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The Left’s war on Britishness
The Spectator ^ | Issue: 23 July 2005 | Anthony Browne

Posted on 07/21/2005 11:48:50 PM PDT by Eurotwit

The terrorist attacks of 7 July, as the ludicrous BBC refuses to call them, have raised many questions. We might ask what turned ordinary Muslim youths into mass murderers. Or we might wonder how a religion of peace can inspire people to terrorism across the world.

A more pressing question, however, is: why Britain? Not why was Britain attacked, because the list of countries targeted by Islamist terrorism is growing so fast it will soon be quicker to list those unaffected. But rather: why did Britain become the first country in the developed world to produce its own suicide bombers? Why is Britain just about the only country in the world to have produced suicide bombers who sought to kill not another people but their fellow citizens? Italy, Denmark, the Netherlands and Poland were all part of the war on Iraq, and have not produced suicide bombers. The US and Spain had to import their terrorists. For those who think that Muslims in Britain are particularly oppressed and poor, try visiting Muslims in France or Italy.

For all our concern about Islam, Britain is one of the least Islamic countries in Western Europe. There are more Muslims, as a percentage of the population, in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark. It is true that Britain, more cursed with political correctness than most, has shown a joyfully optimistic tolerance of Islamic extremists. The BBC, the Guardian and the Metropolitan Police promote groups like the Muslim Association of Britain, even though it openly supports terrorism (just not in Britain).

No, the real answer to why Britain spawned people fuelled with maniacal hate for their country is that Britain hates itself. In hating Britain, these British suicide bombers were as British as a police warning for flying the union flag.

Britain’s self-loathing is deep, pervasive and lethally dangerous. We get bombed, and we say it’s all our own fault. Schools refuse to teach history that risks making pupils proud, and use it instead as a means of instilling liberal guilt. The government and the BBC gush over ‘the other’, but recoil at the merest hint of British culture. The only thing we are licensed to be proud of is London’s internationalism — in other words, that there is little British left about it.

It wasn’t always like this. The Great Exhibition in 1851 and the Festival of Britain a century later both unashamedly celebrated Britain’s achievements, fuelling an infectious sense of pride in being British. But then the Left and the multiculturalists waged an intolerant war of attrition against British identity and social cohesion, culminating in a report by New Labour’s Lord Parekh calling for Britain to become a ‘community of communities’. By 2000, the best Britain could come up with for the Millennium Dome was an embarrassing display of giant lice in giant pubic hair.

But self-loathing in a nation, like self-loathing in an individual, is alienating. Someone who despises himself inspires greater contempt than affection, and a country that hates itself cannot expect its newcomers to want to belong.

Only in the last few years has it dawned on the government how dangerous the Left’s war on Britishness really is. Labour ministers now queue up to declare that we need a new sense of British identity. But the ability to learn a few sentences in English and a knowledge of how to claim benefits do not create a national allegiance.

What is needed is something to make the people who live in these islands feel good about being British, but the war on Britishness has imposed a nationwide amnesia about our national story.

The historian Simon Schama wrote that ‘to collude in the minimisation of British history on the grounds of its imagined irrelevance to our rebranded national future, or from a suspicion that it does no more than recycle patriotic pieties unsuited to a global marketplace, would be an act of appallingly self-inflicted collective memory loss’. And as the American philosopher George Santayana warned, ‘A country without a memory is a country of madmen.’

Britain is one of the few countries where it is a source of pride to despise your country. We are all repeatedly taught the things to be ashamed of about Britain, but what about the things to be proud of? The truth is that Britain’s self-loathing is as unique as it is unwarranted. Britain really is great. These small rainswept isles off the western end of the vast Eurasian landmass have contributed far more to the well-being of the rest of humanity than any other country, bar none.

Sometimes it takes a foreigner to open your eyes. A Norwegian diplomat told me long ago that he was taught at school, as British kids aren’t, that Britain gave the world industrialisation, democracy and football — its economic system, its political system and its fun. That is just the start of it. It is true Britain gave the world its most popular sport — football — which emerged in the 13th century in the north of England as a holy day game, and was given the modern rules in 1848 by undergraduates at Cambridge University. But Britain has also given the world almost every other internationally played sport. If you can score points by hitting or kicking something, it was almost certainly invented by Britain’s leisured classes, keen on exercise, team spirit and clear rules.

Golf originated in Scotland in the 15th century. Cricket emerged 700 years ago, and evolved into the game we have today. The French may have invented the nearly obsolete real tennis, but the Victorians created modern tennis. Britain’s rain prompted indoor tennis, and table tennis was born. Harrow School gave the world squash; Rugby School gave the world rugby; the Duke of Beaufort copied the game poona from the Indians and gave the world badminton; the Marquess of Queensberry took bare-knuckle pugilism and turned it into modern boxing, complete with gloves. Every time people play table tennis in China, football in Brazil, cricket in Pakistan or golf in Japan, they are enjoying Britain’s gifts to the world. Any other country which gave organised sport to the world would enjoy it as a proud part of their national identity; but not Britain.

The one thing we do say about ourselves is that we are a nation of inventors, but few of us realise just to what extent. A recent survey by the Science Museum complained that 58 per cent of Britons didn’t realise we invented trains, and 77 per cent didn’t realise we invented jet engines. In fact, we didn’t just invent railways, but our engineers helped revolutionise the world by building them across Europe, the Americas, Africa and Asia. In 1698 the military engineer Thomas Savery patented the first steam engine (later improved by James Watt), while in 1821 Michael Faraday invented the electric motor. In 1876 the Scotsman Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone; 50 years later John Logie Baird demonstrated television; and in 1989 Tim Berners-Lee invented the internet.

And so it goes on and on — the traffic light, the electromagnet, the underground train (which first ran near the site of the Edgware Road bomb), light bulbs, the pneumatic tyre (thanks, Mr Dunlop), radar, the steel-ribbed umbrella, the Thermos flask, the pocket calculator (thanks, Sir Clive), vaccination, penicillin and cloning (thanks, Dolly).

Britain’s scientists have done more to unravel the mysteries of nature than any others. Of the four main forces of nature, Brits unravelled the mysteries of two — Newton with gravity and James Clerk Maxwell with electromagnetic radiation. Darwin discovered evolution by natural selection, while Watson and Crick unpicked DNA. Of the three planets unknown to the ancients, two were discovered by the British. Sir William Herschel discovered Uranus in 1781, while in 1841 the Cambridge maths undergraduate John Adams, using orbit calculations, discovered Neptune (beating a French rival by a few months). Britain is second only to the US in the number of Nobel prizes it has won — twice as many as France and seven times as many as Italy and Japan.

Britain didn’t just give the world industrialisation, but the belief in economic and political liberty, in free markets and democracy, leading to the modern world’s unprecedented affluence and freedom. Adam Smith, John Locke and John Stuart Mill won the arguments, and Britain’s global influence spread them. Britain didn’t invent democracy, but matured it over centuries and ensured that it became dominant.

Britain’s greatest creations are the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, all stable, affluent, successful liberal democracies which have for more than a century been a magnet to the rest of the world. No other European country ever managed such an achievement. All stayed free of the tyrannies of fascism, communism and military dictatorship that benighted almost everywhere else. In the dark days of the second world war, Britain and its former colonies were just about the only democracies in existence; now democracy embraces much of humanity. Of the G8 countries, all but Russia (and arguably even she) owe their current status as free-market democracies to Britain and its former colonies. The English-speaking economies amount to more than a third of world GDP.

With just 1 per cent of the world’s population, Britain has united the world with a truly global language, allowing people to speak unto people for the first time in history (French was little more than a language for elites). These islands make up less than a fifth of 1 per cent of the world’s land area, and yet their capital dictates to the rest of the world its time zones and degrees of east and west.

Britain’s cultural influence is far smaller that its scientific and political influence, but in the written word it is unrivalled. Molière and Goethe cannot challenge Shakespeare as the world’s most important writer. More recently, British musicians from The Beatles to Dido have a global audience unmatched by those of any country other than its former colony, the US. Our TV producers increasingly enjoy a similar status — is there any country that hasn’t yet suffered Big Brother or Who Wants to be a Millionaire?

Our national story is the most extraordinary there is. The patriotic French are obsessed with ‘les Anglo-Saxons’ because they see our achievements far more clearly than we do ourselves. As Luigi Barzini asked in The Europeans, ‘How ...did a peripheral island rise from primitive squalor to world domination?’ Thomas Sowell, the leading African-American intellectual, wrote in his epic Conquests and Cultures, ‘Much of the world today, including the United States, is still living in the social, cultural, and political aftermath of Britain’s cultural achievements, its industrial revolution, its government of checks and balances, and its conquests around the world.’

The problem for Britain is not that it has too little to be proud of, but too much. Multiculturalists warn that history excludes newcomers, but Britain’s national story is a continuing one that anyone can join, just as immigrants have joined it in the past, and as newcomers to the US today get infected by its self-belief. Through the so-called voluntary assumption of history, when an immigrant starts thinking of his fellow countrymen as ‘we’ rather than ‘you’, he takes on his country’s history as his own.

After helping free Europe from fascism, Winston Churchill finally published his History of the English-Speaking Peoples, a book with so little self-loathing that it is now utterly unfashionable. Churchill explained, ‘It is in the hope that the contemplation of the trials and tribulations of our forefathers may not only fortify the English-speaking peoples of today, but also play some small part in uniting the whole world, that I present this account.’ Today, the need for such a self-confident national story is as great as ever. We have tried the alternative, and seen its deadly consequences.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: cary; londonattacked; pharisee; simonschama
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To: Eurotwit
There is no denying the siginifcant contributions the British and the peoples of the British Isles have made to the modern world. Historically, the logistics of being significantly seperated from the Euroasian Continent may have helped to give inhabitants of the British Isles an edge. In a sense, the Isles became a slightly safer haven for earlier inhabitants of the Europian continent.

In most recent times the United States has become in a sense, the free worlds Britain Squared or Britain Super Sized. Obviously during WWII the free world learned the importance of developing safe havens within the United States and Great Britain.

21 posted on 07/22/2005 3:40:34 AM PDT by justa-hairyape
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To: Eurotwit
"And so it goes on and on — the traffic light, the electromagnet, the underground train (which first ran near the site of the Edgware Road bomb), light bulbs,

The Brits invented Light Bulbs?

22 posted on 07/22/2005 3:50:03 AM PDT by muir_redwoods (Free Sirhan Sirhan, after all, the bastard who killed Mary Jo Kopeckne is walking around free)
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To: Eurotwit
bump
23 posted on 07/22/2005 4:04:08 AM PDT by stripes1776
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bump for later


24 posted on 07/22/2005 6:17:02 AM PDT by Drew68 (IYAOYAS! Semper Gumby!)
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To: muir_redwoods
The Brits invented Light Bulbs?

Yes. (Not many people know that)

25 posted on 07/22/2005 6:29:29 AM PDT by Oztrich Boy (Free Hat!)
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To: mrsmel
I lived and worked in England for nearly 1.5 years, way back in 1991 - 1992. That seems nearly like ancient history now, so much has happened since.

I lived in a small village in a farming district, and spent as much time as I could touring England, much of it in London.

I found a lot of Ye Olde England. There was Sir Isaac Newton's house, Warwick Castle with its fantastic gardens, Edinburgh Castle and City, Dover castle, and all the Sights in between.

I was also able to find much of the more humble, everyday England. The truck stop cafe on the A-45 West of Cambridge, I suppose it was. One Saturday morning on the way to Warwick Castle we stopped for breakfast.

The menu, written on the blackboard behind the kitchen counter, consisted of one word: BREAKFAST. Full English Breakfast, of course, which is actually quite good, if one ignores the fried bread, which I've always suspected was present only to sop up the excess cooking lard.

There was my land lord, who asked for the rent in cash, because she was avoiding the tax-man. She instructed me to tell anybody who looked as if they might be official that I was her boyfriend.

The row house was a super-efficiency. The hot-water heater electric was only on for 3 hours in the early morning, and the same went for the space heaters. The heat provided had to last for another 21 hours.

A great concept, but I suppose because it was subsidized by government funds, It was finished up in a slipshod fashion. An honest builder would have been shamed by the fit and finish.

Anyway, I think the real England is still there to be found, quite easily, once out of the immediate touristy venue. In London, I went to the hotels that did not cater to the tour companies, and I found Fawlty Towers. In the countryside, I stopped at restaurants that did not cater to tourists, both on and off the beaten path, and I found all the bad food you've ever heard about, especially the Motorway Restaurants (stay away!).

I also found very, very good restaurants, such as at Tuddenham Mills, off the A11. It is inside a refurbished 14th Century mill, much rebuilt over the centuries, with many structural timbers obviously out of junked ships. Even the old water wheel still turns. If you ask, they will demonstrate it. Interestingly, the manger told me that they own the stream for ten miles up, and control all development on the stream banks.
26 posted on 07/22/2005 6:36:31 AM PDT by jimtorr
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To: mrsmel
IMO, the Labor government has made every effort to remove the Britishness from Britain over the years since Thatcher in order to facilitate the merging of Britain into the EU.
27 posted on 07/22/2005 6:53:08 AM PDT by expatpat
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To: Oztrich Boy

I understand that Edison in the US and Swan in the UK (and a German) were all developing this invention at the same time.


28 posted on 07/22/2005 6:54:58 AM PDT by expatpat
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To: jimtorr; Eurotwit; pau1f0rd; MadIvan

I found London to be more real than San Francisco or Washington, D. C., once away from the touristy areas. I made it a point to go to a shopping mall in Bayswater, on Queensway. I stayed in a hotel near the Liverpool Street train station. I went to Church in Putney, South of the Thames.

I did the touristy things, as well, of course. Tower of London, all of the Imperial War Museums including RAF Duxford, British Museum and all. I draw the line at Art Museums, though.

I stayed at some of the best hotels, but I preferred the not-so-best. The rooms at a £150/night hotel and a £400/night hotel aren't that different, nor is the service, I found.

Altogether, I found the people in London and in the country to be open, friendly, helpfull and hospitable. Very few people had heavy accents, either. The only whiney person I found was the cab driver in London who told me about his adventures with the refugee Pakistani's up the street.

He was a WWII vet, who proudly flew a Union Jack in front of his house. The Paki's, who were living entirely on the dole, had sued him and the district council to make him take his flag down. They said that they did not want to be reminded that they were living in England.

The only snotty people I came across were employees in the expensive hotels and department stores, and a minor immigration official when I had to renew my work visa after a year.

Thanks for a wonderful experience, guys. I hope y'all put the boot to the bad-uns.


29 posted on 07/22/2005 7:20:21 AM PDT by jimtorr
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To: struggle

Actually he invented the World Wide Web.. the 'net had existed for a long time before that.


30 posted on 07/22/2005 7:22:17 AM PDT by 1066AD
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To: jimtorr

I would love it all, I think. For now,the closest that I can get for a while is my Brown Betty tea pot(I'm sure that I still don't make a decent pot of English tea,but hey,I'm used to tea being "ice tea",LOL),and ordering food items and things like that from British online sellers. I can't wait to have a real English breakfast,those kipper things and all,and a real English tea,and buy violet-scented things at the "chemist":) Does this make me an Anglophile? Or a victim of too many Barbara Cartland books in my school days?


31 posted on 07/22/2005 7:31:02 AM PDT by mrsmel (Here lies David St. Hubbins... and why not?)
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To: mrsmel

I'm English, from a long line of Yorkshire mariners and farmers though I've broken the mould by moving south. Constable (the painter) was from a neighbouring village, Dedham. His father's mill is still there and the river and fields look just the same (except the mill's a museum now of course!)


32 posted on 07/22/2005 7:32:34 AM PDT by pau1f0rd (Still more majestic shalt thou rise, More dreadful from each foreign stroke.)
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To: expatpat

I can only hope that the British people will realise how much their heritage means not only to them,but to the world,and put a stop to it. This is going to be just one big drab beige world before it's over.


33 posted on 07/22/2005 7:33:02 AM PDT by mrsmel (Here lies David St. Hubbins... and why not?)
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To: jimtorr

We visited England last year. Like you, we were fascinated with London. The REAL England, I believe, is found "out of town."

We stayed at a B&B in Thaxted, and attended Easter services at a church in Great Dunmow. (The church is 800 years old. In regards to history, the U.S. is still wearing short pants.)

As I am a dirt track auto racing fan, we found a great race track in Henham, billing itself "The Rollover Capital of the U.K." I made a friend for life there. We exchange email regularly. He was at Disneyworld on 9/11/01, and wondered when he'd be going home.

It's always the "regular folks" who best represent their respective nations. Based on our experiences in England, we have no better friends on the planet in spite of morons like "Red Ken."


34 posted on 07/22/2005 7:44:27 AM PDT by Pete'sWife (Dirt is for racing... asphalt is for getting there.)
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To: pau1f0rd
Sorry to corrupt the thread,but I've been up all night watching the TV and reading FR,and what is happening over there right now is just unbelievable. I'm watching as I type,the pictures of the suspects from the failed bombings.There is no way that a few,relatively speaking,fanatical members of the "religion of peace" should be allowed to come into a sovereign and democratic country and disrupt the entire tenor and lifestyle of that country,much less injure and kill the very hosts,the native people of that country,who took them in. I know y'all won't stand for it,and my prayers are certainly with you all right now.

Back on topic-your home region sounds so beautiful,I've really got to get over there and fulfill my dream of seeing it.I've always told my husband,I don't care what else I never see,I want to see England,especially its beautiful countryside. From the descriptions I've read over my lifetime,and the pictures I've seen,fewer places seem so beautiful and agreeable.And I LOVE rain,the weather would perfectly agreeable to me also.I've never dealt with cold weather that much,that would be new,but I love when we have a cold winter(maybe every 5 years or so!),so I'm sure I'd love that.
35 posted on 07/22/2005 7:48:45 AM PDT by mrsmel (Here lies David St. Hubbins... and why not?)
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To: justa-hairyape
Arthur Herman take a pretty good stab at explaining the success Britain has had on the world stage in his latest To Rule the Waves.

He stresses the role the British navy had in her success on the global stage from about 1600 through mid 20th century. Britain's strong naval tradition evolved from obvious necessity. Guaranteeing freedom of the seas was very much in her interests, requiring access to her colonies. Britain was too strong to be defeated outright but never strong enough to overwhelm the other great powers of the time. So it was in her material interests to promote global peace & stability & her navy gave her the means to do so.

36 posted on 07/22/2005 8:13:40 AM PDT by skeeter ("What's to talk about? It's illegal." S Bono)
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To: mrsmel

Don't spend too much time in London, go to the Yorkshire moors, the Cotswolds, the Lake District, Devon and Cornwall, etc. If you ask the way in London in recent years, you will almost certainly get the response "I no know, I stranger myself."


37 posted on 07/22/2005 9:58:22 AM PDT by expatpat
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To: muir_redwoods
The Brits invented Light Bulbs?

Edison only improved on them.

38 posted on 07/22/2005 11:06:10 AM PDT by A Ruckus of Dogs
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To: Eurotwit

A good sentiment, but full of inaccuracies.

For instance:

The internet was created in America, Berners-Lee only invented html.

James Watson (of DNA fame) was American and hence can hardly be held up as a British hero.

And the TV show Big Brother was a Dutch invention.


39 posted on 07/22/2005 11:47:08 AM PDT by moatilliatta
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To: Eurotwit

Informative article. Thanks for posting.


40 posted on 07/22/2005 12:24:37 PM PDT by Liberty Valance ( Howdy!)
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