So, not angry, nor hateful, although I will put my hand
up to being a bit of a curmudgeon. I’ve been trying to place my finger on quite
when that happened. When did this optimistic young lad of the mid-twentieth century,
setting out to explore a world of exciting possibilities turn into an old
duffer, harbouring a low, seething antipathy towards almost everything that
identifies the Britain I feel less and less connected to each day?
I watched the first part of the BBC documentary ‘Cold
War, Hot Jets’ the other night; a fascinating celebration of the world I was
born into. Stirring stuff, straight from the pages of Boy’s Own Paper and that
curious homonym (Boyzone) made me wonder: do today’s young lads want to grow
into men, explore the world, fly fast jets and serve their country, or do they just
want to be groomed by manipulative Cowells and garner instant fame and fortune for
five minutes? Go out in a blaze of guts and glory shooting for the stars, or have
your own star snuffed out by the fickle flame of celebrity?
A Royal Air Force ten times the size of today’s. An
actual fleet of huge, ocean-going warships. An army still capable of taking on
anybody, anywhere. And we’d not long emerged from the last world war. As small
boys we would parade round the school yard, arms over each other’s shoulders,
proudly singing “We won the war, in nineteen forty-four!” over and over again.
It was close enough; it rhymed and we were kids… and schools had yet to
commence the re-positioning of impressionable heads with regard to ante bellum politics.
Goodies and baddies: it worked well enough to instil a morality seemingly
absent today.
I think that’s where it started to end. The Empire was
already gone, of course; there was still pride in what we had achieved over the
previous two-hundred years, but the new, progressive generation wanted none of
it. As they sought to distance themselves from the horrors of a war they had no
hand in fighting, a new rhetoric was developed and national pride was rebadged as
‘nationalism’ and deemed reprehensible. Most of my life, therefore, I have felt
out of step, with one foot in the majesty of the past and one in the mediocrity
of the here and now.
Predicated on lies around the concepts of equality and
collectivism, the touchy-feely world of caring by diktat has allowed people to
abrogate their personal responsibilities towards one another and rely not on
this band of brothers but on an increasingly all-powerful state to bind society
together. And it hasn’t worked, has it? Next year will be the one hundredth
anniversary of the outbreak of The Great War, but whoever put the cult in
multiculturalism will gleefully point out that what was never achieved by war
in a thousand years has been done by stealth as the zealots applaud the smothering
of our own culture and the minoritisation of our own ethnicity in our own major
cities.
We WILL remember.
But on Remembrance Sunday and today, the Eleventh Day,
days on which I can scarcely breathe for the catch in my throat that every
word, every note of the last post and every second of the two-minute silence
brings, I am proud to be an Englishman and damned proud of our long and yes,
noble past. And part of that hard-won British character is the tolerance of fools who would see
us condemned to the backwaters of history. I’m talking to the likes of you,
Anjem Choudary. Today, this one day of the year when Britons dare to celebrate
being British, I have only one thing to say to those who come here, drink deep
from our generosity then reward it with hatred. If you don’t like it, just fuck
off.
Hear, hear.
ReplyDelete*standing ovation*
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely outstanding.
ReplyDeleteYep
ReplyDeleteSpot on as ever Mr B
ReplyDeleteI have said before that this is not the land my father and grandfathers were prepared to die for, these are not the shallow death-cult loving people they sought to protect. they had an idea that what we had was worth preserving; they just couldn't imagine that it could all be given away so easily by complacent people who cared nothing for their willingness to face danger.
ReplyDelete