and gave a speech bashing Soviet leaders.
After the death of Thatcher in April, Gorbachev recalled: "Our first meeting in 1984 set in motion relations that were sometimes complicated, not always smooth, but which were serious and responsible on both sides. Human relations also gradually took shape, becoming more and more friendly.
"In the end we managed to achieve a mutual understanding, and that contributed to a change in the atmosphere between our country (the Soviet Union) and the West and the end of the Cold War."