Grumpybear
Well-Known Member
To be fair, though, you've just described British economic and foreign policy for about three hundred years. We didn't object to what Napoleon was doing, we just wanted to do it more.
Have to disagree. Our leaders and people were Ok with a navy (which could do good things like abolish slavery and protect our trade) but hated the idea of a standing army even when it was confined to internal security duties at the other end of the empire. Victorian politicians loathed the traders and missionaries who went and got themselves boiled alive, to say nothing of the likes of General Gordon, resulting in tabloid pressure to go and teach the fuzzy-wuzzies a sharp lesson. They knew well that empire made individuals rich but the nation as a whole poor. By 1900 we were nearly broke and by 1918 completely skint - so we decided to start giving up our empire and blow our overdraft on social improvements instead.