• gmtom@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      As a Brit I’m always shocked people focus on us so much. Like yeah we fucked up a lot of places and did awful things, but basically every country in Europe has committed atrocities that are as bad if not worse, like the French in Vietnam or Belgium in Africa, or mother fucking Spain basically wiping put the entire south American continent.

      • SuddenDownpour@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Most of the current day border conflicts are related to the past century’s British policy, both due to the extent of the British Empire and its little interest in preventing trouble in their way out. You see similar issues with French ex-colonies, but since they weren’t as many they don’t appear as much in the news. Border conflicts in old Spanish colonies mostly took place during the 19th century, and they’ve been independent for long enough for their current issues not to have as much to do with Spain anymore. In contrast, there are British people alive today who were kicking around when the victors of WWII decided to split Palestine in half without asking Palestinians for their opinion, and afterwards chose to ignore the ethnic cleansings of Palestinians.

        In any case, you shouldn’t take of this personally, unless you actually hold any position of relative power.

        • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Palestinians were in fact asked for their opinion before the UN voted to split it in half…

          There’s a shituation very comparable to Palestine happening today in Western Sahara. A former colony of Spain.

          • SuddenDownpour@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Palestinians were in fact asked for their opinion before the UN voted to split it in half…

            Do you have a source for this?

            There’s a shituation very comparable to Palestine happening today in Western Sahara. A former colony of Spain.

            Fair enough. Spain had an UN mandate that ordered them to oversee the process of decolonization, and instead they just gave it up to Morocco against the wishes of the Saharawi people themselves. The contemporary attitude of both the US and Spain is disgusting in this issue.

            • gmtom@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              If he’s referring to what I’m thinking about it was the Arab league that was asked. They said “no” and the UN said “we don’t care”

              • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                I replied to a post that claimed they weren’t asked for their opinion. Instead of working with the UN to decide on how the territory should be split they just said “we don’t care”. It’s like refusing to go to your divorce or custody hearing because you think it’ll be unfair

                Their plan was to get the neighbouring countries to invade and capture the entire territory

              • SuddenDownpour@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                So the majority of Palestinians just flat out refused to discuss splitting their country apart, just like it would happen everywhere. The way in which you presented facts is disturbingly misleading.

                • nonailsleft@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  I’m just replying to the statement they were never asked about their opinion. How is that misleading?

        • V H@lemmy.stad.social
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          1 year ago

          You see similar issues with French ex-colonies, but since they weren’t as many they don’t appear as much in the news.

          Or people aren’t as aware of them. E.g. notably their mandates in Syria and Lebanon after World War 1 where they intentionally stirred divisions on the basis of a theory of wanting to keep it so France as a mediator was needed in order to keep them stable. And then they fucked off and left chaos behind.

          • SuddenDownpour@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Fair enough. Also, English speaking people will be relatively less exposed to conversations in French, which should be more oriented towards French colonies than English colonies.

      • V H@lemmy.stad.social
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        1 year ago

        Three things: Scale, recency and contrition or perceived lack thereof.

        The British Empire is the largest empire there has ever been. At its greatest extent, in 1920, it covered about 1/4 of the entire world, long after having lost many holdings like the US. The second largest, the Mongol Empire, reached almost the same size, but hundreds of years earlier.

        In the same time period as the British, the Russian empire covered <20% in 1895, but its proportion of colonial lands to their own was much smaller than for the British Empire and the proportion of the current world population living in those areas is also much smaller. The French colonial empire covered less than 1/10th of the world at its peak in 1920, and was by far the other largest recent holding of colonies geographically and culturally outside of the immediate sphere of the holding country.

        Spain is rarely brought up, I think, in large part because the Spanish empire reached its peak in the early 1800’s and so is “history”. Belgium doesn’t get discussed at much because 98% of their colonial holdings was Leopold II’s personal ownership of the Congo Free State. And then we get to the last bit: Contritition.

        Nobody goes around saying the massive scale of gross abuse that happened under Leopold II’s rule of the Congo Free State was a good thing. Few people I’ve met ever defend France’s atrocities in Vietnam. Even the defence of their ownership of Algeria, which was special enough to trigger an attempted coup against Charles de Gaulle when he wanted to let it have independence because many saw it as part of France itself, is relatively muted.

        But there’s still mainstream support for the British Empire in the UK. There are still people who insist the British Empire was awesome for the colonies that were exploited because they got English and rails and British legal systems and that somehow outweighs the mass murder and brutal exploitation and erasure of local cultures.

        E.g. this survey from 2019, where 32% were proud of the British Empire, 37% were neutral, and only 19% considered it “more something to be ashamed of”. 32% were proud of their country’s history of colonialism and oppression. Critically this was significantly higher than for other colonial powers other than the Dutch. At the same time 33% thought it left the colonies better off vs. only 17% who thought they were worse off.

        I’m not British, but I’ve lived in the UK for 23 years, and I’ve experienced this attitude firsthand from even relatively young British people (ok, so all of them have been Tories) - a refusal to accept that the fact that a substantial number of these former colonies had to take up arms to get rid of British rule might perhaps be a little bit of a hint that the colonial rule was resented and wrong.

        No other modern empire has left behind such a substantial proportion of the world population living in countries that have either a historical identity tied up to rebelling against British rule, and/or have relatively recently rebelled against British rule, and/or still have substantial reminders, such as Commonwealth membership or the British monarch as their monarch. When a proportion of the British population then keeps insisting this was great, actually, there you have a big part of it.

      • jhulten@infosec.pub
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        1 year ago

        We aren’t giving the others a pass, but this shitshow has a certain Etonian stench. It’s like the British Empire looked at Zionist and saw a shared colonial heart…

        • TanakaAsuka@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          No, it’s because you can trace at least some of this specific problem directly back to British imperial rule in the middle east.

          • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Yes, they intentionally drew national boarders to split ethnic populations and ensure infighting amongst country.

            The aim was to keep the region destabalized and unable to strike at their former oppressors.

      • ComradeKhoumrag@infosec.pub
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        1 year ago

        I think the general focus comes from the particular reach of the British empire controlling ~ a quarter of the world, but I agree every major power has done it

        That said, in this particular conflict, it’s more about how right after WWII , around the time when the United nations was founded. The world powers knew they basically owned the world at this point with nuclear tech, but justified it by arguing they should use this power to preserve countries borders.

        Around the same time when the world powers are saying this, land that Britain colonized in Palestine was given to create Israel. Which is hypocritical.

        I can understand machiavellianism in the context of pre 1950 geopolitics, but there will never be peace because of the decision making of Western powers doing something they have acknowledged is unethical

        • V H@lemmy.stad.social
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          1 year ago

          1/4 yes, but also worth mentioning that today far more than 1/4 of the present-day population live in that quarter of the world that has a history of being under British rule in recent history.

          Couple that with the UK population being far more likely to be proud of the empire, wish Britain still had an empire, and insist the colonies wee left better off for having been oppressed, the British Empire has a certain stench about it many of the others haven’t, or haven’t anymore because of either age, a greater willingness to admit it was a bad thing, or lack of scale.

          • gmtom@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Not to be an imperial apologist, but there was one colony that was actually better off under British rule and that was Hong Kong.

            • V H@lemmy.stad.social
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              1 year ago

              I think Hong Kong is the rare exception that’s at least possible to reasonably argue, since the alternative was never independence but being ruled by someone granting even fewer freedoms.