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Leaving the ECHR would cost the Tories dear – politicalbetting.com

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  • rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    I should warn you that my 15 year old daughter is obsessed by the Moldovan entry into last year's Eurovision:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9RJQPZsj8E
    Just be thankful, that they did NOT allow TRANSnistria to participate in EV22!
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,586

    This discussion is so fecking pointless.

    People who only speak English looking to work in another country favour those where they speak ENGLISH.

    Totally mind-blowing.

    Pensioners can get away with moving to Spain, as they can stay in their immigrant ghettos, reading the Daily Mail and drinking Watney's Red Barrel.

    Now do keep up. Britons living in Spain are no longer chavs who refuse to integrate but lucky Brexit refugees, as The Guardian will tell you.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,625

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    We are not European? I'm sorry, that is one of the most absurd statements I've ever heard, even on here, and that is saying something.
    In what specific ways are we "European" apart from geographically, in a meaningful cultural sense that does not apply to other nations like Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    Unless you think they're European too, to which a case could be made, but I think its more politically accurate to say "western" nowadays (even though Australia and NZ are in the East).
    We are European in the sense that we are in Europe, we speak a European language, the majority of our population has European ancestry, we have a European culture, we fight in European wars... I mean, we are European in every sense of the term. As a major European power, and like other major European powers like France and Spain, we established colonies in the modern period, and many Europeans travelled to settle in those colonies. Unsurprisingly, we have a lot in common with these European settlers who came from this country and speak our language, but that does not stop us being European any more than it stops the French being European because they have more in common with Quebecois than with Bulgarians.
    Christ, I can't believe I'm even having to say this. No wonder this country is circling the drain.
    Will there reach a point when the population is so diverse that none of these arguments (save geography) will be valid?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    .

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    Are Brits more likely to eat spaghetti bolognese or poutine? Paella or lamingtons?

    Are Brits more likely to holiday in Ibiza or Vancouver Island?
    Both of
    Are Brits more likely to watch "The Bridge" or "The Brokenwood"?
    We could do this all day.

    Are Brits more likely to emigrate to Australia or Austria?

    Even with free movement, Brits who chose to move abroad overwhelmingly chose to go across the world to our more culturally similar cousin nations, than to our neighbours (excluding Ireland, which is sui generis and we still have free movement with).
    Spain is more popular than Ireland, despite it speaking a different language.

    Interesting.
    Both of Catholic majority heritage unlike Protestant majority heritage the UK, New Zealand and Australia
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    TimS said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    We are not European? I'm sorry, that is one of the most absurd statements I've ever heard, even on here, and that is saying something.
    In what specific ways are we "European" apart from geographically, in a meaningful cultural sense that does not apply to other nations like Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    Unless you think they're European too, to which a case could be made, but I think its more politically accurate to say "western" nowadays (even though Australia and NZ are in the East).
    Let’s be honest, there are parts of culture where we’re more similar - not surprisingly - to our old settler colonies, including some sports (generally the posh ones), pop music and cinema, some aspects of business etiquette and culture, and the language with its literature. Though in all cases I would say British culture is more similar to Irish than to Canadian, Aus, US etc.

    There are other parts of culture where we live, act and consume more like continental Europeans than the Anglosphere. Football being a huge one, transportation especially public transport, how we do our shopping, what our cities look like, farming and fishing lifestyles and so on.

    We’re not unique in this mixed identity. I’m pretty sure the French and Québécois share some cultural features the Germans or Dutch don’t have, and likewise the Portuguese and Lusophone countries.
    Exactly. There seems to be an assumption by some that the Irish don't count because they're still the colony of the British. When as you say they are an European state and closest to us - so much so that that state overlaps with the UK in important ways.

    Re the language and sport arguments, I don't see certain posters extending them to, say, the West Indies or India, extending the Tebbit Test. Cricket, you know. And just as intimate a history. Why not include them?
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,075
    edited August 2023
    viewcode said:

    Everybody stop talking and go watch The Thick Of It on BBC4.

    It's really dated. It's the Twitter episode, when they discover there's a thing called Twitter. Nowadays Malcolm would not just be fired, he'd be on a non-crime crime list. I think the only good thing you can say is that the cast are really well dressed.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    .

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    Are Brits more likely to eat spaghetti bolognese or poutine? Paella or lamingtons?

    Are Brits more likely to holiday in Ibiza or Vancouver Island?
    Both of
    Are Brits more likely to watch "The Bridge" or "The Brokenwood"?
    We could do this all day.

    Are Brits more likely to emigrate to Australia or Austria?

    Even with free movement, Brits who chose to move abroad overwhelmingly chose to go across the world to our more culturally similar cousin nations, than to our neighbours (excluding Ireland, which is sui generis and we still have free movement with).
    Spain is more popular than Ireland, despite it speaking a different language.

    Interesting.
    Both of Catholic majority heritage unlike Protestant majority heritage the UK, New Zealand and Australia
    Anglican Church *is* Catholic. You mean RC. And we in the UK and Ireland are all equally of RC heritage, not to mention pagan.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    No we have culturally much more in common with Australia and New Zealand than continental Europe
    That's what used to be said, before Gallipoli, Tobruk and Singapore.

    Just ask the Australians.
    Yes they voted 55% to keep the monarchy in 1999 and Australia remains the main emigration destination for Brits.

    So the ties that bound us together to defeat the Nazis and Japanese in WW2 remain
    And lots of UK people emigrate to Spain and Thailand, but I don't see you proclaiming the ties that bind the UK to them.
    Fewer UK people emigrate to Spain than Australia, despite Spain being far closer.

    Thailand is not even in the top 10 UK emigration destinations unlike Australia at no 1, Canada at no 3 and New Zealand at no 6.
    https://www.movehub.com/blog/top-10-countries-brits-choose/
    Spain and France feature remarkably highly, given they speak different languages to us.

    Interesting.
    Given France is our closest neighbour only 7th is not high at all
    Ireland (5th) are our closest neighbour.
    Dover is closer to Calais than GB to the Republic of Ireland
    Nice to know that the Shinners can now rely on your vote!
    GB is closer to Northern Ireland than France but not the Republic of Ireland
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 49,859
    rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    I should warn you that my 15 year old daughter is obsessed by the Moldovan entry into last year's Eurovision:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9RJQPZsj8E
    Remind me of Interrailling in communist Yugoslavia. Without the dancing on the tables, obvs.
  • rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    I should warn you that my 15 year old daughter is obsessed by the Moldovan entry into last year's Eurovision:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9RJQPZsj8E
    Just be thankful, that they did NOT allow TRANSnistria to participate in EV22!
    Illegally occupied by Russia since the early 1990s!
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,581
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    No we have culturally much more in common with Australia and New Zealand than continental Europe
    That's what used to be said, before Gallipoli, Tobruk and Singapore.

    Just ask the Australians.
    Yes they voted 55% to keep the monarchy in 1999 and Australia remains the main emigration destination for Brits.

    So the ties that bound us together to defeat the Nazis and Japanese in WW2 remain
    And lots of UK people emigrate to Spain and Thailand, but I don't see you proclaiming the ties that bind the UK to them.
    Fewer UK people emigrate to Spain than Australia, despite Spain being far closer.

    Thailand is not even in the top 10 UK emigration destinations unlike Australia at no 1, Canada at no 3 and New Zealand at no 6.
    https://www.movehub.com/blog/top-10-countries-brits-choose/
    Spain and France feature remarkably highly, given they speak different languages to us.

    Interesting.
    Given France is our closest neighbour only 7th is not high at all
    Ireland (5th) are our closest neighbour.
    Dover is closer to Calais than GB to the Republic of Ireland
    Nice to know that the Shinners can now rely on your vote!
    GB is closer to Northern Ireland than France but not the Republic of Ireland
    But how close is Northern Ireland to the UK?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,075
    Barnesian said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    No we have culturally much more in common with Australia and New Zealand than continental Europe
    That's what used to be said, before Gallipoli, Tobruk and Singapore.

    Just ask the Australians.
    Yes they voted 55% to keep the monarchy in 1999 and Australia remains the main emigration destination for Brits.

    So the ties that bound us together to defeat the Nazis and Japanese in WW2 remain
    And lots of UK people emigrate to Spain and Thailand, but I don't see you proclaiming the ties that bind the UK to them.
    Fewer UK people emigrate to Spain than Australia, despite Spain being far closer.

    Thailand is not even in the top 10 UK emigration destinations unlike Australia at no 1, Canada at no 3 and New Zealand at no 6.
    https://www.movehub.com/blog/top-10-countries-brits-choose/
    Spain and France feature remarkably highly, given they speak different languages to us.

    Interesting.
    Given France is our closest neighbour only 7th is not high at all
    Ireland (5th) are our closest neighbour.
    Dover is closer to Calais than GB to the Republic of Ireland
    Nice to know that the Shinners can now rely on your vote!
    GB is closer to Northern Ireland than France but not the Republic of Ireland
    But how close is Northern Ireland to the UK?
    [Deleted]
  • DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    We are not European? I'm sorry, that is one of the most absurd statements I've ever heard, even on here, and that is saying something.
    In what specific ways are we "European" apart from geographically, in a meaningful cultural sense that does not apply to other nations like Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    Unless you think they're European too, to which a case could be made, but I think its more politically accurate to say "western" nowadays (even though Australia and NZ are in the East).
    We are European in the sense that we are in Europe, we speak a European language, the majority of our population has European ancestry, we have a European culture, we fight in European wars... I mean, we are European in every sense of the term. As a major European power, and like other major European powers like France and Spain, we established colonies in the modern period, and many Europeans travelled to settle in those colonies. Unsurprisingly, we have a lot in common with these European settlers who came from this country and speak our language, but that does not stop us being European any more than it stops the French being European because they have more in common with Quebecois than with Bulgarians.
    Christ, I can't believe I'm even having to say this. No wonder this country is circling the drain.
    Not just that.

    I was in York at the weekend- Europeans have been invading and mixing each other for ages. The Christian heritage of Europe goes back much further than in other parts of the Anglosphere; when Europeans are atheists, it's an atheism that bears the imprints of Christianity, if only as a thing to react against.

    There's also the geography. Partly climate, but also coming to terms with density- European settlements are generally dense and constrained in a way that Australia and Canada aren't. That makes a difference, partly in road layouts but also the degree that we have to come to terms with living together. There's less middle of nowhere to bugger off to.

    That doesn't, of itself, mean that you-know-what is a bad idea. But happy childhood memories of other parts of the Commonwealth doesn't make it a good idea either. The exceptionalism that says "we have an Anglosphere, dontcha know" might be true, but that doesn't make for a solid basis for a national self-image.

    If those who support a policy that is (lest we forget) unpopular want it to persist, they need to do better than they are doing.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,625
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Epping is a fine suburb of Sydney. :)
  • IanB2 said:

    rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    I should warn you that my 15 year old daughter is obsessed by the Moldovan entry into last year's Eurovision:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9RJQPZsj8E
    Remind me of Interrailling in communist Yugoslavia. Without the dancing on the tables, obvs.
    You can always dance on TOP of a train!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEjU9KVABao
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WKX5x3KZXfY
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Epping is a fine suburb of Sydney. :)
    Sure but it didn't have Randolph Churchill doing the garden party and dinner circuit, I bet!
  • AnabobazinaAnabobazina Posts: 23,485
    HYUFD said:

    .

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    Are Brits more likely to eat spaghetti bolognese or poutine? Paella or lamingtons?

    Are Brits more likely to holiday in Ibiza or Vancouver Island?
    Both of
    Are Brits more likely to watch "The Bridge" or "The Brokenwood"?
    We could do this all day.

    Are Brits more likely to emigrate to Australia or Austria?

    Even with free movement, Brits who chose to move abroad overwhelmingly chose to go across the world to our more culturally similar cousin nations, than to our neighbours (excluding Ireland, which is sui generis and we still have free movement with).
    Spain is more popular than Ireland, despite it speaking a different language.

    Interesting.
    Both of Catholic majority heritage unlike Protestant majority heritage the UK, New Zealand and Australia
    Spain is also majority Catholic, in case you were unaware.

    Odd.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,249
    DavidL said:

    Cyclefree said:

    In your now near-daily reminder:-

    "Scotland Yard was braced for fresh scandal on Tuesday after it missed at least eight opportunities to remove a police officer who went on to rape two women."

    Adam Provan.

    "Judge Lucas said the “persistence and seriousness of Provan’s offending was clear when set out in the starkest terms”, adding that his actions have “brought disgrace on the police force”. The judge said he was troubled by how the Met handled the female officer’s initial complaints about Provan’s behaviour, in 2005. He told Provan: “While this cannot be laid at your door, I find it highly troubling that [the female officer’s] colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in 2004 and 2005 were more concerned about looking out for ‘one of their own’ than in taking her seriously and investigating her complaints about you.”

    It's going to be exceedingly hard to judge this year's winner of the No Shit, Sherlock! Awards. Some really excellent contenders this year and, doubtless, more to come.

    I'm co-opting @ydoethur onto the judging panel.

    So the winner is someone in the Department of Education? Good clue.
    DfE and OFSTED are excluded from the competition for the same reason that aircraft built by Blackburn are excluded from Worlds Ugliest Aircraft completions. There would be no fun with immediate and obvious winners.

    https://www.baesystems.com/en/heritage/blackburn-r1-blackburn
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    HYUFD said:

    .

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    Are Brits more likely to eat spaghetti bolognese or poutine? Paella or lamingtons?

    Are Brits more likely to holiday in Ibiza or Vancouver Island?
    Both of
    Are Brits more likely to watch "The Bridge" or "The Brokenwood"?
    We could do this all day.

    Are Brits more likely to emigrate to Australia or Austria?

    Even with free movement, Brits who chose to move abroad overwhelmingly chose to go across the world to our more culturally similar cousin nations, than to our neighbours (excluding Ireland, which is sui generis and we still have free movement with).
    Spain is more popular than Ireland, despite it speaking a different language.

    Interesting.
    Both of Catholic majority heritage unlike Protestant majority heritage the UK, New Zealand and Australia
    Spain is also majority Catholic, in case you were unaware.

    Odd.
    Precisely the point, the sunnier weather just puts Spain ahead of Ireland
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    edited August 2023

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.

    EDIT: And the Normans, and the Vikings.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Most Australians are more supportive of links to the UK and the King than Scottish Nationalists like you certainly.

    Of course until the Act of Union England had fought more wars against Scotland than any other nation except France
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    edited August 2023

    DavidL said:

    Cyclefree said:

    In your now near-daily reminder:-

    "Scotland Yard was braced for fresh scandal on Tuesday after it missed at least eight opportunities to remove a police officer who went on to rape two women."

    Adam Provan.

    "Judge Lucas said the “persistence and seriousness of Provan’s offending was clear when set out in the starkest terms”, adding that his actions have “brought disgrace on the police force”. The judge said he was troubled by how the Met handled the female officer’s initial complaints about Provan’s behaviour, in 2005. He told Provan: “While this cannot be laid at your door, I find it highly troubling that [the female officer’s] colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in 2004 and 2005 were more concerned about looking out for ‘one of their own’ than in taking her seriously and investigating her complaints about you.”

    It's going to be exceedingly hard to judge this year's winner of the No Shit, Sherlock! Awards. Some really excellent contenders this year and, doubtless, more to come.

    I'm co-opting @ydoethur onto the judging panel.

    So the winner is someone in the Department of Education? Good clue.
    DfE and OFSTED are excluded from the competition for the same reason that aircraft built by Blackburn are excluded from Worlds Ugliest Aircraft completions. There would be no fun with immediate and obvious winners.

    https://www.baesystems.com/en/heritage/blackburn-r1-blackburn
    Doesn't matter. This would win almost any time.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farman_F.120#/media/File:Farman_F.4X_F-AHAF_CIDNA_Dübendorf_-_LBS_SR02-10182_(rotate,_tight_crop,_contrast).jpg

    Moral: the favourite - and I agree re Blackburn aircxraft before the NA.39 - needn't always win.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against and the Irish we fought against in the Irish War of Independence.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 50,249

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    It’s a common thing in the King’ing business that the home grown employees become troublesome and expensive. The standard fix is to reduce headcount and re-hire. Preferably immigrants.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Most Australians are more supportive of links to the UK and the King than Scottish Nationalists like you certainly.

    Of course until the Act of Union England had fought more wars against Scotland than any other nation except France
    Interesting topics, you have. It's all wars of conquest, religion, race and flags
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 71,070
    .

    DavidL said:

    Cyclefree said:

    In your now near-daily reminder:-

    "Scotland Yard was braced for fresh scandal on Tuesday after it missed at least eight opportunities to remove a police officer who went on to rape two women."

    Adam Provan.

    "Judge Lucas said the “persistence and seriousness of Provan’s offending was clear when set out in the starkest terms”, adding that his actions have “brought disgrace on the police force”. The judge said he was troubled by how the Met handled the female officer’s initial complaints about Provan’s behaviour, in 2005. He told Provan: “While this cannot be laid at your door, I find it highly troubling that [the female officer’s] colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in 2004 and 2005 were more concerned about looking out for ‘one of their own’ than in taking her seriously and investigating her complaints about you.”

    It's going to be exceedingly hard to judge this year's winner of the No Shit, Sherlock! Awards. Some really excellent contenders this year and, doubtless, more to come.

    I'm co-opting @ydoethur onto the judging panel.

    So the winner is someone in the Department of Education? Good clue.
    DfE and OFSTED are excluded from the competition for the same reason that aircraft built by Blackburn are excluded from Worlds Ugliest Aircraft completions. There would be no fun with immediate and obvious winners.

    https://www.baesystems.com/en/heritage/blackburn-r1-blackburn
    That has a certain old world charm.

    The Boeing X32A, though..
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Most Australians are more supportive of links to the UK and the King than Scottish Nationalists like you certainly.

    Of course until the Act of Union England had fought more wars against Scotland than any other nation except France
    That's only because you deny that Ireland is a nation.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 9,871
    OldBasing said:

    Still think we will see one 30 point lead between now and the election, who wants to call me thick?

    @CorrectHorseBat I reckon sometime around when the Online Safety Bill becomes law and the tech firms turn off Whatsapp and Messenger in the UK....
    Apart from labour are even more in favour of the os bill than the tories. The bill needs to be buried full stop
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,083
    rcs1000 said:

    DougSeal said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    We are as European as Canadians are American.

    And you should know full well the UK has much in common with New Zealand and other nations, the idea we have nothing in common with New Zealand is just preposterous.
    Canadians are, literally, American, yes. As for Aotearoa, we play a certain number of sports in common and speak English. That is it. We don't even have the same legal system anymore given they've largely abandoned common law. Aotearoa is a Polynesian culture. We are a European one. We are nothing but a rebellious province of a European whole. We have culturally far more in common with the rest of Europe than Aotearoa or Australia and we have been part of unions with European nations far longer than our brief dalliance with them.
    Canadians are on the continent of America, but tell them they are American and you're liable to get punched.

    Or a scowl at the very least, because Canadians unlike Americans are generally too polite to go around punching people for saying something stupid.

    We are a neither rebellious nor European except in a geographic sense, we have far more culturally in common with Canada or Australia or New Zealand than we do with Germany or Bulgaria or Romania.

    Who do you think more Brits would rather listen to: Kylie Minogue or Elena Gheorghe?

    Which do you think more Brits are more likely to read: Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, or Olga Tokarczuk's Empuzjon?
    I should warn you that my 15 year old daughter is obsessed by the Moldovan entry into last year's Eurovision:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9RJQPZsj8E
    Don't feel bad, I'm sure you did the best you could.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,083
    Pagan2 said:

    OldBasing said:

    Still think we will see one 30 point lead between now and the election, who wants to call me thick?

    @CorrectHorseBat I reckon sometime around when the Online Safety Bill becomes law and the tech firms turn off Whatsapp and Messenger in the UK....
    Apart from labour are even more in favour of the os bill than the tories. The bill needs to be buried full stop
    It seems like a classic case of theoretically positive motications leading to unforeseen consequences, and yet will never die because everyone reckons they'll be the ones to strike the right balance next time.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,083

    Geography is literally the only qualification we need to be European. It doesn't matter how 'British' we are, we have always been part of Europe, and therefore our traditions and culture are European. Fish and chips is just as much a European dish as coq au vin. Europe is a collection of nations - it's meant to be different.

    The only way to define it more that that would be to go so broad it's pointless, or ridiculously over simplify which is also pointless.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    edited August 2023
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    Ah, I understand now. If they are the wrong race, they don't count, is youir argument.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    DougSeal said:

    Brexit is dead.
    We just haven’t figured out how to dispose of the body yet.

    For the moment, we have to put up with this grotesque “Weekend at Bernie’s” style politics where people pretend it makes any sense whatsoever.

    Brexit is done.

    Being a part of history now, it is neither living nor dead, its simply a part of the past.
    As a philosophy it’s dead. The majority now see what we’ve lost and want to get most of it back. A journey that will end up with us becoming politically what we always have been cultural and geographically - European - rather than this insane nostalgia for a brief period of attachment to countries literally on the other side of the globe we have nothing in common with.
    Odd. Brits think they have far more in common with Aussies, Kiwis and Canadians than they do with the French, Czechs and Slovenians and they vote with their feet accordingly.

    The British position has been the same for centuries: we are a maritime trading nation that trades both globally and continentally and has a strong interest in a maintaining a balance of power in Europe and secure global sea routes in order to prosper.

    Geography is key but not all in one direction like you think it is.
    And yet, despite all of that (which isn't false but I do think it is more complicated than that), Brexit is unpopular and increasingly so.

    It's really not my job to work out why, or what to do about that. Which is probably for the best, because I haven't got a clue where to begin.

    (I suspect the answer is that there's nothing to be done about it. The mental map for those who grew up after about 1973 is just different to that of those who grew up post war but pre-EEC membership. And changing people's mental maps is damn difficult.)
    It isn't that much, most of even under 40s would be fine with EFTA membership at most, they don't have a desperate desire to be part of the Eurozone and an EU superstate which is where the EU is heading.

    Over 65 upper middle class LD voters are much keener on rejoining the full EU than most under 40s would be if EFTA was an option too (and plenty of the former on PB)
    But even that- some variant of what Norway or Switzerland do- is a much closer arrangement than we have right now. In an annexe with a separate front door, but still in the same building. Which is not what eurosceptics are talking about this evening.

    One final thought before I wander off to water the corguettes. (Half of me wants them to die so I don't have to keep harvesting them, but that wouldn't be on.) Some of the chat this evening has been about how the UK can't be fully European, because of the Anglosphere. Spaniards don't bang on about the Hispanidad in the same way, or France about the Francophonie. They just get on with having multiple overlapping identities. Why do Brits find that so difficult?
    Most of Latin America is mixed race, only really Argentina or Chile come close to white Spanish ancestry majority. The Philippines are not majority white Spanish ancestry either. No French ex colonies or current colonies are majority white French ancestry, indeed Quebec in Canada comes closest to that (and I exclude Quebec from the Anglosphere).

    New Zealand, Australia and Canada however are majority of white British isles ancestry
    The "British" aren't mixed race? Revolutionary, often literally so in the form of the Irish.
    Most British are not mixed race.

    Though I would say the average Englishman is closer to the average Australian or New Zealander than the average Scottish Nationalist
    Ah, I see you are denying even the "Our Island Story" approved story.

    Given the history fo emigration to Australia and NZ, that would considerably surprise many people thjere.
    Most of them not Scottish Nationalists either. Scottish Nationalists of course closer ideologically to the EU and even France than the Anglosphere
    Oh, my. And am I also to understand that most Australians aren't members of the Epping Primrose League?

    Most Australians are more supportive of links to the UK and the King than Scottish Nationalists like you certainly.

    Of course until the Act of Union England had fought more wars against Scotland than any other nation except France
    That's only because you deny that Ireland is a nation.
    Even on that basis England fought more wars with Scotland than Ireland
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 17,215
    edited August 2023
    Pagan2 said:

    OldBasing said:

    Still think we will see one 30 point lead between now and the election, who wants to call me thick?

    @CorrectHorseBat I reckon sometime around when the Online Safety Bill becomes law and the tech firms turn off Whatsapp and Messenger in the UK....
    Apart from labour are even more in favour of the os bill than the tories. The bill needs to be buried full stop
    It needs to be buried, absolutely.

    But the politics of the situation is that "we want this" currently trumps "you can't have this, you utter loonies, it's impossible". That doesn't just apply to the Online Safety Bill, though it's a very stark example.

    And as long as that remians the case, our national situation is that of a Turk who has reluctantly been conscripted into acting out the role of a stepmother in an online video.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,714
    What happened to @IanB2 ?
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,586
    edited August 2023

    What happened to @IanB2 ?

    He libelled another poster, in a very bad way. Or once and future poster, I suppose.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023
    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    Ah, I understand now. If they are the wrong race, they don't count, is youir argument.
    No they count, even if Australians are lukewarm in polls about a voice in Parliament for aborigines but as protected minorities in those nations. They have not been the majority of the population there for centuries
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 63,032
    edited August 2023
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    My Canadian daughter in law would challenge your statement that most white Canadians are of white British Ancestry not least as her family are Ukrainian and indeed emigration into Canada came from across Europe
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,633

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
  • See that IanB2 has been banned - anyone got a clue why?
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,714
    carnforth said:

    What happened to @IanB2 ?

    He libelled another poster, in a very bad way. Or once and future poster, I suppose.
    When? I can't see anything. Maybe I am being thick???
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,586

    See that IanB2 has been banned - anyone got a clue why?

    Remember Musk's comments on the cave rescue diver? A bit like that.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    I almost added to my original post "unless you are going to say that wars only count against white people". And here you are...
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,586
    edited August 2023

    carnforth said:

    What happened to @IanB2 ?

    He libelled another poster, in a very bad way. Or once and future poster, I suppose.
    When? I can't see anything. Maybe I am being thick???
    Perhaps the mods deleted it. It was as clear a libel against another poster as I have ever seen here. Not IanB2's usual stuff at all. A spasm perhaps.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,310
    DavidL said:

    Cyclefree said:

    In your now near-daily reminder:-

    "Scotland Yard was braced for fresh scandal on Tuesday after it missed at least eight opportunities to remove a police officer who went on to rape two women."

    Adam Provan.

    "Judge Lucas said the “persistence and seriousness of Provan’s offending was clear when set out in the starkest terms”, adding that his actions have “brought disgrace on the police force”. The judge said he was troubled by how the Met handled the female officer’s initial complaints about Provan’s behaviour, in 2005. He told Provan: “While this cannot be laid at your door, I find it highly troubling that [the female officer’s] colleagues in the Metropolitan Police in 2004 and 2005 were more concerned about looking out for ‘one of their own’ than in taking her seriously and investigating her complaints about you.”

    It's going to be exceedingly hard to judge this year's winner of the No Shit, Sherlock! Awards. Some really excellent contenders this year and, doubtless, more to come.

    I'm co-opting @ydoethur onto the judging panel.

    So the winner is someone in the Department of Education? Good clue.
    I have the casting vote. The DofE is going to have to get its skates on if it's going to beat the police and a really exceptional new entrant - the NHS.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,625

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    I almost added to my original post "unless you are going to say that wars only count against white people". And here you are...
    If the First Nations were nations then they weren't Austraians, New Zealanders or Canadians, so you can't really count wars against them as wars with Australia, New Zealand or Canada.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    I almost added to my original post "unless you are going to say that wars only count against white people". And here you are...
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada did not exist as nations when we colonised them. Indeed most of the ancestors of most of the current population of those nations came from the British Isles over the next few centuries
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,581
    carnforth said:

    carnforth said:

    What happened to @IanB2 ?

    He libelled another poster, in a very bad way. Or once and future poster, I suppose.
    When? I can't see anything. Maybe I am being thick???
    Perhaps the mods deleted it. It was as clear a libel against another poster as I have ever seen here. Not IanB2's usual stuff at all. A spasm perhaps.
    I was very surprised. I assumed his account had been hacked.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    We have fought a war against Germany and Italy however since they became independent and we had fought a war against virtually all those European nations you name before that.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 62,714
    carnforth said:

    carnforth said:

    What happened to @IanB2 ?

    He libelled another poster, in a very bad way. Or once and future poster, I suppose.
    When? I can't see anything. Maybe I am being thick???
    Perhaps the mods deleted it. It was as clear a libel against another poster as I have ever seen here. Not IanB2's usual stuff at all. A spasm perhaps.
    I am surprised I have to say.

  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    I almost added to my original post "unless you are going to say that wars only count against white people". And here you are...
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada did not exist as nations when we colonised them. Indeed most of the ancestors of most of the current population of those nations came from the British Isles over the next few centuries
    And if we restrict the time period to when Australia, New Zealand and Canada were independent nations, then most of your examples of wars against European nations vanish.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,633

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
    On that basis we may as well class the Battle of Orgreave, the Poll Tax riots and Peterloo Massacre as international conflicts. Only wars between sovereign states of course count (or wars of independence to get that sovereign nationhood)
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 51,625
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    If we're defining things by territory rather than the identity of the people, then you'd have to include our invasion of France in 1944.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,633
    edited August 2023
    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
    On that basis we may as well class the Battle of Orgreave, the Poll Tax riots and Peterloo Massacre as international conflicts
    No, those were domestic, not international conflicts.

    If you are not going to count wars before independence then neither can we count the Mau Mau War, nor Malayan Emergency, 1857 Indian War of Independence, as those were all before independence against British subjects.
  • Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    Puppet government of Nazi Germany.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    My Canadian daughter in law would challenge your statement that most white Canadians are of white British Ancestry not least as her family are Ukrainian and indeed emigration into Canada came from across Europe
    She can challenge it, she would still be wrong. Outside Quebec certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    edited August 2023
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
    On that basis we may as well class the Battle of Orgreave, the Poll Tax riots and Peterloo Massacre as international conflicts
    No, those were domestic, not international conflicts.
    So was the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade, at the time Australia was a British colony not an independent sovereign nation.

    All the Rum Rebellion was anyway was to replace Bligh as governor general of NSW
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 22,075

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    Puppet government of Nazi Germany.
    [Redacted]
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,633
    edited August 2023

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    If we're defining things by territory rather than the identity of the people, then you'd have to include our invasion of France in 1944.
    I was referring to our battles against Vichy France in Madagascar etc.
  • HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    My Canadian daughter in law would challenge your statement that most white Canadians are of white British Ancestry not least as her family are Ukrainian and indeed emigration into Canada came from across Europe

    According to wiki, heritage based on self-IDed responses in 2021 Canada census;

    English 14.7%
    Irish 12.1%
    Scottish 12.1%

    Adding up to 38.8% (not accounting for overlap)

    So add in Welsh, Cornish, Manx and you get to maybe a bit above 40%

    However, 15.6% reported that they are of "Canadian" heritage, so the "British stock" among these likely gets the total "Anglosphere" element to approaching 50%.

    Again NOT considering overlaps that mix in non-UK/IRE heritages.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethnic_origins_of_people_in_Canada
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to a
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    We have fought a war against Germany and Italy however since they became independent and we had fought a war against virtually all those European nations you name before that.
    If you look at the narrow time period since Australia, New Zealand and Canada were independent nations, then we've had wars with a small number of European nations, but not Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

    If you look at the longer time period ("before that", as you say), then we've had wars against what became Australia, New Zealand and Canada and we've had wars with most (but not quite all) of Europe.

    This does not appear to be a decisive case either way.

    If we look at the British military today, there are more in Germany or Cyprus individually than there are in Australia, New Zealand and Canada put together. (There's a few in Canada and basically none in Australia/NZ.) We have close military ties with most of Europe + Canada, and weaker ones with Australia and New Zealand.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,553
    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.
  • .

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    No, I never did that.

    I responded to someone else saying that we are European because ... wars ... in the context of claiming we have more in common with Europe than them, by saying they were also in those wars and on our side and with our troops too.

    Personally I don't think wars are a major part of our culture, so I wouldn't have brought them up personally, I simply responded to someone else who did and I never mentioned France or Dutch.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    I did wonder about mentioning the battles against Vichy France. I would contest that, at the time, we did not recognise them as the legitimate French government.
  • carnforth said:

    See that IanB2 has been banned - anyone got a clue why?

    Remember Musk's comments on the cave rescue diver? A bit like that.
    Was his unacceptable comment removed?
  • Andy_JS said:

    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.

    The reasoning?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
    On that basis we may as well class the Battle of Orgreave, the Poll Tax riots and Peterloo Massacre as international conflicts
    No, those were domestic, not international conflicts.

    If you are not going to count wars before independence then neither can we count the Mau Mau War, nor Malayan Emergency, 1857 Indian War of Independence, as those were all before independence against British subjects.
    No you can't count the Mau Mau war, not least as the Mau Mau fought other Kenyans not just the British. Nor can you count the Malayan Emergency where the Federation of Malaya fought with the British against the Communists.

    The 1857 Indian War of Independence you might be able to have fair enough but there was no Canadian, Australian or New Zealand War of Independence
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 96,083
    edited August 2023
    Andy_JS said:

    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.

    Who was named on each of the 364 other days of the year?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to a
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    We have fought a war against Germany and Italy however since they became independent and we had fought a war against virtually all those European nations you name before that.
    If you look at the narrow time period since Australia, New Zealand and Canada were independent nations, then we've had wars with a small number of European nations, but not Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

    If you look at the longer time period ("before that", as you say), then we've had wars against what became Australia, New Zealand and Canada and we've had wars with most (but not quite all) of Europe.

    This does not appear to be a decisive case either way.

    If we look at the British military today, there are more in Germany or Cyprus individually than there are in Australia, New Zealand and Canada put together. (There's a few in Canada and basically none in Australia/NZ.) We have close military ties with most of Europe + Canada, and weaker ones with Australia and New Zealand.
    No as Australia or New Zealand and Canada did NOT exist as the ethnicity of the population at the time was completely different to now and they were not independent nations.

    We have also just signed a defence pact with Australia and the US
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    Also both the Rum Rebellion and Eureka Stockade were fights between British government forces and white Australians.
    On that basis we may as well class the Battle of Orgreave, the Poll Tax riots and Peterloo Massacre as international conflicts
    No, those were domestic, not international conflicts.

    If you are not going to count wars before independence then neither can we count the Mau Mau War, nor Malayan Emergency, 1857 Indian War of Independence, as those were all before independence against British subjects.
    No you can't count the Mau Mau war, not least as the Mau Mau fought other Kenyans not just the British. Nor can you count the Malayan Emergency where the Federation of Malaya fought with the British against the Communists.

    The 1857 Indian War of Independence you might be able to have fair enough but there was no Canadian, Australian or New Zealand War of Independence
    The British Army and RAF would be very surprised by your interpretation.

    As would the Māori.

    And a lot of people in the Malayan Federation *were* the Communists.

    You're just trying to define things away.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,401
    edited August 2023
    Canada is a lot less Anglo/British than a lot of folk on here blithely assume.
    It's at least as much American. Though don't tell them that.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    edited August 2023
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to a
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    We have fought a war against Germany and Italy however since they became independent and we had fought a war against virtually all those European nations you name before that.
    If you look at the narrow time period since Australia, New Zealand and Canada were independent nations, then we've had wars with a small number of European nations, but not Australia, New Zealand and Canada.

    If you look at the longer time period ("before that", as you say), then we've had wars against what became Australia, New Zealand and Canada and we've had wars with most (but not quite all) of Europe.

    This does not appear to be a decisive case either way.

    If we look at the British military today, there are more in Germany or Cyprus individually than there are in Australia, New Zealand and Canada put together. (There's a few in Canada and basically none in Australia/NZ.) We have close military ties with most of Europe + Canada, and weaker ones with Australia and New Zealand.
    No as Australia or New Zealand and Canada did NOT exist as the ethnicity of the population at the time was completely different to now and they were not independent nations.

    We have also just signed a defence pact with Australia and the US
    Oh, so other races definitely don't count in your view of history. No, sir, we can't have the Māori thinking their states [edit] exist before the Pakahe come along and name them New Zealand, or even continuiong to fight after that. Oh no, dear me. Can't possibly have you admitting that your view of history is just a teeny bit, erm, unbalanced in a certain way.

  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 32,553
    edited August 2023
    dixiedean said:

    Canada is a lot less Anglo/British than a lot of folk on here blithely assume.

    Indeed. They do things like using British spellings mainly as a way of being counter-American rather than pro-Britain.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    edited August 2023
    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    My Canadian daughter in law would challenge your statement that most white Canadians are of white British Ancestry not least as her family are Ukrainian and indeed emigration into Canada came from across Europe
    She can challenge it, she would still be wrong. Outside Quebec certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles
    You say, "Outside Quebec certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles". I read that as, "Outside of the big portion of the Canadian population that proves me wrong, certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles".

    Let's look at the 2021 Canadian census, where people self-reported specific ethnic or cultural origins. Their answers were Canadian (15.6 percent of the population), followed by English (14.7 percent), Irish (12.1 percent), Scottish (12.1 percent), French (11.0 percent), German (8.1 percent), Chinese (4.7 percent), Italian (4.3 percent), Indian (3.7 percent), and Ukrainian (3.5 percent).

    So, English + Scottish = 26.8%. Irish + French + German + Chinese + Italian + Indian + Ukrainian = 47.4%
  • carnforthcarnforth Posts: 4,586

    carnforth said:

    See that IanB2 has been banned - anyone got a clue why?

    Remember Musk's comments on the cave rescue diver? A bit like that.
    Was his unacceptable comment removed?
    I can't see it now, so I assume so.
  • Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    I did wonder about mentioning the battles against Vichy France. I would contest that, at the time, we did not recognise them as the legitimate French government.
    However, Vichy WAS recognized as legitimate French government by Canada up until Normandy invasion, while Australia recognized BOTH Vichy and Free French.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 48,633
    Andy_JS said:

    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.

    @DougSeal will one day be hailed as the greatest tipster of all time.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 3,783
    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    You've clearly forgotten the great "It's A Knock Out" battles of the 1970s.
  • .
    Andy_JS said:

    dixiedean said:

    Canada is a lot less Anglo/British than a lot of folk on here blithely assume.

    Indeed. They do things like using British spellings mainly as a way of being counter-American rather than pro-Britain.
    It depends which province you're in. In the western provinces you'll find a lot of Union flags and British names added to things, and a lot of symbols of the monarchy.

    But that's more a way of being counter-Ontario and counter-Quebecois than it is pro-British.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,401
    kle4 said:

    Andy_JS said:

    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.

    Who was named on each of the 364 other days of the year?
    Well. If she got in there I imagine me and you probably grabbed a couple of the other spots.
  • Andy_JS said:

    GB News has just named Liz Truss as their greatest Briton of the day.

    Head of Lettuce is demanding a recount?
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 11,051
    edited August 2023

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    I did wonder about mentioning the battles against Vichy France. I would contest that, at the time, we did not recognise them as the legitimate French government.
    However, Vichy WAS recognized as legitimate French government by Canada up until Normandy invasion, while Australia recognized BOTH Vichy and Free French.
    I did not know that. Gosh.

    Well, I think Canadian recognition of the Vichy government just goes to show how the UK and Canada have very different international relations/views of the world!
  • kjhkjh Posts: 11,786
    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    So not surprisingly we fought more wars with countries that did exist than we did with countries that didn't exist. Surely that makes us natural allies with Narnia and Atlantis as we have never fought a war with them either.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918
    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    So not surprisingly we fought more wars with countries that did exist than we did with countries that didn't exist. Surely that makes us natural allies with Narnia and Atlantis as we have never fought a war with them either.
    Firstly they are fictional and secondly they did not mainly share the same ethnicity and ancestry as Australia and New Zealand do with the British Isles
  • IF you REALLY want to piss off Canucks these days, refer to their country as the "Dominion of Canada" or just "the Dominion".

    Then follow up by bad-mouthing Canadian bacon . . . which they call "back bacon" for some reason . . .
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,401
    edited August 2023

    .

    Andy_JS said:

    dixiedean said:

    Canada is a lot less Anglo/British than a lot of folk on here blithely assume.

    Indeed. They do things like using British spellings mainly as a way of being counter-American rather than pro-Britain.
    It depends which province you're in. In the western provinces you'll find a lot of Union flags and British names added to things, and a lot of symbols of the monarchy.

    But that's more a way of being counter-Ontario and counter-Quebecois than it is pro-British.
    Even the Western Provinces vary greatly though.
    Alberta models itself on Texas. BC on Brighton.
    Edit.
    And even inter Provincially that isn't true. Edmonton is quite liberal (maybe Austin?). The BC Interior is like nowhere else on Earth.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    So not surprisingly we fought more wars with countries that did exist than we did with countries that didn't exist. Surely that makes us natural allies with Narnia and Atlantis as we have never fought a war with them either.
    In any case HYUFD's logic is unsound.

    *fights a war, conquers a country or group of countries, renames it BritImperland, and claims "no sir, we never fought a war here in BritImperland, no siree"*
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 42,829
    HYUFD said:

    kjh said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    So not surprisingly we fought more wars with countries that did exist than we did with countries that didn't exist. Surely that makes us natural allies with Narnia and Atlantis as we have never fought a war with them either.
    Firstly they are fictional and secondly they did not mainly share the same ethnicity and ancestry as Australia and New Zealand do with the British Isles
    "ethnicity"
    "ancestry"

  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 122,918

    Foxy said:

    HYUFD said:

    Carnyx said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Where did you learn your history?

    (a) wars of extermination and conquest against the Aboriginals of Australia and Tasmania
    (b) New_Zealand_Wars
    (c) wars against the First Nations, with or without French and Dutch involvement, ditto US involvement
    (d) Red River War

    And that is off the top of my head.

    Australia, Canada and New Zealand did not exist as independent nations then
    Weren't you and Bart talking about wars with France and the Anglo-Dutch wars? We've not fought a war against France or the Netherlands (or Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Poland, Malta, Cyprus, Greece, Slovenia etc.) since Australia, Canada and New Zealand became independent.

    If you're going to look at a narrow time period for wars against Aus, Can and NZ, you need to apply the same time period to European nations.
    Our last battle against France was in 1942.
    I did wonder about mentioning the battles against Vichy France. I would contest that, at the time, we did not recognise them as the legitimate French government.
    However, Vichy WAS recognized as legitimate French government by Canada up until Normandy invasion, while Australia recognized BOTH Vichy and Free French.
    I did not know that. Gosh.

    Well, I think Canadian recognition of the Vichy government just goes to show how the UK and Canada have very different international relations/views of the world!
    No it just goes to show the influence of the Francophone lobby in Quebec
  • HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    HYUFD said:

    We fight in European wars - As do they. ANZAC troops literally fought in European wars too, in Gallipoli etc they were embedded with and led by our troops, on our side, rather than against us. Score another one for CANZUK.

    Colonisation - Yes we colonised other nations. Including literally the other nations we're talking about, so we're closer to them as we colonised them, the Netherlands never colonised us or vice-versa. Score another one for CANZUK.

    To simplify a long discussion, if I can tackle these two?

    French, Polish, Belgian and Norwegian military personnel, among others, were embedded with and led by ours in World War II. Since WWII, the UK and France were together for Suez, without CANZUK, while Australia and New Zealand were together with the US for the Vietnam War without us.

    In the 2003 invasion of Iraq, we were joined by Australia, but not by Canada and NZ. We were also joined by Albania, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Portugal, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, but not by France, Germany, Norway and others.

    In NATO's involvement in the Kosovo War, the UK fought along side the French, Italians, Danish, Belgians, Norwegian and Canadian... but there was no AUSNZ involvement.

    I'm not seeing a "win" here for CANZUK.

    Colonisation... you say the Netherlands never colonised us, although William and Mary comes close. Of course, the Romans did colonise us, as did the Anglo-Saxons.
    Name one war we fought against Australia, New Zealand or Canada?

    I can name multiple wars we fought against France, Germany and Spain.

    We also fought the Dutch in the Anglo Dutch wars, we fought Russia in the Crimea War and indirectly the Cold War and Italy in WW2. Even the Americans we fought the War of Independence and War of 1812 against.

    We also now have the Australia and US defence pact we are part of too
    Australia, New Zealand and Canada are all pretty new as countries, but we fought plenty of wars with the peoples of those places.

    Australia: Tasmanian War; Hawkesbury and Nepean Wars; Bathurst War; wars of the Liverpool Plains; the Mount Cottrell massacre; Eumeralla Wars

    New Zealand: Flagstaff War; 1st Taranaki War; 2nd Taranaki War; East Cape War; Titokowaru's War

    Canada: Seven Years' War; the Rebellions of 1837–1838; King William's War
    So what? Most Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders are now of white British ancestry and we did not fight them (although we did fight the French at Quebec under Wolfe).

    We never even fought a War of Independence against Australia, Canada or New Zealand unlike we did against the US colonists and Catholic Irish
    My Canadian daughter in law would challenge your statement that most white Canadians are of white British Ancestry not least as her family are Ukrainian and indeed emigration into Canada came from across Europe
    She can challenge it, she would still be wrong. Outside Quebec certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles
    You say, "Outside Quebec certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles". I read that as, "Outside of the big portion of the Canadian population that proves me wrong, certainly most Canadians' ancestry is from the British Isles".

    Let's look at the 2021 Canadian census, where people self-reported specific ethnic or cultural origins. Their answers were Canadian (15.6 percent of the population), followed by English (14.7 percent), Irish (12.1 percent), Scottish (12.1 percent), French (11.0 percent), German (8.1 percent), Chinese (4.7 percent), Italian (4.3 percent), Indian (3.7 percent), and Ukrainian (3.5 percent).

    So, English + Scottish = 26.8%. Irish + French + German + Chinese + Italian + Indian + Ukrainian = 47.4%
    That seems about right
This discussion has been closed.