there is a nuanced historical literature on it, yes, with persuasive and well-researched arguments on many sides. are you familiar with historiography about the british raj or are you just good at finding wikipedia links? you do know that submitting wikipedia links as a 'citation' would get you kicked off a year-one humanities course ... right? this isn't 'knowledge', dilbert.
the point being that india was certainly and demonstratively capable of industrial society before the british arrived, regardless of your interpretation for its precipitous decline between the 18th and 19th centuries. indian nationalists will blame it all on the conquerors; the conquerors will claim that india would never have schools, railways, etc, without our having been there. the truth is obviously somewhere in the middle of that, and in many shades of nuance.
you saying that india would still be medieval is arrant nonsense. 100% claptrap. next.
ditto with africa. the idea that slavery was for their 'improvement' and they should be thankful or go back to africa is just ahistorical, and furthermore ethically bankrupt, NONSENSE.
I'm sure the average indian was unaffected by wealth transfer ...
er, this describes your average british person for most of the history of the british colonies and empire, dumkopf. your average peon didn't even get suffrage until 1918. for most of the 'glorious' history of our 'rich and industrialised' nation, the mass of our people lived in rural poverty and ignorance, or, later, massive ghettos in the cities without working sanitation and where disease and crime were rife. it's amazing how much you talk about 'indians in mud huts' and neglect the sheer, well, neglected status of 95% of brits during our 'world no. 1' phase. you are a mong.
Last edited by uziq (2022-11-03 04:06:32)