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serial thriller The Promised Land 21 Sep 18 6.40pm | |
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Originally posted by Stirlingsays
Statistically I can rip you to sheds over it. Please do. I await to find out how pakistan and Syria are better than Sweden and Japan eagerly.
If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4 |
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Stirlingsays 21 Sep 18 6.57pm | |
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Originally posted by serial thriller
Please do. I await to find out how pakistan and Syria are better than Sweden and Japan eagerly.
What are your complaints. I have plenty against pakistan in many instances. What are your ones? Without the British it is unlikely that the democratic process would have existed to have allowed this to have happened even in the first place. pakistan's legal and educational institutions are mostly based upon English practice and have provided processes better than existed before. It's trading influence and infrastructure also provided a leg up to India and hence pakistan. India has very good connections to the UK and is one of our largest trading partners. It's people like you who only focus upon the negative aspects of British colonialism and appear to be tone deaf not only to human nature and what the alternative histories would have been for these countries but also deaf to how most Indians think of Britain. As for Syria, what is your complaint about Syria in relation to the UK? Japan is a country that has been totally transformed by the western investment and infrastructure and technology since WW2 and has been on higher GDP growth than the UK for decades. Sweden? What are you waffling about.....it's perfectly clear I'm talking about comparable countries in the region. Edited by Stirlingsays (21 Sep 2018 7.03pm)
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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serial thriller The Promised Land 21 Sep 18 7.07pm | |
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And there was me hoping for statistics... Again, it makes me wonder why people like yourself are so quick to defend the establishment for their crimes, despite only the most wafer thin historical knowledge at your disposal.
If punk ever happened I'd be preaching the law, instead of listenin to Lydon lecture BBC4 |
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Hrolf The Ganger 21 Sep 18 7.18pm | |
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Originally posted by serial thriller
One thing I will never understand is people's instinctive defence of British atrocities abroad. It comes from such a superficial reading of history, and one which is peddled and parroted by this country's establishment. Go back to the early 20th century and Hindus would very much have been condemned and vilified like you do to Muslims. 30 years ago it was people like myself, the Irish. Those who condemn without learning will do so towards whoever they're told to, those who attempt to learn will begin to empathise. Ah! So you have an axe to grind. Fancy that. And you are the expert historian too. Thing is that it isn't 1916 or 1947, it is 2018. Britain was no more or less ruthless than any other country or group in history when it came to defending its interests. To believe that all these things happen in a bubble or that Britain was somehow the villain and all others were the good guys is ridiculous. You talk about a superficial reading of history but you are as guilty of that as anyone.
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Stirlingsays 21 Sep 18 7.36pm | |
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Originally posted by serial thriller
And there was me hoping for statistics... Again, it makes me wonder why people like yourself are so quick to defend the establishment for their crimes, despite only the most wafer thin historical knowledge at your disposal.
Ok, pakistan is only 80 years old and started as we left so I'll refer to our colonialism in India. Britain laid the foundations for modern-day India. The British involvement in these foundations plays an initial positioning role in the prosperity that it enjoys today. This is not just a British view, Dr Kartar Lalvani, the writer of the book, The Making Of India: A Story Of British Enterprise stated back in 2013, 'The indisputable fact is that India as a nation as it stands today was originally put together and created by a small, distant island country.' He states how India had no uniform government and was a vast region of unconnected, under developed and warring areas with low life expectancy. He detailed how Britain provided the social, civil and physical infrastructure like railways, roads, canals, mines, sewers, plantations over two centuries of colonial rule that would not have been present at anything like a comparable level from the restrictive corrupt and backward rulers at the time who were still burning widows on funeral piles after the death of their husbands...by the way those rulers were the Mughals - Muslim rulers who came from as far west as Turkey....they were hated....Delhi was razed eight times in that period and great pyramids were constructed with the skulls of its inhabitants. ..The British, on the other hand, also eradicated the thugee (violent highway robbery) organizations as an effective force....we also oulawed female infanticide, and stopped the burying of lepers alive. Also the British banned slavery in 1843 at a time when an estimated 10 million Indians were slaves - up to 15 per cent of the population in some regions. Within forty years of the East India company starting its first trading post India had another 22 bases. These posts continued and developed India during and after the British left. By 1914, the Indian mining industry, which was built from nothing by the British, was producing nearly 16 million tons of coal a year. Health and life expectancy both improved dramatically, particularly because malaria was tackled and vaccination against smallpox introduced. Dr Lalvani adds: 'The 200-year window of British governance was perhaps the only period in a thousand years of Indian history to date when the minorities and people of different religions felt more secure and less discriminated against, with a notable absence of killings, conflicts and persecutions.' As the links between the two countries were established, wealthy young Indians were packed off to Britain to study and returned home well-trained, bristling with new ideas and instilled with a British sense of fair play. The mutual respect among Indians and Britons meant the transition from colonial rule to independence was relatively peaceful compared to many other independent movements. The French, Dutch, Portuguese and Spanish all did much less for their former foreign outposts......And without the British India would have been a French colony....As that prospect was ended by the victory of Robert Clive over French forces at Plassey, in Bengal, in 1757. Despite these problems, India inherited political stability while another legacy of British rule is enduring good relations between the two distant nations. He says: "Although there were wrongs committed by the British against India, as widely recognised by the British themselves, there was much more that was and remains positive. The sheer audacity and scale of such an endeavour, the courage and enterprise have no parallel in world history." Dr Lalvani says he despairs that some Indian politicians still insist on attacking its former ruler and disparaging Britain's significant role in the country's development. Instead they should acknowledge the benefits and work to preserve and foster the special relationship between the two nations. Or, in other words, Dr Lalvani believes that no Indian should today pose the question: 'What did the British ever do for us?' Now this guy has a far more sensible and realistic view of this time period and the impact of the British than you do. Edited by Stirlingsays (21 Sep 2018 7.46pm)
'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen) |
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elgrande bedford 21 Sep 18 7.40pm | |
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7 Originally posted by serial thriller
British Muslims - I assume this is who you're referring to - weren't 'imported'. Many from the large British-pakistani community, for instance, were granted citizenship after the region they had called home for hundreds of years was colonised violently. After a hasty exit, a partition was left which lead to one of the biggest human migrations in history. By us. Before we arrived in India, the Moghol Empire was enormous, and dwarfed the wealth we possessed by some margin. We left a region war torn, impoverished and chaotic. The British Syrian community, which makes up a lot of more recent migration, can make a similar claim. Their land has historically been a very prosperous one. It is one of the earliest sites of civilisation, a major territory under the Ottomans, and after French occupation was authoritarian yes, but by no means 'third world' under the Assad dynasty. It is only since our invasion that the country has been turned in to a wasteland, and millions have been forced to flee in search of refuge. We have taken in, per capita, the fewest Syrian refugees in Europe. All of this shouldn't take away from the staggering fact that your comment is IN reference to an act of terror committed by WHITE ENGLISH PEOPLE. But it should serve to inform us of the staggering depths of stupidity your post manages to fall to. We on the left are often accused of terrorist apologism but if this thread - and particularly this comment - is not apology for the attempted murder of innocent citizens I don't know what is. We have Muslims who use this site and follow Palace, as I'm sure you know. I think an apology to them is in order. Edited by serial thriller (21 Sep 2018 5.12pm) Edited by serial thriller (21 Sep 2018 5.16pm) Now I condemn every thing that those people in the car did,I hope they throw away the key.
always a Norwood boy, where ever I live. |
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becky over the moon 21 Sep 18 7.48pm | |
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Nobody seems to have noticed the one line tucked away in the report that, after they moved the car away from the mosque car park, there was an altercation with some people on their way to the mosque, which resulted in some damage to the vehicle. I don't say any of you would do what they did, but how many of you would sit back and tolerate your car being damaged over a few harsh words?
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Cucking Funt Clapham on the Back 22 Sep 18 9.26am | |
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Pretty much the same one you're making.
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dannyboy1978 22 Sep 18 2.02pm | |
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Originally posted by Cucking Funt
Pretty much the same one you're making. You insinuated doctors ext are immune from being terrorists. So what about doctors?
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DanH SW2 22 Sep 18 2.08pm | |
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He is literally making the same point as you.
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elgrande bedford 22 Sep 18 2.13pm | |
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Originally posted by dannyboy1978
You insinuated doctors ext are immune from being terrorists. So what about doctors? I think he is agreeing with you dannyboy.
always a Norwood boy, where ever I live. |
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dannyboy1978 22 Sep 18 2.28pm | |
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Oh ok, my bad
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