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  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,155

    Without the British Empire existing as it did at the time it's likely we'd have far less democracy and freedom in the world today, which would likely be a highly autocratic one - at best.

    That's not to apologise for its many crimes but, in assessing its legacy in the round, it must also be part of the scorecard.
    There's a reason that Marx spent a lot of time in the British Library in London while writing Das Kapital. The British Empire was the best of a bad bunch.

    But, unavoidably, as an Empire, it's ultimate purpose was to extract wealth from the Imperial possessions to enrich Britain, by whatever level of force was necessary.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 22,661

    Most of them are bad but some of the Oppo ones are both low calorie and taste good, salted caramel in particular.
    Salted caramel is yet another piece of American shite that has crept its way into British culture.

    I'd rather have a Mr Whippy.

    Good night comrades.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,198

    Err, no. The East India Company was by no conceivable standard comparable to Leopold in the Congo. Don't be daft.
    Well, the Great Bengal famine of 1770 killed perhaps 10 million, and was largely precipitated and certainly made worse by the East India Company. Its in the same league.
  • MrEd said:

    Agreed. Correct me if I am wrong but I don't remember the East India Company cutting off the hands of labourers if they failed to meet their quotas.
    They summarily blew people from cannons instead.
  • This is what I don't get. Critics of the British empire - I mean the sort of brain-dead critics who seem to have taken over the debate - have the most bizarrely twisted view of history.

    It starts with Enlightenment values - values which were created in Europe, and especially in France and in British-empire building Scotland , but also in England - and generalises those European, Enlightenment values to be universal. This is historically a very odd thing to do - no other society in the entire history of the world had these values before they became mainstream in Europe. But let's go with it, and judge the colonial period by the human-rights standards we would expect today.

    Was the British Empire bad by those standards, compared with alternatives of the time? As you rightly say, no Viceroy of India was elected by Indians. So what? Who was? Was there some kind of Swedish-style social democracy, governed by the rule of law, and free of human rights abuses, and offering opportunities to all castes, amongst the Mughals and Maharajahs, and which was cruelly displayed by the British Empire?
    India only became a true democracy after independence. The electorate in British India was only a pitiful 10% of the population, whereas in 1952, universal suffrage was introduced in time for that year's election, the first after independence.
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    They summarily blew people from cannons instead.
    Which they seem to have got from the Mughal rulers of India

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowing_from_a_gun
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    edited August 2020
    Foxy said:

    Well, the Great Bengal famine of 1770 killed perhaps 10 million, and was largely precipitated and certainly made worse by the East India Company. Its in the same league.
    For heaven's sake! 'Largely precipitated'? The East India Company caused the monsoon to fail, did it? It's true that the policies subsequently made it worse, but it wouldn't be the first or the last cases where that happened, in the British Empire or anywhere else in the world, including India before the British were involved.
  • MrEd said:

    Which they seem to have got from the Mughal rulers of India

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blowing_from_a_gun
    So you're saying there was little difference between the Mughals and the "Honorable" Company? I agree with you!
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,309

    It's not a fact. Auschwitz was designed to slaughter as many Jews as quickly and efficiently as possible to achieve the goal of racial elimination.

    Slavery was not.

    This argument really hinges on the fact that because both are terrible they're basically as bad each other.

    They're not.
    Slave labour was not an element of Auschwitz? Do tell me more.
  • MrEd said:

    I think that would have been difficult Casino. India was different from the likes of Australia in two ways (1) its people didn't have ties to the home country as the Dominions did and (2) there were a number of Princely rulers which complicated matters.

    PS sorry to be a pedant but India is still a member of the Commonwealth.
    33 out of 54 members of the Commonwealth are republics, as the name ought to suggest!
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822


    India only became a true democracy after independence. The electorate in British India was only a pitiful 10% of the population, whereas in 1952, universal suffrage was introduced in time for that year's election, the first after independence.

    Yes, they picked up European values. I wonder why?
  • MrEdMrEd Posts: 5,578

    So you're saying there was little difference between the Mughals and the "Honorable" Company? I agree with you!
    Both were constructs of their time. No one would say the East India Company was the beacon light of Christian values but the analogy was that the East India Company was similar to the Congo Free State. The latter sought purposefully to make the native population into slaves. The former was interested in riches and conquest but there was no design to enslave all Indians.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,198

    For heaven's sake! 'Largely precipitated'? The East India Company caused the monsoon to fail, did it? It's true that the policies subsequently made it worse, but it wouldn't be the first or the last cases where that happened, in the British Empire or anywhere else in the world, including India before the British were involved.
    Prior to the famine, the Mughal tax rate was 10-15%, and famine relief was provided from central reserves. After Plassey, the East India Company hiked the tax rate to 50%, so there were no reserves, and famine relief was not provided. When revenues began to fall because of mass starvation, the EIC raised taxes to 60% to make up lost revenue, worsening starvation further.

    Like Leopold in Africa, death meant nothing provided profits were maintained.
  • Foxy said:

    Prior to the famine, the Mughal tax rate was 10-15%, and famine relief was provided from central reserves. After Plassey, the East India Company hiked the tax rate to 50%, so there were no reserves, and famine relief was not provided. When revenues began to fall because of mass starvation, the EIC raised taxes to 60% to make up lost revenue, worsening starvation further.

    Like Leopold in Africa, death meant nothing provided profits were maintained.
    Don't forget the other great famine in the 1870s, around the time Victoria became Empress.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_of_1876–1878
  • Yes, they picked up European values. I wonder why?
    Some Europeans didn't believe in Indian independence, like Churchill.
  • Richard_NabaviRichard_Nabavi Posts: 30,822
    Foxy said:


    Prior to the famine, the Mughal tax rate was 10-15%, and famine relief was provided from central reserves. After Plassey, the East India Company hiked the tax rate to 50%, so there were no reserves, and famine relief was not provided. When revenues began to fall because of mass starvation, the EIC raised taxes to 60% to make up lost revenue, worsening starvation further.

    Like Leopold in Africa, death meant nothing provided profits were maintained.

    As Wikipedia says, "Little is known about death tolls in the many earlier Indian famines". As I said, there was no social democracy, concern for human rights, rule of law, fairness, equality of opportunity, or benign government displaced by the British Empire in India. And equating it with the deliberate horrors of Leopold in the Congo is just bonkers.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,198

    Don't forget the other great famine in the 1870s, around the time Victoria became Empress.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Famine_of_1876–1878
    Of course there were more, but the 1770 famine was particularly egregious, and a consequence of the greed of the EIC.
  • Hold on... this doesn't actually show what Mike says it does at all.

    In every single party split, as well as in Remain/Leave, more respondants said the song should be performed with lyrics than said should be performed without them or not at all combined. Even in Labour, the split is, crudely put, 39/38. Remain is 46/26. That's overwhelming.

    Suggests that the BBC is very much being swayed by a tiny and extreme cultural minority.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,805
    edited August 2020

    Some Europeans didn't believe in Indian independence, like Churchill.
    As a Brexiteer, do you believe in an Indian superstate, or do you think it should be dissolved into separate sovereign states?
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,198

    As Wikipedia says, "Little is known about death tolls in the many earlier Indian famines". As I said, there was no social democracy, concern for human rights, rule of law, fairness, equality of opportunity, or benign government displaced by the British Empire in India. And equating it with the deliberate horrors of Leopold in the Congo is just bonkers.
    The 1770 Bengal famine was as deliberate as the Ukranian famine of the thirties.

    If you want a more recent example of the dirty end of empire, this book is well worth a read. The events are well within living memory.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1844135489/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_qxzrFbPJGGYRA
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,001
    Rogueywon said:

    Hold on... this doesn't actually show what Mike says it does at all.

    In every single party split, as well as in Remain/Leave, more respondants said the song should be performed with lyrics than said should be performed without them or not at all combined. Even in Labour, the split is, crudely put, 39/38. Remain is 46/26. That's overwhelming.

    Suggests that the BBC is very much being swayed by a tiny and extreme cultural minority.

    And why Boris was so quick to come out today and say the BBC should have played the songs in full with lyrics too
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,001
    Land of Hope and Glory has hit Number 1 on the iTunes charts

    https://order-order.com/2020/08/25/land-of-hope-and-glory-hits-no-1-on-itunes-charts/
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,209
    I'll be annoyed if these miscreants lose my Biden bet.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,001
    Pulpstar said:
    Trump is begging for a 'Silent Majority' law and order election as his best hope to beat Biden and these idiots could give it to him
  • As a Brexiteer, do you believe in an Indian superstate, or do you think it should be dissolved into separate sovereign states?
    Me, are you kidding? Hey, I was with you all the time! That was beautiful! Did you see the way the Leavers fell into our trap? Ha ha!
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,309
    When your wee slice of ideological grift encourages you to promote Lukashenko as a good thing.

    https://twitter.com/RobDotHutton/status/1298372510140989440?s=20
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,805
    edited August 2020
    Shame on Toby Young.
  • BluestBlueBluestBlue Posts: 4,556
    These contemptible bullies are the most effective vote-winners Trump could ever ask for. Could the far left just, y'know, fuck off before they hand him an improbable second term?
  • SirNorfolkPassmoreSirNorfolkPassmore Posts: 7,286
    edited August 2020

    For heaven's sake! 'Largely precipitated'? The East India Company caused the monsoon to fail, did it? It's true that the policies subsequently made it worse, but it wouldn't be the first or the last cases where that happened, in the British Empire or anywhere else in the world, including India before the British were involved.
    How many famines has India suffered since 1947, out of interest?

    That's not a particular criticism of the British Empire of all empires, incidentally. But it's undeniably true that functioning democracies, even extremely poor ones, very rarely suffer famines whereas dictatorships and imperial possessions often do. That's not to do with functioning democracies having better weather and luck.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Shame on Toby Young.

    First time I've logged on today. What's he done?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,805
    Andy_JS said:

    First time I've logged on today. What's he done?
    image
  • NickPalmerNickPalmer Posts: 21,674
    Foxy said:

    Looks interesting. My own ancesters in Colonial Australia were involved in campaigning against the dubious trade in "coolie labour". They were Presbyterian ministers in the Australian goldfields (and later in Fiji).

    Once the early gold rush petered out, the mines became consolidated by a few owners who cut costs by importing indentured Chinese Labour. As well as the racism of the Australian frontier, it was felt that they were undercutting the paid labourers.

    My ancestors ran a hospital and very controversially for the time insisted on treating the Chinese workers equally, and on the same wards as the white Australians. They got some stick for doing so. My uncle has a rather magnificent silk banner given to my great grandfather by the chinese community of the town in thanks.

    The story of Empire is a mixed one, a complex brew of being both exploiter and exploited, and delivered opportunity as well as degradation*. Even at the time there was controversy and realisation that a lot of what was going on was morally wrong, like the "blackbirding" trade your ancestor tried to expose.

    *for example, having been chucked out of Speyside in the clearances, my family benefited by farming and mining land cleared of aborigines.
    A lot to be proud of there.
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 34,295

    Empires are racist and undemocratic.
    Would India be a democracy today without the British influence? Probably not.
  • I don't agree with OGH on his final sentence. I think we would get this reaction if the Proms were being broadcast by another broadcaster. Anyone stupid enough to think changing Last Night would create buzz and they could ride out the anger deserves what they get.

    My mother who is a 90 y.o. woke Lib Dem is seething about this. She is more annoyed than she is about Brexit. That is saying something.
  • Andy_JS said:

    Would India be a democracy today without the British influence? Probably not.
    Very difficult to know. Plenty of countries with similar "British influence" aren't. Plenty without it are.
  • image
    Is Young serious or just taking the piss. Can he really be that dumb?
  • justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    We should protect those who protect us
    The same argument could be used by German citizens regarding crimes committed by the SS and other members of the Wehrmacht during World War 2. To turn a blind eye to atrocfities committed by British military personnel but then condemn others who carry out similar acts - eg the Serbs in Sebrenica and elsewhere - is pure hypocrisy.
  • RobDRobD Posts: 60,350
    edited August 2020
    justin124 said:

    The same argument could be used by German citizens regarding crimes committed by the SS and other members of the Wehrmacht during World War 2. To turn a blind eye to atrocfities committed by British military personnel but then condemn others who carry out similar acts - eg the Serbs in Sebrenica and elsewhere - is pure hypocrisy.
    Are you seriously comparing British soldiers to the SS?

    When will you stop with the Nazi comparisons.
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,321
    British fans of the British empire:

    1. "The empire that I pathetically still identify with is coincidentally the best one in history. Basically benevolent, whereas all the other ones were terrible." (See also: "The British empire: fantastic because sometimes not as bad as the Belgian Congo")
    2. "Nobody had ever thought of respect for human life, democracy, social welfare etc etc before the British came and enslaved them" (see also: "no country has ever managed to build a railway without the benefit of British rule").

    Do you guys not get how ridiculous you sound?
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,251
    MrEd said:

    Both were constructs of their time. No one would say the East India Company was the beacon light of Christian values but the analogy was that the East India Company was similar to the Congo Free State. The latter sought purposefully to make the native population into slaves. The former was interested in riches and conquest but there was no design to enslave all Indians.
    Eh? You do realise the EIC were primarily slavers, extortionists and drug dealers? Having "Company" at the end of their name doesnt make them like a normal business.

    From 1883 Sir Henry Bartle Frere who sat on the Viceroy Council (but will probably be presumed to be woke on here so can be ignored) said:

    "Comparing such information, district by district, with the very imperfect estimates of the total population fifty years ago, the lowest estimate I have been able to form of the total slave population of British India, in 1841, is between eight and nine millions of souls. "
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,270

    There's a reason that Marx spent a lot of time in the British Library in London while writing Das Kapital. The British Empire was the best of a bad bunch.

    But, unavoidably, as an Empire, it's ultimate purpose was to extract wealth from the Imperial possessions to enrich Britain, by whatever level of force was necessary.
    This is a common view, but it's far from the truth.

    The Treasury actually didn't like extending the Empire (on the grounds of cost, hardly likely if all imperial possessions "enriched" Britain) which is why informal influence was preferred throughout most of the 19th Century. Extra colonies meant more responsibility and potential for clashes with other powers which is why the phrase "gained in a fit of an absence of mind" gained currency.

    Colonies were established for a variety of reasons - the sugar islands in the Caribbean undoubtedly fall into the category you suggest, and Bengal made money for the buccaneers of the East India Company - but most of it was about ensuring opening markets and securing trading concessions, and then having overseas bases to protect them from other powers.

    This was necessary because there was no "rules based international order" or WTO then - although that was something we helped create later - and if you wanted global trade you had to control it. If it was about purely plundering gold and silver - as Spain did in the new world - there'd have been next to no development in the colonies of physical and civil infrastructure, except mines & transport, and we'd also have experienced rampant inflation at home too.

    The vast majority of Britain's growth in wealth in the 18th and 19th Centuries came about due to industrialisation, and the fact it could exploit (domestically) iron and coal to take advantage of this.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,270
    Foxy said:

    Prior to the famine, the Mughal tax rate was 10-15%, and famine relief was provided from central reserves. After Plassey, the East India Company hiked the tax rate to 50%, so there were no reserves, and famine relief was not provided. When revenues began to fall because of mass starvation, the EIC raised taxes to 60% to make up lost revenue, worsening starvation further.

    Like Leopold in Africa, death meant nothing provided profits were maintained.
    That's simply not true - from Burton Stein, "A History of India": The base of the empire's collective wealth was agricultural taxes, instituted by the third Mughal emperor, Akbar. These taxes, which amounted to well over half the output of a peasant cultivator, after the costs of production had been met, is estimated to have been taken from the peasant producers by way of official taxes and unofficial exactions."
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,270
    kamski said:

    British fans of the British empire:

    1. "The empire that I pathetically still identify with is coincidentally the best one in history. Basically benevolent, whereas all the other ones were terrible." (See also: "The British empire: fantastic because sometimes not as bad as the Belgian Congo")
    2. "Nobody had ever thought of respect for human life, democracy, social welfare etc etc before the British came and enslaved them" (see also: "no country has ever managed to build a railway without the benefit of British rule").

    Do you guys not get how ridiculous you sound?

    I'm not sure anyone is "identifying" with it. We are simply saying it had good points, as well as bad, and that it's only fair to assess it within the geopolitical context of the times rather than by today's standards. Further, it's legacy has to be judged in the round and compared to the likely alternatives.

    Why is this so threatening to you?
  • kamskikamski Posts: 6,321

    I'm not sure anyone is "identifying" with it. We are simply saying it had good points, as well as bad, and that it's only fair to assess it within the geopolitical context of the times rather than by today's standards. Further, it's legacy has to be judged in the round and compared to the likely alternatives.

    Why is this so threatening to you?
    I just find it as absurd as listening to a French person droning on about how the French Empire was uniquely benevolent because they weren't as bad as the Belgians (or a Chinese on the benefits of Chinese rule in Tibet, or a Russian on how great the Russian empire/Soviet Union was etc).
  • Economist: Biden +8.8%
    RCP: Biden +7.6%
    Five Thirty-Eight: Biden +9.3%

    Half the PB Tories: "Trump isn't the messiah - not at all; in fact some of what he says is downright unsavoury - but the election is certainly swinging his way. Footage from outside a restaurant and his expected sweep-up of the Mormon vote from McMullin prove it."
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