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British anchor vs. Shashi Tharoor
Brut India
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9/7/2023
After a UK anchor asked India to return foreign aid, a 2015 video of Shashi Tharoor went viral where he made the sun set on the British Empire.
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00:00
We should not be giving money to countries with a space program.
00:03
No wonder that the sun never set on the British Empire,
00:07
because even God couldn't trust the English in the dark.
00:30
India's share of the world economy when Britain arrived on its shores was 23%.
00:43
By the time the British left, it was down to below 4%.
00:46
Why?
00:47
Simply because India had been governed for the benefit of Britain.
00:51
Britain's rise for 200 years was financed by its depredations in India.
00:55
In fact, Britain's industrial revolution was actually premised upon the de-industrialization
01:01
of India.
01:02
The handloom weavers, for example, famed across the world, whose products were exported around
01:06
the world.
01:07
Britain came right in.
01:08
There were actually these weavers making fine muslin, light as woven air, it was said.
01:14
And Britain came right in, smashed their thumbs, broke their looms, imposed tariffs and duties
01:19
on their cloth and products, and started, of course, taking the raw materials from India
01:24
and shipping back manufactured cloth, flooding the world's markets with what became the
01:29
products of the dark and satanic mills of Victorian England.
01:33
That meant that the weavers in India became beggars, and India went from being a world-famous
01:39
exporter of finished cloth into an importer, went from having 27% of world trade to less
01:45
than 2%.
01:47
Meanwhile, colonialists like Robert Clive bought their rotten burrows in England on
01:52
the proceeds of their loot in India, while taking the Hindi word loot into their dictionaries
01:57
as well as their habits.
01:59
And the British had the gall to call him Clive of India, as if he belonged to the country,
02:11
when all he really did was to ensure that much of the country belonged to him.
02:17
By the end of the 19th century, the fact is that India was already Britain's biggest
02:22
cash cow, the world's biggest purchaser of British goods and exports, and the source
02:28
of highly paid employment for British civil servants.
02:31
We literally paid for our own oppression.
02:34
Between 15 and 29 million Indians died of starvation in British-induced famines.
02:39
The most famous example, of course, was the Great Bengal Famine during the Second World
02:43
War, when four million people died because Winston Churchill, deliberately as a matter
02:48
of written, minuted policy, proceeded to divert essential supplies from civilians in Bengal
02:54
to sturdy Tommies and Europeans as reserve stockpiles.
02:59
He said that the starvation of any way underfed Bengalis mattered much less than that of sturdy
03:05
Greeks.
03:06
This is Churchill's actual quote.
03:08
And when conscious, stricken British officials wrote to him, pointing out that people were
03:12
dying because of this decision, he peevishly wrote in the margins of the file, why hasn't
03:17
Gandhi died yet?
03:19
So all notions that the British were trying to do their colonial enterprise out of enlightened
03:25
despotism to try and bring the benefits of colonialism and civilization to the benighted
03:30
heathen.
03:31
I'm sorry.
03:32
Churchill's conduct in 43, simply one example of many that gave a lie to this myth.
03:37
As others have said on the proposition, violence and racism were the reality of the colonial
03:43
experience.
03:44
And no wonder that the sun never set on the British Empire, because even God couldn't
03:49
trust the English in the dark.
03:51
Well, let me quantify World War I for you.
03:57
One-sixth of all the British forces that fought in the war were Indian.
04:01
Fifty-four thousand Indians actually lost their lives in that war.
04:06
Sixty-five thousand were wounded.
04:08
Another four thousand remained missing or in prison.
04:11
Indian taxpayers had to cough up a hundred million pounds in that time's money.
04:17
India supplied 70 million rounds of ammunition, 600,000 rifles and machine guns, 42 million
04:24
garments were stitched and sent out of India, and 1.3 million Indian personnel served in
04:31
this war.
04:32
Not just that, India had to supply 173,000 animals, 370 million tons of supplies, and
04:40
in the end, the total value of everything that was taken out of India, India and India
04:45
by the way suffering from recession at that time and poverty and hunger, was in today's
04:51
money eight billion pounds.
04:54
You want quantification?
04:55
It's available.
04:57
Second World War, it was even worse, two and a half million Indians in uniform.
05:00
I won't belabor the point, but of Britain's total war debt of three billion pounds in
05:06
1945 money, 1.25 billion was owed to India and never actually paid.
05:13
Railways and roads were really built to serve British interests and not those of the local
05:17
people, but I might add that many countries have built railways and roads without having
05:21
had to be colonized in order to do so.
05:24
They were designed to carry raw materials from the hinterland into the ports to be shipped
05:34
to Britain, and the fact is that the Indian or Jamaican or other colonial public, their
05:40
needs were incidental.
05:41
Transportation, there was no attempt made to match supply to demand for mass transport,
05:47
none whatsoever.
05:48
Instead, in fact, the Indian railways were built with massive incentives offered by Britain
05:54
to British investors, guaranteed out of Indian taxes paid by Indians.
06:00
With the result that you actually had one mile of Indian railway costing twice what
06:05
it costs to build the same mile in Canada or Australia because there was so much money
06:10
being paid in extravagant returns.
06:12
Britain made all the profits, controlled the technology, supplied all the equipment, and
06:16
absolutely all these benefits came as private enterprise, British private enterprise, at
06:22
public risk, Indian public risk.
06:25
That was the railways as an accomplishment.
06:28
There was reference to democracy and rule of law.
06:30
Let me say with the greatest possible respect, it's a bit rich to oppress, enslave, kill,
06:37
torture, maim people for 200 years and then celebrate the fact that they're democratic
06:41
at the end of it.
06:42
We were denied democracy, so we had to snatch it, seize it from you.
06:47
With the greatest reluctance, it was conceded in India's case after 150 years of British
06:51
rule and that too with limited franchise.
06:53
The British aid to India is about 0.4% of India's GDP.
06:58
The government of India actually spends more on fertilizer subsidies, which might be an
07:03
appropriate metaphor for that argument.
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