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Originally posted by Howie47
They where also called "blue bloods"
As I originally said, in my first sentence. "When Darwin released his theory; the British seized upon it"
The rest of your post is just as mentally disorganized,
lacking of knowledge
and full of an attitude of protest against any suggestion that your point of view could be wrong;
that I can't see any (reason) to respond to it.
Originally posted by Na boo the Enigma
reply to post by Howie
Howie,
Any pressure on the British to withdraw from the colonies came from the occupied people themselves and not from any external pressure. Uprisings were quashed by military force motivated by a religious ruling class. The peasantry/working classes of Britain have never been particularly religious, religious fervor during Victorian times was the preserve of the Middle and Upper-Middle classes who were responsible for the day-to-day administration of the empire.
One of the worst examples of British brutality in empire was the manner in which the Indian Rebellion of 1857 was suppressed. The rebellion started as a mutiny by Muslim soldiers due to working conditions and religious insensitivity on the part of the British Army and resulted in a full-scale Muslim uprising. During the rebellion and the British retaliation religious justification was given for some extraordinarily brutal acts undertaken as part of a "no prisoners" policy by the British Establishment. Commanders ordering these acts often thought of themselves and righteous Christians dealing with sub-human non-believers.
This was in 1857, just two years before The Origin of Species was published and is indicative of a pattern of religious motivation in the continued running and expansion of the empire which continued right through to the Boer War. Even as the British Empire waned during The Great War, religious propaganda was used to spur on the honest British Tommy and justify an increasingly futile, murderous campaign to the British public.