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It's a hard thing to be an Anglophile.

Was there any time in history when the present and the future didn't look shaky? When Dickens opened A Tale of Two Cities with the famous line "It was the best of times; it was the worst of times," he may have been optimistic. Or so it sometimes seems. Things don't look so good, but I've always believed the glass was at least half full. Here's what's going on.
Our sceptered isle is on a diet. An emergency national budget has thrown the United Kingdom into a public sector austerity not known since World War II. Next year, Britain's adjustment to meet the huge national spending spree under 12 years of Labour government will cost each average British household between £400-500 in VAT tax increase alone. Over the next four years spending cuts of 25 per cent will impact almost every government ministry and markedly decrease public employment. Child benefits will be means tested, public welfare curtailed and disability claims subject to reexamination.
Not since the early days of Margaret Thatcher has the gate so been barred against the treasury door. It's not expected that every corner of British society will go equally gentle into that good night. I don't anticipate either that the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government is going to find it easy to weather the coming social clamor. The bonhomie with which this noble experiment in political alliance began is already wearing thin, and the back benchers and ideologues of both parties are becoming restless. There will be interesting months ahead in British politics.
Meanwhile, images of Muslim radicals taunting the funeral parades of British soldiers killed in Afghanistan rightly disturb all of Western Civilization. And the national dialog over the identity of Middle England, and even of Britain itself, continues in the background, like the ambient simmer of a tea kettle.
Admittedly, most of us who are Anglophiles are Romantics in some way. We may well be Classical, too, but it is our heart that is stirred by Britannia and her history. We might not agree on what it is exactly that defines it, after all there are both Whigs and Tories amongst us, but it is that Middle England that we love - and we hate to see it having faded over the last two generations.
It's not easy being an Anglophile these days. The Britain of our imagination, with which we identify, seems to have been slowly slipping away.
Alas, that Middle England, real and imagined, is far removed from Britain's population centers, the streets of Birmingham, Manchester, Bradford, Glasgow, and from Greater London itself - where 20 per cent of Britain's population resides.
Most of the island's largely urban population have never visited a peer's ancestral home, a National Trust garden or had a ploughman's lunch at a country pub. Yet the populist urban weight dictates rural land use, agricultural and social policy. Provincial Britain isn't represented by the media, either; the BBC, ITV, Sky, etc., as well as all the national papers are focused to appeal, well, to city folks, because that is their popular audience.
And, the reality is that the urban population is not an indigenously English or British people. For almost half a century, British immigration policy allowed easy access for Commonwealth citizens to the United Kingdom, and to its jobs and social services. In all Great Britain's large metropolitan areas, and a number of midsized provincial cities, there are significant ethnic communities of recent and second generation émigrés from the West Indies, India, the Far East, Pakistan and colonial Africa - not to mention those newer communities of EU immigrants, predominantly from Eastern Europe. In many or most of these cities, the "native" English working and middle classes are a minority. Social policy under successive Governments has encouraged these affinity groups to maintain and foster their group identity, with public grants to the cultural, religious and community organizations of these ethnic neighborhoods. It's little wonder that Britain is collectively scratching its head in search of identity.
Then, there's Big Brother. There's a reason for the Brits' collective griping over the intrusion of the Nanny State. Over the last decades, health and safety concerns, security concerns and political correctness have all taken their toll on the national culture and heritage of a hard-fought history - CCTV cameras everywhere, churches locked, centuries-old village customs and traditions disallowed. And post offices, village shops and pubs closing at an alarming rate. And, yes, that I can't smoke my pipe in the pub any more is part of the reason they're closing.
No wonder it's hard to be an Anglophile these days. We long for the England of Barchester Towers, Meryton and Mr. Pickwick; the Scotland of Rob Roy and Robert Louis Stevenson; the Wales of Milk Wood and How Green Was My Valley. Our hearts walk the Malvern Hills with Elgar and the Casterbridge of Thomas Hardy. We relish the manor and the market square, the British pride in local history, the unwritten rules, timeless customs and local celebrations that give a character to a people.
I really do hate to join the jeremiad, but I fear it is true. The Britain of today is neither populated nor administrated by a people who share the American Anglophile's ideal of Middle England. The characteristics of the English identity that devolved as a society from the time of the Norman Conquest will indeed continue to disappear - at whatever rate. In some sense, though, that is true of any society, and increasingly in our globalized world on societies built on tribal and ethnic identity. That's cold comfort, isn't it?
Catch Great Britain while you can, though, because it is still there. To be sure, you can still find that incandescent Britain in provincial market towns and in the city centers of the medieval cathedral cities. The Isle of Wight and Winchester, Hexham, Oakham, Lincoln and Norwich.
You can still find it in the villages, in Mousehole, Castle Combe and Jane Austen's own Chawton, in Ambleside, Senghenydd and Llanarmon-yn-Ial.
And between the National Trust, English Heritage and the efforts of countless trusts, benefactors and volunteers, Great Britain preserves its jewels of history, its treasure houses, abbeys, castles and ancient monuments, better than anywhere else on earth.
The incomparable landscapes are there, too, changing every 50 miles or so, richly textured and incredibly varied: the New Forest and the Norfolk Broads, the Western Highlands and the Yorkshire Moors, the South Downs and Snowdonia, the fells of the Lake District and the Peaks.
The local pubs are still there, too, and that's where the people gather. I learned long ago that the pub was absolutely the best place to meet people and to strike up conversation with local folk. The county people gather, too, on market days, and at church and village fetes and local agricultural shows, and at a cornucopia of festivals that market the calendar of every market town. They would be delighted to have you share the day. Slow down your travels and just be part of a place for a day or two.
In the meantime, it's true. Britain's financial woes have meant the continued weakness of the pound against the dollar, with the present rate seemingly stable for the time at just under $1.50 to the pound sterling. That means Britain is cheaper for travel (and shopping) than it has been since the mid-80s. The bad news is that the days of inexpensive airfare seem to be behind us; transatlantic flights are dearer than ever, and likely to stay high. If you can get there, though, now's the time to go. Live the history while the cultural context in which it was built is still most alive.
Yes, it's a hard thing to be an Anglophile these days, but it's still a joy.
 
re-read this post again. I am a causal observer of City, State and Federal government. Am secure with my opinion that regardless of Party rule it's a group of people that continue the age old tradition of favor returning and croney mingling.
 
http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/1478881/multiculturalism-has-failed-british-pm
http://www.smh.com.au/world/multicu...as-failed-says-chancellor-20101017-16p7h.html
http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/...y_says_multiculturalism_has_failed_france_too

no_shit_sherlock.jpg
 
You Brits have the same problem we have in the States. We are all to damn nice. Give money here, spend money there. All the while everyone we help pisses on us in return. Maybe its time to say fuck everyone elses problems and take care of our own for a change.
 
You Brits have the same problem we have in the States. We are all to damn nice. Give money here, spend money there. All the while everyone we help pisses on us in return. Maybe its time to say fuck everyone elses problems and take care of our own for a change.

with an attitude like that,youll never be president! you got to piss all over people for a vote now a days. cant you see that? are you blind? are you even an american?
 
Same shit goes on here. The problem is Australia wanted to be multicultural and now we are. There are a multitude of cultures in little fucking enclaves all over the place. I thought it was about fitting in with the country you move to, rather then rebuilding your own suburb by suburb. Then along come the stuperstitions and religious bullshit, some muslim cleric here made headlines calling aussie girls "uncovered meat" and adding it's no wonder they get raped. The general public response was "well fuck off back to your own country m8". This shit will never work.
 
Same shit goes on here. The problem is Australia wanted to be multicultural and now we are. There are a multitude of cultures in little fucking enclaves all over the place. I thought it was about fitting in with the country you move to, rather then rebuilding your own suburb by suburb. Then along come the stuperstitions and religious bullshit, some muslim cleric here made headlines calling aussie girls "uncovered meat" and adding it's no wonder they get raped. The general public response was "well fuck off back to your own country m8". This shit will never work.

are the "foreigners" demanding that shit be writen in their language too? its like that in the states! bullshit,i tell ya...
 
Same shit goes on here. The problem is Australia wanted to be multicultural and now we are. There are a multitude of cultures in little fucking enclaves all over the place. I thought it was about fitting in with the country you move to, rather then rebuilding your own suburb by suburb. Then along come the stuperstitions and religious bullshit, some muslim cleric here made headlines calling aussie girls "uncovered meat" and adding it's no wonder they get raped. The general public response was "well fuck off back to your own country m8". This shit will never work.

I agree. If they love their culture and traditions so much, why don't they just fucking stay in their country of origin.
 
From a strange part of the world I escaped from it was so fucked up that your only marry someone your chosen to marry and most of the time the high priest is only the one aloud to marry the women. But it changed when the women pressed charges for rape and incest among youth that the entire compound was closed.
 
From a strange part of the world I escaped from it was so fucked up that your only marry someone your chosen to marry and most of the time the high priest is only the one aloud to marry the women.
seems to me it's only fucked up if you're not a high priest. if you are then it's paradise on earth. i'm afraid you failed..... and as for it all changing because of bleating women and pansies, i don't even want to read that shit.
 
I agree. If they love their culture and traditions so much, why don't they just fucking stay in their country of origin.

EXACTLY. I'm sick of hearing liberal/limp wristed faggots here harp on about these people coming from hell for a better life, and next thing you know there is an uproar because you cant wear that jihad shit ninja outfit in our banks, or have your face covered for a drivers licence photo, or expect Australians to give a rats ass about silly customs and what they think is right in my society. If I moved to America I'd do my best to fit in with americans, same goes for any country... you cant move someplace for a better life and drag all the outdated values (aka bullshit) that made it a fucking hole in the first place.
 
I live in an area of the UK that has been recognized as the most run-down in Western Europe, my name tells you where. High unemployment, few jobs, massive taxation and little help on regeneration from the government. Employers know they have all the advantages so pay minimum wage and treat employees like dirt, firing anyone who doesn't jump quickly enough. There is a massive immigrant population under-cutting with wages that local people can't live on. I went to my local shop today and in that 10 minute walk I did not hear English spoken once, but I saw over 20 people. I didn't look directly at any of them as that can lead to unnecessary complication.
Most young women have to rely on baby-production in order to claim benefits/welfare due to lack of work, you may not agree with this but there few other options. Housing is another concern, I've never been able to get a mortgage because the house prices far exceed any ability to repay on low incomes. Most people live in rented accommodation, landlords can evict or increase rent at will.
Why stay here you may ask? Because this is my home and I love being here. Besides it's warm here not like further north. Also there's fewer creepy-crawlers and snakes.
Ok I stop now, wingeing pom out.
 
I live in an area of the UK that has been recognized as the most run-down in Western Europe, my name tells you where. High unemployment, few jobs, massive taxation and little help on regeneration from the government. Employers know they have all the advantages so pay minimum wage and treat employees like dirt, firing anyone who doesn't jump quickly enough. There is a massive immigrant population under-cutting with wages that local people can't live on. I went to my local shop today and in that 10 minute walk I did not hear English spoken once, but I saw over 20 people. I didn't look directly at any of them as that can lead to unnecessary complication.
Most young women have to rely on baby-production in order to claim benefits/welfare due to lack of work, you may not agree with this but there few other options. Housing is another concern, I've never been able to get a mortgage because the house prices far exceed any ability to repay on low incomes. Most people live in rented accommodation, landlords can evict or increase rent at will.
Why stay here you may ask? Because this is my home and I love being here. Besides it's warm here not like further north. Also there's fewer creepy-crawlers and snakes.
Ok I stop now, wingeing pom out.
And they say scotland aren't paying their way.
 
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