Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: punkfolkrocker Date: 28 Apr 19 - 11:41 AM Perhaps the main reason the English are so anti immigration is because people from other parts of the world tend to be more attractive than the flabby blotchy pasty faced indiginous population... Bloody foreigners coming over here being better looking than us... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 28 Apr 19 - 11:34 AM i remember a teacher once saying to me , this school would be alright if it weren't for the kids. England would be great without the English. you've got to admit, there's a certain logic.... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: punkfolkrocker Date: 28 Apr 19 - 10:54 AM "It's ridiculous to claim to loathe all of them." we all agree, folks who make such sweeping generalisations are all a bunch of idiots... .. oh.. errrrrrmm... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Jim Carroll Date: 28 Apr 19 - 10:36 AM "I think it's ridiculous to say "England" when the author is actually referring to the humans who live in England" Started to say that earlie Leenia, but thought it would be lost on the people it was aimed at - like the feller who thinks that not to be successful is to be deficient and to be pitied The British people have a lot to be proud of, not least their tolerance in putting up with those who are supposed to Govern them Jim Carroll |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Backwoodsman Date: 28 Apr 19 - 09:12 AM So, presumably, the OP is OK with Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland then? Or is he/she one of those ignorant people who doesn’t understand that those parts of The United Kingdom aren’t ‘England’? |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: leeneia Date: 28 Apr 19 - 09:01 AM To get back to the OP, "How I learnt to loathe England," how can a person loathe an entire country? As a geologist, I think it's ridiculous to say "England" when the author is actually referring to the humans who live in England. England is a land, with fields, cities, mountains, rivers and even occasional earthquakes. Humans are small features (usually no more than 2 meters high) who dot the surface. But such as they are, those humans are numerous and multifarious. It's ridiculous to claim to loathe all of them. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Jeri Date: 27 Apr 19 - 09:53 PM I kept wishing she'd turn around fast. I think he reaction might've been entertaining. And as for being part of the Third Reich, It often seems like he's modeling his presidency on Hitler. White nationalism, inspiring fear, hatred, and continuously scapegoating people who call him out. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 27 Apr 19 - 09:44 PM He's certainly a strange man. Do you remember when Hillary Clinton was making speeches and he was stalking round the stage behind her - pretending he was smouldering with rage, and looked about to attack her. I have never seen anything like that outside a kids playground. Some weird people in the Republican Party - voting for behaviour like that. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: punkfolkrocker Date: 27 Apr 19 - 02:42 PM Don't forget Trump represents god.. He is an angel sent down by the lord to save mankind... .. gota love/fear USA religious nutters... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Mossback Date: 27 Apr 19 - 01:17 PM What the English had that we Yanks thought we were free of was 'blood' class distinctions. Well, the Yanks thought wrong. Trump represents the US. He represents infantile hubris, idiocy, racism, felony, obstruction of justice, organized crime, treason, misogyny, white supremacy, greed, immorality, mendacity and a host of other undesirable qualities. The U.S., not so much |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Iains Date: 27 Apr 19 - 12:46 PM There are a lot of small minded people posting on this thread. Trump represents the US. Without their help we would be part of the third Reich or having a hammer and sickle flying over our heads. Perhaps a stretch too far for the lefties! |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 27 Apr 19 - 12:36 PM okay - all the other days you devote to Trump. that one day, make it about those guys who gave us everything we have. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Steve Shaw Date: 27 Apr 19 - 11:18 AM The very idea that a small-minded, racist, misogynistic, lying bigot should be invited here to sit at our top table at our expense is thoroughly disgusting. And it's hubris-driven leaders like him who cause those sacred war dead to be dead in the first place, Al. Lest we forget. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Dave the Gnome Date: 27 Apr 19 - 10:21 AM Speak for yourself... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 27 Apr 19 - 06:13 AM no one likes a narrow minge... |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: The Sandman Date: 27 Apr 19 - 04:36 AM I love England, but i prefer to live in Ireland.Ido not like multi national capitalism whether it is english or european or american. whoever makes a statement How I Learnt to Loathe England is as narrow minged as someone who says, How I Learnt to Loathe Germany,a xenophobic racist idiot , |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 27 Apr 19 - 04:08 AM No indeed. My father was in the Irish guards. the armoured division driving an Sherman tank called McGillicuddy Reeks, suplied by the much despised Americans. Because they had become an English Tommy (another term which raises a sneer) The Irish lads were in danger when they went home on furlough. Though of course much of that Celtic and traveller culture would have ended up in a gas chamber, if those brave Irish men had not put their own lives on the line, and in many cases lost their lives to fight for our freedom. As you say, many people of all nations made that sacrifice to fight Hitler and wrest the control of Europe away from him. I think that's what make the controversy of of Trump's visit so shameful. He's here in his office to honour the sacred dead. The fact that he's a total fuckwit should be irrelevant for one day. the rest of his visit - go get him! |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Rusty Dobro Date: 27 Apr 19 - 03:31 AM 'Carry on loathing. All your freedoms and economic matiness with Germany was bought with English blood.' Not quite all of the blood was English, surely? |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 27 Apr 19 - 03:13 AM Its strange - how much less politically acceptable it would be to start a thread entitled how i learned to loathe ... (virtually anywhere except England and the USA). |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: robomatic Date: 26 Apr 19 - 08:41 PM I'll defend my OP in that when I was a-growin' there were less distinctions obviously drawn in the U.S. between the super-rich, the rich, the middle class,etc. There have always been 'dollar' divisions in a Capitalist environment. What the English had that we Yanks thought we were free of was 'blood' class distinctions. What I think is happening is that the dollar divisions are now great enough, what with the elimination of such things as estate taxes and the acceptance of very very high executive to worker salary rations that we have effectively instituted a locked in class system of opportunity. So now there are limited educational opportunities, the 'digital' divide, and limited access estates, not to mention private islands. And of course the current college application scandal. I think items mentioned in the essay about England are distinctly applicable to the USA. Not to mention our inequalities in access to the criminal justice system, the punishment apparatus, the healing apparatus, etc. I think those who take personal issue with the author of the article are not being fair. I happened to be bicyling in Holland when all at once church bells began ringing out all over and overlong. Turned out it was the anniversary of liberation. The man who wrote what he wrote saw and heard what he did and wanted to show us a unique outsider's viewpoint. What he sees in the UK is among other things a culture of 'grievance' that is obstructing improvement for all and creating barriers between natural allies; it is quite the thing over here in the US. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: lefthanded guitar Date: 26 Apr 19 - 06:26 PM Yes Thompson I totally concur- America. certainly does have a class system, and it's become more entrenched over the years. And the opportunities to aspire to or to maintain being middle class are shrinking. When I was young, I believe that most people in the U S were middle class. There were far less poor - certainly far less homelees - and the super rich weren't t quite so rich. As a mature adult, it seems more and more of us have the fear off being poverty stricken nipping at our heels. Years of inadequate health care and a non living wage are bruising this country. Why could a man work 40 hours 40 years ago and support a house, car,a wife and three children and a liesurely annual vacation? Why can't even two people work full time now - without needing 3 credit cards just to make ends meet? No the class system and the impoverished are not new to America or to Europe. After all the song Streets of London was written many decades ago. But now we seem - US and Britain- to be bound in a battle of wills between those who want to curtail and those who want to expand the open arm policy. I wish there was a better way to communicate between this warring factions and find a common ground. Don't we really all want the same things at the end of the day? I often feel it's hopeless - the binds grow more constructiing and the loud angry voices more vicious. And yet I choose to believe , at least for today, that all our countries and the many good kind honest people within them will someday discover a more enlightened road to travel. This kind of progress comes slow. Civil rights, woman's rights, freedom to honor your faith or to have no faith, human rights, and the rights of our very own planet to breathe - -is the direction we need strive towards. So much has been attained. So much more can be. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Thompson Date: 26 Apr 19 - 05:09 PM Surprised at @robomatic's idea that America doesn't have a class system. Indeed it does, and it's the most sexist place I've been (in my fairly limited travel). |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Jack Campin Date: 26 Apr 19 - 03:15 PM What can you say? You could say that Leave voters were on average considerably wealthier than pro-Europeans, as well as considerably older. Xenophobes have more money to shield thenselves from the consequences of Little-Englandism as well as less years left to suffer them. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Dave the Gnome Date: 26 Apr 19 - 01:01 PM I'm working class too. Worked for nearly 50 years. Started in the building trade and fell into computing via working shifts in a data centre. I have pulled 48 hour shifts, worked in Europe when there was little work here and spent weeks away from home living in dodgy digs to earn enough to pay for a roof over our heads and food on the table. I, and many like me, are very pro EU because we know that is the best way forward in What is becoming a fat more global economy. Nothing to do with class. Just common sense. What Al (performer, songwriter and teacher of guitar) is on about, I have no idea. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Iains Date: 26 Apr 19 - 12:59 PM The UK is obviously far better off without such a negative emigre. Was it masochism drove him to Britain in the first place? |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Jim Carroll Date: 26 Apr 19 - 12:45 PM "If I had the money I'd leave..." If I had the money I wouldn't go back - getting old has too many problems as it is Jim |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: punkfolkrocker Date: 26 Apr 19 - 12:04 PM I'm working class by family and childhood environment.. Pseudo middle class by education, and lowclass by social status and income... I'd prefer to remain in Europe, but if we must leave, certainly don't want an exit dictated on the terms of tory right wing zealots.. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Donuel Date: 26 Apr 19 - 11:46 AM The form of classism in the US is directly related to being above or below the 10 million dollar line that divides Vassels from minor Kings. The lower dividing line are home owners, or homeless. It is said that the truley wealthy must personally control over 50 million. Of course the ruling class are billionaires. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 26 Apr 19 - 05:33 AM this place is probably all right if you're a rock star. interesting that the wtiter said that his parents generation liked us. My dad who was in the fighting in the low countries said the Dutch people were very warm and welcoming. Anyway now he hates us. Can't stand it that a working class was rude and triumphalistic to broken hearted middle class people, tearstained and bereft of their beloved EU. What can you say? If you weren't there when Tebbit was lying that NO miners would lose their job if they went back to work. That the unenemployed were just workshy who needed to get on their bikes. When the conference hall errupted with hilarity at the tory party conference as Peter Lillie sang a parody of Gilbert and Sullivan about disabled scroungers. Well I guess if you weren't there or have forgotten. You won't have seen real triumphalism. Triumphalism that didn't even need a triumph, as Thatch got re-elected with about 34% of the vote, time after time - and then subjected the country to the most radical right wing reforms imaginable. Carry on loathing. All your freedoms and economic matiness with Germany was bought with English blood. |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: punkfolkrocker Date: 25 Apr 19 - 09:50 PM If I had the money I'd leave... Problem is, I don't know which country I'd prefere to move to...??? Being a multi-millionaire nomad sounds appealing.. except my IBS and sciatica doen't travel well... That's probably why I'm not a rock star...??? |
Subject: RE: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: Big Al Whittle Date: 25 Apr 19 - 06:26 PM Infamy! Infamy! They've all got it in for me..... yes the middle classes won't let this one go. We're all fools or villains. after two years, it is actually calming down a bit. in the uk, we're weird. things that upset us are difficult for foreigners to understand, and I imagine we would have the same difficulty in a strange land. |
Subject: BS: How I Learnt to Loathe England (article) From: robomatic Date: 25 Apr 19 - 05:47 PM This relates to but does not strictly apply to Brexit. This article from Prospect Magazine was very interesting to me because it treats the issues going on in the UK of this moment as more self-generated than relational to Europe. The writer is from the Netherlands and is returning there not because of Brexit but nevertheless with a severe attitude adjustment due to the bitter internal politics which are extremely class linked. My reaction was that not having the class linkage in my American upbringing I recall it a little bit because of my long ago experience in the U.K. Also from witnessing a bit of it in these threads. I am likewise concerned because of elements in the UK experience which I see being taken up by the United States of here and now. |