The United Kingdom shamelessly prostrated itself at the feet of Donald Trump on Wednesday, throwing a lavish welcoming party for his state visit to Windsor that resembled less diplomacy and more fealty.

In doing so, the U.K. has revealed something deeply unflattering about itself—in the scramble to keep America close, it will debase itself and its values completely.

It will silence dissent, empty out its traditions, and rent out its monarch like a sex worker, deployed to flatter the ego of a man who has spent much of his political life suggesting he should be treated like one, a monarch, not a sex worker, that is.

As stage props go, the monarchy is unbeatable. But if this is what the “special relationship” between the U.S and the U.K. now means, it looks to many in Britain less like a partnership and more like groveling, feudal servitude.

archive article: https://archive.is/DxOAv

  • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    13 hours ago

    From my experience living there for over a decade, including meeting some people from the landed wealth, such warm welcomes to the ultra rich aren’t some kind of 5D chess strategy to get their secrets, they’re pure and simply a mix of greed and no scruples whatsoever by people who are trained since their teens in image management.

    If the English Gentleman stereotype of honorable behaviour was ever true (rather than an image crafted by films, which frankly seems more likely), nowadays it’s only about “projecting the right image”, which is quite independent of “doing the right thing” (given that the upper classes are literally taught in their private schools to be fake and tell people what they want to hear, being a “posh gentleman” might actually be negativelly correlated with “doing the right thing”).

    In summary, do not expect honorable behaviour from the present day British elites, especially not the English ones - want to find honor in that country, try the Northern England and Scottish working class (maybe also Northern-Ireland, but I’m not as familiar with those) and a few amongst the middle and lower-middle class in multi-cultural large cities like London.

    • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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      11 hours ago

      In summary, do not expect honorable behaviour from the present day British elites, especially not the English ones

      I mean, read Wilde, Wodehouse, Austen, Dickens… That’s always been the case.

      • melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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        10 hours ago

        People used to be dishonourable. They still are, but they used to be too. (R.I.P. Mitch Hedberg).

      • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 hours ago

        True.

        After all, Workhouses and Indentured Servitude (the later, curiously, a reintroduction of Slavery - this time Debt-based - 3 decades after Britain abolished Chatel Slavery) were very common British practices in the 19th Century.

        Also things that never get shown in modern portrayals of that time - such as Downtown Abbey - are how the “house staff” really got treated: for example they had to turn and face the wall when the lord or lady of the house passed them.