warspite1
Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008 From: England Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: axisandallies quote:
ORIGINAL: E quote:
ORIGINAL: wodin There was a fantastic BBC documentry about the British Empire and it was very insightfull...and I learnt alot Infact....there are two sides to everything you know....nothing is black and white... I always try to learn all sides of history and try and take a neutral perspective with out being blinded by propaganda... You can only learn with an open mind I learned everything I needed to know about the British and British Society from three documentaries. Each being crucial to understanding the British... 1. For military information, strategy and history - Dad's Army. 2. For the inner workings of the UK government - Yes Minister/Yes Prime Minister. 3. For the thought processes used by the everyday people - Monty Python. You forgot two......for us Americans.....Austin Powers and Sweeny Todd......this is a jest and not to be taken seriously Warspite1 British History Dad'd Army is a very good place to start if you want to learn all about the history of one of the Home Guard's elite squads - the crack Walmington-on-sea platoon. If you want to learn about earlier episodes of British history I suggest there is probably no more accurate or insightful series than that of Blackadder. You can learn all about Elizabeth I "I may have the body of a weak and feeble woman, but I have the heart and stomach of a concrete elephant". Next comes the Regency period which centres around the future George IV Blackadder: Sir Talbot represented the constituency of Dunny-on-the-Wold, and, by an extraordinary stroke of luck, it is a rotten borough. George: Really! Is it! Well, lucky-lucky us. Yippee. Lucky, lucky, lucky, lucky. Lucky, lucky. Lucky. Luck-a-doodle-dandy-dingle. Luck luck. Luck. Cluck, cluck, cluck. Cluck, cluck, cluck, cluck. Blackadder: You don't know what a rotten borough is, do you, sir? George: No. Finally there is a series devoted to World War I "Crikey, sir. I'm looking forward to today. Up diddly up, down diddly down, whoops, poop, twiddly dee - decent scrap with the fiendish Red Baron - bit of a jolly old crash landing behind enemy lines - capture, torture, escape, and then back home in time for tea and medals". Priceless.....and totally off topic - sorry
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England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805
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