President Trump

A damning of our country.

We used to be able to produce and invent enough to be self sufficient. Over the past 40 years this has been sold off to foreign investors who ironically pillaged the country that probably did the same to same to theirs in the old empire days.
We are where we are - democracy is under massive threat from without and within - we need to get a proper perspective of our colonial past. Usually the Empire created better conditions than those it replaced and was considerably more civilized than its contemporary competitors and historical predecessors. Fed up of statue destroyers and tv historians feeding the reparations industry.

Said this in another thread without response: Denigrating colonialism has been well described by the distinguished theologian Nigel Biggar as an “important way of corroding faith in the west”. The British empire, for Biggar, “was not essentially racist, exploitative or wantonly violent”. It was born out of many motives, from “cultural curiosity” to “the vocation to lift oppression”, none of which was “morally wrong”. Britain’s “involvement in slavery was nothing out of the ordinary” but its attempts to abolish it were particularly selfless given “the higher price that British consumers would have to pay for freely produced sugar”. He concedes that the empire “did contain some appalling racial prejudice”, but this was relatively marginal. Rather, “the empire’s policies… were driven by the conviction of the basic human equality of members of all races”.

 
We are where we are - democracy is under massive threat from without and within - we need to get a proper perspective of our colonial past. Usually the Empire created better conditions than those it replaced and was considerably more civilized than its contemporary competitors and historical predecessors. Fed up of statue destroyers and tv historians feeding the reparations industry.

Said this in another thread without response: Denigrating colonialism has been well described by the distinguished theologian Nigel Biggar as an “important way of corroding faith in the west”. The British empire, for Biggar, “was not essentially racist, exploitative or wantonly violent”. It was born out of many motives, from “cultural curiosity” to “the vocation to lift oppression”, none of which was “morally wrong”. Britain’s “involvement in slavery was nothing out of the ordinary” but its attempts to abolish it were particularly selfless given “the higher price that British consumers would have to pay for freely produced sugar”. He concedes that the empire “did contain some appalling racial prejudice”, but this was relatively marginal. Rather, “the empire’s policies… were driven by the conviction of the basic human equality of members of all races”.

Sounds like a good thread debate on his own.

Successive governments have sold off our economic crown jewels and now we're going cap in hand to BlackRock and Google who will have access to our personal data for a few billion to the economy.
 
Anybody noticed the two schoolchildren given the responsibility of controlling the two lead pairs of horses? Impressive job.
 

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