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Your thoughts on the UK? I visited a few months back

badminton · 61-69, MVIP
Love the U.K. Of course, It has it's problems, post-empire malaise, post-industrial revolution grittiness. British working-class people have a kind of sullen resentment about them. A hold-over from the class system I suppose.

But despite all that the U.K. is a more civilized, less violent place than the U.S. They take better care of their children and seniors than in the U.S. And there is much beauty in the cities and small towns. Even the worn-down post-industrial cities and water fronts have a somber beauty. Much of the countryside is largely unspoiled, less developed and commercialized than in the U.S.

Outside of the U.S. the U.K. and Ireland are closet to my heart.
MrBlobby · 31-35, M
@badminton Nah mate, the working-class here love our tyranical reptilian royal overlords.

Look at our national collection of Idiot's, famed pizza-lover and former-sweater Prince Andrew. National treasure Boris Johnson telling everyone in covid that there loved ones were going to die, before quoting something unintelligible in pig-latin. Liz Truss telling everyone she wanted to sell pork to China, coming to office; within 40 days the Queen died, the economy flat-lined, and she was out of a job, and a man that flys by helicopter to beat the traffic got her job. And our beloved King-Prince Charlie the 3rd; famed for his growling, sausage fingers, hated of pens and romantic desire to reincarnate as a tampon.

The class system is a hierarchy that worked for the wealthy. It hold's people back. The perception in the job market is the common man works all his life, the middle class manage and keep the workers under heel and the upper class are the lords of the manor; their only fear in life is the proles rising up; or a groundskeeper or upper-middle class businessman's son knocking up their daughter and marrying to avoid a scandal.

I would agree with you, less-violent, less guns, a free at access NHS which does need improvement but is still beloved, we need a better mental-health system as its been run down by 14 year of tory's mucking about with it, a benefits system that acts as a safety-net preventing crimes driven by poverty and desperation, a police force that polices by consent of the people. Perhaps the fact the working class do not subscribe to the fairy-tale, trickle down economic, winner and loser mentality that rarely produces a winner from poverty; the worker doesn't get the breaks in life, but there isn't an expectation of him to be a self-made millionaire

Ed: all this said with tongue in cheek, Monty Python, good natured, ribbing ;)
badminton · 61-69, MVIP
@MrBlobby
winner and loser mentality that rarely produces a winner from poverty;

Most working-class people in the U.S. do not see themselves as an oppressed proletariat. Think see themselves as potential future millionaires, just waiting for their ship to come in. So they don't invest in the idea of improving the standard of living for the working-class. That's why they are often conservative politically. They feel someday they will join the wealthy class. Goodbye peasants!
MrBlobby · 31-35, M
@badminton Hmm optimistic, but statistically improbable! Sure there are bound to be a few that claw their way up from the bottom, just unlikely to be them; that's why the stories are in the news/media! If it was common it wouldn't get much attention (JD Vance?) Most won't get much further than a little better than paycheck to paycheck. At least a realistic goal of living-comfortably, but having a net below sounds realistic

I think the same people would view investing their life savings all at once into lottery tickets as foolish - but same logic. I guess on their death beds they might realise the big lie. Then again a lot of brits worship the royals like gods walking among mortals! 🤣
iamBen · M
I've enjoyed every trip there. I've been all over the UK over the years. The people are nice and generous. The countryside is often beautiful. They are struggling right now and I wish the British people well and hope their challenges resolve soon.
Sapio · 51-55, M
My original hometown is London but I haven't been back since I left in 1982.
Matt85 · 36-40, M
and you didnt even come round to see how i was
blocked 🚫
TheWildEcho · 56-60, M
Beautiful if you avoid the big cities
@TheWildEcho Each of those would make beautiful post cards for tourists. 🙂
TheWildEcho · 56-60, M
@NoGamesTolerated top and bottom one I took myself, downloaded the others
@TheWildEcho oh I see. Well the top and bottom ones were just as pretty as the others. 🙂
Steve42 · 56-60, M
They have baked beans for breakfast and drive on the wrong side of the road.
Rob04 · 18-21, M
@Steve42 Yes beans with toast maybe once a week. Sausage, bacon and eggs all inclusive. I tried cooked beans once at a friend's house. We do drive on the "Wrong" side I guess.
MrBlobby · 31-35, M
The UK is a great place and usually welcoming (or it should be) - I'd dare to say London is the place tourists visit most; to get a feel for the national spirit I would say visit different various towns and cities. The North is different than the south. Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are vastly different in feel, culture history and feel. Canterbury, Oxford, Cambridge, Brighton, Manchester, Leeds, Liverpool, York, Basildon (if you can spot the duffer then you know the UK 😅)

Put it this way, if you meet a Scouser in your country and start talking about Buckingham Palace, Tower Bridge and Big Ben etc, you'll probably get the same reaction as if I start talking about the Golden Gate Bridge, Alcatraz Prison and Hollywood to a New Yorker 😏
MrBlobby · 31-35, M
@Aami1 good for you - hope he doesn't charge you extra for a ice-cream 😅
Aami1 · 26-30, F
@MrBlobby I have to repay him in other ways ;) Luckily I like it, though ;)
MrBlobby · 31-35, M
@Aami1 ...And the bestest GF award goes to... ;)
Rob04 · 18-21, M
Girl, I live here. 3 hours drive from London.

Where are you from and what comparisons you made with your own home town?
KingofBones1 · 46-50, M
It is okay it has its good points but I'm still happy that I am an American
Holden · 26-30, M
My thoughts? Eh, I feel sorry for people who live there or want to.
72andy · 51-55, M
Ah the Thames tourist trap
Beautiful
Thodsis · 51-55, M
Mustn't grumble.
It's far more welcoming to cannibals now that they installed the Great Rotisserie Sun-Powered People Cooker (back there, behind you).

Amazing that they get the food to pay for being cooked! lol
Strongtea · 22-25, M
What did you think of it?
Strongtea · 22-25, M
Ah cool! Did u just visit London?@Aami1
Aami1 · 26-30, F
@Strongtea I visited him in his home town for several days, and on the last day He took me to London
Strongtea · 22-25, M
Nice! That’s good that you got to see a couple of places. I’m from the north east of England and I got mugged once in London when I went for the day so I find it quite scary. @Aami1
HumanEarth · 56-60, F
I never been there. What its like from an outsiders point of view?
Guardian · 56-60, M
Its gone downhill since I was a kid!😵‍💫
HumanEarth · 56-60, F
Your legs must be massive to get the top of that hill
They're going to have to confront their fascism.
Monday40 · 51-55, F
I would love to go there.
Aami1 · 26-30, F
@Monday40 why don't you go then? :D
Monday40 · 51-55, F
@Aami1 funds 😄
Barefooter25 · 46-50, M
That's a lovely beautiful pic!!! 🇬🇧
MasterLee · 56-60, M
It used to be a nice place to visit
TAReturns · M
Really wishing I was there 😁👍
Loved my visits there.
496sbc · 36-40, M
Nice yeah
tenente · 100+, M
calm down Britain 🤔 you're not so Great 🙄
🤣💀🩵@tenente

 
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