miércoles, 30 de noviembre de 2011

2011/worlds-best-commercials + videos varios

http://www.adweek.com/cannes-lions-2011/worlds-best-commercials-2010-11-132944

videos varios


CAPITALISM

McFuneral

Monopoly Man Goes Bankrupt

Wonka's Fizzy Lifting Drinks

How It Should Have Ended: How Superman Should Have Ended

Milton Friedman - Socialism vs. Capitalism
Bill Gates: How to Fix Capitalism
CAPITALISM: A LOVE STORY - TRAILER
Children's Guide to Growing Up: Social Class System
Children's Guide to Growing Up: Politics
Children's Guide To Religion

SAFE SEX

USE A CONDOM !!!

Condomned: Part 2

Condomned: Part 3

tV ADS

Ozzy Osbourne- World of Warcraft Commercial TV Ad
Emmy 2010 Best Commercial Nominees
Honda Ad
BANNED Adam and Eve, the gay version
Banned Commercials - Nike - Soccer vs ninjas
Very Funny Pepsi Commercial
McDonalds FUNNY AD
Funny Egyptian Coke Ad
Coca Cola Funny Girls commercial
Subliminal Coca Cola message

McDonald's Sausage McMuffin and Egg McMuffin (2) 1984 TV Ads

1988 McDonald's Commercials -- Big Mac

Official Apple iPad TV Commercial

iPhone Commercials

Abercrombie & Fitch Best Short Video

 

HUMAN RIGHTS

Women's Rights in the 1920's

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gP7s6CNHTOs

History of Women's Rights

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0W8AXaHp1A&NR=1

Women's rights in Islam

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=diyvoatyTts

PEACE

John Lennon's 70th birthday in NYC--Pete Seeger, Mark Hudson, Tom Paxton, Neil Innes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TByiPSmBFOI&feature=related

John Lennon's 70th birthday concert begins with a bagpiper playing "Give Peace a Chance"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PsIhAbNJD48&feature=related

Severn Suzuki...(ESPAÑOL) La Niña que SILENCIO al mundo por 6:32 MINUTOS

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLV6jaZFLro

Ghandi, El hombre Mas Grande Del Siglo XX

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tV59Ap9KRHw&feature=related

Martin Luther King, Jr.'s last speech

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0FiCxZKuv8

Nelson Mandela Released 1990

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5s8xkjG8bx4

Interview about the 2009 Nobel Peace Prize

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooqkvd8JPfU

Barack Obama Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u26Oljj225o&feature=related

Homer Simpson tries to vote for Obama

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1aBaX9GPSaQ&feature=related

Best of Obama Girl: Super Obama Girl!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIiMa2Fe-ZQ&feature=fvwrel

President Bill Clinton - Farewell Address

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nycvN6xk_tY

President Ronald Reagan - Farewell Address

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qUGR5ushe0E&feature=related

President Jimmy Carter - "Crisis of Confidence" Speech

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IlRVy7oZ58

Narcotráfico Luis carlos Galán

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iV4pB4tpZWU

Pablo Escobar en política

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4kbCn3haX0

Zamba Del CHE Víctor Jara


 

 

 

 

 

 

Personalidades

El discurso que hizo que mataran a JFK

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ru71aSygXOk&feature=related

Discurso Che Guevara "La esperanza de un mundo mejor"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1S7AEnIvWU&feature=related

Discurso Che guevara en la onu.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E0U01Wt-pkA&feature=related

Palabras de Salvador Allende

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W9fU6ECZo3M&feature=related

pinochet

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qsBTTH0F1_g

EuroNews - Entrevista - Alvaro Uribe

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkrLcAklc30&feature=fvsr

We're At War, Charlie Brown

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFwgV3rgLPE

SANDINO VIVE!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZhy3EnBFUE

The Clash 'Washington Bullets' 1980 Sandinista

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1LhlVtbW_U

Victor Jara A Desalambrar

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VQJhk6e0I9g

Comandante Che Guevara - victor jara

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYs7bUPMPGk&feature=related

Carlos Castaño

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1ugvhDSegYU

 

 

 

HUMAN RIGHTS

 

Gay Rights Commercial

Banned Racist Thialand Commercial

Racist KFC advertisement?

Racist commercial

Shocking 1950's Commercial!

COMERCIAL COLGATE

Tide commercial

Tide Detergent Commercial - VINTAGE - 1950s

Funny AUDI commercial

New BMW Commercial with New Vision Concept Car

2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class Convertible - The premiere

Shell - Ferrari commercial

Lamborghini LP560-4 Commercial in HD


GREEN ADS

IBM Green Commercial - Elevator

MacBook Green Commercial

GE Green commercial 1

GE Commercial - Today is a New Day (2009)

Awesome GE comercial

Funny Greenpeace Commercial

Greenpeace Human Life Commercial

Genius ideas by Greenpeace

Greenpeace Condom Animation










martes, 30 de agosto de 2011

The Clash of the Middle Classes, Moisés Naím

The Huffington Post
by Moisés Naím
August 05, 2011
The main cause of coming conflicts will not be clashes between civilizations, but the anger generated by the unfulfilled expectations of a middle class, which is declining in rich countries and booming in poor countries.
"The clash of civilizations," the theory popularized by Samuel Huntington in the early 1990s, maintains that once the ideological confrontation between communism and capitalism is over, international conflicts will arise between countries with different cultural and religious identities. "The clash of civilizations" will dominate global politics. "The fault lines dividing civilizations will define the frontlines of the future," he wrote in 1993. For many, the attacks by al Qaeda and the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq confirm this view. As we now know, however, what has happened is that conflicts have been more within civilizations than between them. Pious Islamic terrorists have killed far more innocent Muslims than anyone else. And the battles between Shiites and Sunnis continue to cause the majority of Muslim casualties.
In my opinion, a far more important source of friction than clashes between cultures or religions will be the changes in living standards of the middle classes in both rich and poor countries. In the former the middle class is shrinking, while in the latter it is swelling. These changes lead to thwarted and unfulfilled expectations -- both feed social and political instability.
Poor countries experiencing rapid economic growth now have the largest middle class in history. This is true for Brazil and Botswana, China and Chile, India and Indonesia, and many other nations. According to the World Bank, between 2006 and today, 28 formerly "low-income countries" joined the ranks of what it calls "middle-income" ones. Their new middle classes may not be as prosperous as their counterparts in developed countries, but their members now enjoy an unprecedented standard of living.
Meanwhile, in countries like Spain, France, or the United States the status of the middle class is going from bad to worse. In more than 1.3 million Spanish households, all the members of working age are unemployed. Only 8 percent of French believe that their children will have a better life than them. In 2007, 43 percent of Americans claimed that their salaries were only enough to make ends meet. Today, 61 percent admit this.
On the other hand, the frustrations due to the unsatisfied aspirations of the middle class in China and Brazil are as politically explosive as the anger over the new economic insecurity of the middle class in Italy, Spain, or Greece.
Governments in the poorer countries are under enormous pressure to meet the booming demands of the new middle class while those of the richer nations are struggling to contain the fall in living standards of the existing bourgeoisie.
Inevitably, some politicians in developed countries are blaming the economic decline on the rise of other nations. The assertion that job losses or stagnant wages in the United States or Europe are due to the expansion of China, India, or Brazil are common. These claims will continue and even intensify as the crises deepen even if the best available research concludes that these are unfounded accusations. The data show that lower wages or job losses in developed countries are not due to the rapid growth of emerging economies, but mostly to technological change, anemic productivity, or tax policy and other domestic factors.
On the other hand, in poor countries, the new middle class which has increased its consumption of food, clothing, medicine, and housing, now demands better schools, cleaner water, better hospitals, more convenient transportation and all kinds of public services. Chile, for example, is one of the most economically successful and politically stable countries in the world and its middle class has been growing consistently. Yet, street protests demanding improvements in public education are regular occurrences. Chileans do not want more schools, they want better schools. And for all governments it is far easier to build a school than to improve the quality of teaching.
In China, there are thousands of demonstrations every year to demand more or better public services. In Tunisia, recent riots expressed the impatience of the people who overthrew the regime of Ben Ali, despite the fact that the country boasted the best economic performance in North Africa. No government can adequately meet the new demands of a booming middle class at the same speed at which they occur. And no government can survive the fury of a once prosperous middle class that sees its situation worsening daily.
The political instability caused by these frustrations is already visible in many countries. Its international implications are not yet so obvious. But they will be.

lunes, 15 de agosto de 2011

The history of stuff

parte 1:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LgZY78uwvxk

parte 2:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dHIO0in4vtg

parte 3:   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TgAU6ZdK4hU

Felipe Calderón’s Two Faces Denise Dresser

Felipe Calderón’s Two Faces


MEXICO CITY – Mexican President Felipe Calderón has finally gotten what he wanted: the resignation of United States Ambassador Carlos Pascual. Calderón shot the messenger for delivering bad news through confidential cables released by WikiLeaks. Pascual’s harsh assessments of the “war on drugs” that Calderón unleashed four years ago infuriated the president.
The revelations also annoyed the Mexican army, for they pointed out that the military frequently doesn’t act on intelligence provided by the US, and displays a strong aversion to risk. Moreover, Pascual’s candid assessments described a dysfunctional situation in which Mexican security agencies fight each other more than they fight organized crime.
Essentially, Pascual was forced to leave for describing a reality that Calderón does not want to face, and that his government would prefer to ignore. In other words, he lost his job for doing it properly.
But the stubborn truth revealed by the US diplomat emerges every day, despite the impact of drug kingpins who are arrested, the number of weapons discovered, or the amount of cocaine seized. Mexico is not winning the “war” against drug trafficking and organized crime: Pascual’s forced resignation cannot hide the 34,000 dead, the growing number of Mexicans addicted to drugs, the surge in kidnappings and executions, and widespread impunity.
The official narrative is that violence is an inevitable consequence of taking on the drug cartels. But other countries have managed to prevent drug gangs from unleashing their fury on innocent civilians. And, while Mexicans are told that the violence is only between rival gangs, executions transcend the realm of drug trafficking. Citizens are exhorted by their government to denounce criminals, though 98.5% of criminal investigations are never solved. A recent poll showed that 59% of Mexicans believe that the government is losing the war that it declared, while only 23% support the government’s current course.
As Sun Tzu wrote in The Art of War, all wars entail deception. Mexico has become its latest victim. The Mexican government has not been sufficiently honest about the scale of the challenges that it faces, the measures that it has taken, and the level of US support, involvement, and collaboration that it has sought.
Therein lie the contradictions, evasiveness, and lack of transparency regarding the terms on which Calderón’s war is being conducted. Everyone on his team demands that the US devote more attention and resources to Calderón’s effort, but publicly denies doing so when evidence of heightened US presence in Mexico becomes public.
In recent weeks, the Calderón administration has twisted itself into knots trying to explain how and why it authorized US drone planes to fly over Mexican territory for intelligence-gathering purposes. And yet, while Calderón insists that the US assume its bilateral responsibilities, he also demands the US Ambassador’s head for revealing his own tactical and strategic mistakes in the war he insists on prosecuting.
Calderón’s contradictory stance is rooted in the reflexive habits of a Mexican political class trained to gain points by kicking the US. Calderón, too, has sought refuge behind the folds of the Mexican flag and in diatribes about sovereignty under siege.
In other words, Calderón accuses the US of intervention, even as he assiduously seeks it. He criticizes the US for meddling, after his government promoted that meddling. Pascual is accused of behaving like a “Proconsul,” after Mexican authorities – due to incompetence or irresponsibility – assigned him that role. In a recent interview, Calderón lambasted Pascual for his “ignorance,” after the ambassador sent incontrovertible cables describing the real situation on the ground. They’re painful to read, but difficult to refute.
Rather than shooting the messenger, Calderón should reflect on the message itself, and rethink not only the war but the terms on which he has decided to wage it. The cables should lead Calderón to rectify a strategy that so far has increased the level of violence without decreasing drug trafficking.
The “success” of the war needs to be measured by the reduction in its toll of violence. Moreover, Pascual’s conclusions should force Calderón to redefine Mexico’s relationship with the US in a more honest fashion. Because if all of this does not happen, Calderón’s ability to force out the US ambassador, and any short-term political gain he obtained in doing so, will be irrelevant.
Indeed, after the “ugly American” has packed his bags, Ciudad Juárez will still be the most dangerous city in the world. The homicide rate in the country will continue to soar, and public security agencies will remain incapable of preventing, detecting, or punishing the vast majority of violent events that have placed the country on edge. The Mexican government will continue to request US aid in a surreptitious fashion, and deny doing so when it becomes public.
The message is clear. If we Mexicans don’t end this war – so ill-conceived, so poorly executed, and so badly explained – it will end us. One does not have to read Carlos Pascual’s leaked cables to understand that.
Denise Dresser is Professor of Political Science, Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2011.
www.project-syndicate.org


http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/dresser8/English

sábado, 23 de julio de 2011

From USSR to Russia

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sponsored/russianow/opinion/6932356/From-the-Soviet-Union-to-Russia-today-the-long-road-to-democracy.html


From the Soviet Union to Russia today - the long road to democracy

This online supplement is produced and published by Rossiyskaya Gazeta (Russia), which takes sole responsibility for the content.

December 14 marked the 20th anniversary of the premature death of one of the worthiest men of our time – academician Andrei Sakharov. In two decades the world has changed beyond recognition, but Russia, whose fate was of such heartfelt concern to Andrei Dmitrievich, has not taken the road that he would have liked.
Democratic reforms have not created a stable civil society, and the "liberation of initiative" that led to the collapse of the Soviet-era economic system has not so far given rise to a civilised market economy.
Today, democratic norms are disregarded even more cynically than in the USSR, while the economy that existed here in the late Eighties seems like a model of technical perfection. Why haven’t the hopes of those who believed in "socialism with a human face" been realised? Is it worth hoping that Russia will come to better future?
In my view, the hopes of 1989 were, alas, illusory. It was assumed that we could build a democratic system in a society that had long since forgotten the traditions of private property, and that was mired in a deepening economic crisis. The democracy of that time had too many features of populism not to turn into some form of authoritarianism.
Among the democrats, there were people who stood up for the democratic idea, but did not use that idea in their own interests. Small wonder that they "democratically" got rid of their legally elected parliament in 1993, "democratically" ensured the victory of their candidate in the 1996 presidential elections and, to a large degree, "democratically" selected a suitable successor for him in 1999.
Genuine democracies are formed over decades. Accidental democracies rarely prove viable. It is a paradox, but a movement toward democracy either begins with the elite, or is prepared by the actions of the elite. In both cases, they turn out to be stable when society proceeds confidently along the path of economic progress, and there arises a large class of people with a vital interest in sensible and predictable rules of the game, rules created by the responsible choices of a significant number of citizens rather than by the whims of certain leaders.
A class of people to whom the rest of society can turn for support. This means the following: democracy has a firm foundation only in a society which has developed with confidence over a certain period of time and whose elite is not parasitical. In other words, democracy takes shape with the greatest probability in a successfully modernising society.
Modernisation is the most important instrument of democratisation. It is precisely the absence of modernisation that determined the failure of the late-Soviet democratic project. In recent decades, many successful democracies have grown up in places where, for the sake of economic success, semi-authoritarian regimes allowed, or even initiated, modernising transformations.
These modernisations did not immediately bring about democracy, but then a populist democracy has never brought about modernisation. As many Western observers remark, a non-liberal democracy is worse than authoritarian liberalism. Strictly speaking, the latter was the main political form for most of the successful modernisations in Asia and Latin America at the end of the 20th century.
In Russia, proponents of democratic changes must of necessity be adherents of modernisation. In the last 20 years, Russia has continued to lag behind the West, and not less but more. That is why a new wave of populism – if one were to arise because of disappointment in the actions of the powers that be – would lead to a still more unenlightened regime than the one established in 2000. An authoritarian regime willing to modernise is signing its own death warrant, sacrificing – albeit unconsciously – its own interests to the future prosperity of the nation.
Now, too, all those who wish Russia a democratic and successful future must become engineers of modernisation. True, opinion polls show that, at this point, only a small percentage of the population is ready take slogans of modernisation seriously.
But the modernisations of South Korea in the Sixties and of Brazil in the Seventies did not begin with plebiscites; they ended with them – when the citizens realised that they no longer needed those regimes that had been forced to begin modernisation. This will happen in Russia, too, one day. But for now, we mustn’t let the elite wear everyone out with talk of the modernisation agenda, the only agenda that can turn Russia into a stable liberal democracy.
Of course, it won’t happen tomorrow. Twenty years have flown by, and today we can only regret that Andrei Sakharov’s dreams are still dreams. But we must try to make the next 20 years more productive.
Vladislav Inozemtsev is director of the Centre for Studies of Post-industrial Societies and editor-in-chief of Svobodnaya mysl.

El Imperio Británico

http://www.friesian.com/british.htm


The Sun Never Set on the British Empire,
"Dominion over palm and pine"

The sun never set on the British Empire
because the sun sets in the West
and the British Empire was in the East.
Anonymous Student

Far-called, our navies melt away;
    On dune and headland sinks the fire:
Lo, all our pomp of yesterday
    Is one with Nineveh and Tyre!
Judge of the Nations, spare us yet,
Lest we forget -- lest we forget!

Rudyard Kipling, "Recessional," 1897




In the animated GIF file above, not all British possessions of 1937 are represented, only select ones for each of the 24 time zones of the Earth. (All British possessions are listed below.) The time zones themselves may be said to be artifacts of the British Empire, since they are based on the Meridian of Greenwich -- at the original Royal Observatory, 1675-1953, in London (as seen in the image), where the building to the right contains the meridian transit instrument that defines the line of zero longitude. Since 1884 this has been the internationally accepted prime meridian for the calculation of longitude. The animation may also be used to inspect the operation of theInternational Dateline, which divides the -12h/+12h time zone. (Animation may be stopped either with the "stop" key or the ESC key.) It is interesting to note that although several places in the Pacific might fall into the -12h time zone, the Dateline itself and the boundaries of the -11h zone are today drawn in such a way that no jurisdiction uses the -12h zone (Tonga, formerly British, uses +12h; Midway Island & the Aleutians use -11h). Some time zone boundaries have been changed since 1937. Gambia no longer seems to be in the -1h time zone. Also, there have been several time zones that are at a half hour rather than a whole hour interval from Greenwich, including today India (+5h30m), Burma (+6h30m), and central Australia (+9h30m). My source for the 1937 zones (in the Atlas of the British Empire, edited by Christopher Bayly, Facts on File, 1989, p.246) does not clearly indicate these variations, so no attempt is made to represent them.
The "British Empire" was not a de jure entity (like the German EmpireAustrian EmpireRussian Empire, or Japanese Empire), since Britain itself was a kingdom (the "United Kingdom" of Great Britain and Ireland, or Northern Ireland in 1937). One British possession, however, was an empire, namely IndiaQueen Victoria became "Empress of India" in 1876. The formal British adoption of India as an Empire, however, was seen at the time as a response to Bismark's creation of the German Empire (1871).
The "British Empire" usually means, however, not something in relation to the Empire of India, but the whole of British colonial possessions spread around the world. As an "Empire" this does not look much like RomeChina, or Russia, which were geographically continguous, with simple, continuous borders. Instead, the "British Empire" was functionally a bit more like the later Holy Roman Empire, whose fragmentation and particularism -- a "jury rig" in British nautical terms -- gravely compromised the power of the whole. The power of Britain at its height was almost entirely a function of that of Great Britain itself, as the power of the later Holy Rome Emperors was almost entirely a function of that of the Hapsburgs. Most would not consider this a flattering characterization of Britain's achievement, since the Holy Roman Empire was famously, in Voltaire's words, neither Holy, nor Roman, nor an Empire. Yet when Emperor Leopold I had to make a deal with the Margrave of Brandenburg just to get him to fulfill his feudal duty to support the Emperor in the War of the Spanish Succession (in 1701), this does not sound too different from the difficulties that Britain faced in World War I and World War II to obtain the full participation of the Dominions in those wars. It was not a foregone conclusion, especially for South Africa, that they would participate at all. By 1939, Australia and New Zealand had long been expressing reservations about involvement in (another) European war, and this line of thinking was only cut short when it became clear that a direct threat from Japan was a reflex of the European situation. When Britain was then unable to stop the Japanese, Australia and New Zealand formed ties with the United States that soon rivaled in sentiment (at least) those for Britain.
The growing and troublesome autonomy of the Dominions was a function of their geographical detachment and distance from the Mother Country. The growth of the United States, for instance, during the same period, did not produce the same problems, since even distant new foundations, like California, remained politically and Constitutionally integrated with the whole, adding an unambiguous increment of wealth and power to the nation. But Britain barely considered constitutional intregration of colonies into Great Britain. Its initial instinct, to hold colonies in thrall, led to the American Revolution and the alienation of its first and most promising colonies. Its later approach, with gradual grants of autonomy, kept the Dominions happier and willingly faithful longer, but ultimately had the same practical effect, as, by the end of World War II, they were all functioning as fully independent states. The dynamic of this fragemenation I have examined elsewhere.
While India was the "Jewel in the Crown" of the Empire, its role in British power was also unlike the possessions of more conventional Empires. It was not geographically, historically, culturally, racially, or religiously contiguous with Great Britain. It was the seat of an entirely different and ancient Civilization, with a vastly larger population than all the rest of British domains put together, and the British were always determined to maintain a distance and a separation from it. The British Empire could therefore have never gone the way of the Roman Empire, where eventually all inhabitants came to enjoy a common citizenship and a common participation in the political, military, cultural, and religious life of the whole. In time, Rome even underwent a religious revolution in the triumph of Christianity, which had grown up out of the disparate, non-Latin elements of the Empire. The British liked to think of themselves as modern Romans, but a fate comparable to Rome, where India would have dominated Britain demographically and perhaps even religiously, was not something they were willing to contemplate.
Yet the dynamic of British ideology and practice was headed in that direction and could only be forestalled by arbitrary and incoherent barriers. Thus, 19th century Britain, when it realized that it was not just out to make money but had come to assume the moral responsibility of ruling millions of people in their own interest, always saw itself on a civilizing mission and soon began in earnest to educate and assimilate Indians (and later, Africans, Chinese, etc.) in all the terms of modern life -- science, liberty, free enterprise, democracy, etc. Christianity (ironically, in light of its Roman origin) was also thrown in there, but official suport for conversions was toned down after the Mutiny (1857-1858). It was not many decades, however, before a Western educated and alarmingly Anglicized Indian elite came into being. By all the ordinary dynamics of Empire (or at least Roman Empire), an educated Indian could be expected to circulate freely among Englishmen, possess the same dignity and freedom as other Subjects of Queen Victoria, and reasonably be expected to participate in the Government of his own country, as many British had already said that modernized Indians could be expected to do. So if a barrier was to be maintained, how was that going to work? Unfortunately, the spirit of the age contributed the impediment:  Racism. If the non-white races were inherently inferior, physically, morally, or intellectually, to whites, then an Englishman was not simply interchangeable with a modern, educated Indian (or African, etc.).
The ugly principle of race spelled the doom of the British Empire, for the British ultimately knew better; and there was the incoherent circumstance that Indian Subjects in Britain could actually be elected to Parliament, as was Dadabhai Naoroji (1825-1917) in 1892. If Indians were racially inferior and could not be trusted to rule their own country, how could one of them become a Member of Parliament? And then it was exceedingly awkward after World War II to maintain racial barriers and racist ideology when Britain had needed to rally support to defeat the ultimate exemplar and advocate of racist ideology,Nazi Germany. To the extent that Hitler actually admired the power (and racism) of the British Empire, he helped to destroy it.
Yet the racism was already doomed, as it was in the United States, by its inconsistency, as noted, with English principles of individual liberty, personal dignity, and natural rights. Someone like Mohandas Gandhi could feel this inconsistency in the most personal way, after he had enjoyed the easy equality and personal friendships of his life in London, while he was a law student in the Middle Temple, and then experienced the color barrier and personal insults, sometimes from the same individuals, after he had returned to India. Yet even Gandhi remained a supporter of British liberal principles, in the law and the Empire, for many years. Only slowly did he come to believe that the denial of independence to India rested only on the worse aspects of British ideology, but then he also realized that he could undermine British confidence and resolve precisely by appealing to the "better angels" of the British character. Prejudice and snubs against the "Wogs" and "N****rs" were not only rude, they were just not "fair play," something a gentleman should not tolerate. This proved to be a most effective strategy.
Despite the informal and even confused nature of the larger "British Empire," the term "imperial" worked its way into various official terminology about British possessions, e.g. the "Imperial General Staff" and the "Imperial War Museum." When India and Pakistan became independent in 1947, the Indian Empire ceased to exist and both countries became, for a time, Dominions -- the category for previous British self-governing territories, starting with Canada (1867) and later coming to include the Commonwealth of Australia, New Zealand, the Union of South Africa, and, for a time (1926-1934), little Newfoundland (which did not join Canada until 1949). As the "Empire" faded, the British Commonwealth took over, though that organization seemed to offer less and less as time went on in terms of real economic, military, or political advantages. Indeed, if the Holy Roman Empire was in some ways analogous to the British Empire, then the Commonwealth may be compared to the German Confederation of 1815, where there was no pretense that the sovereignty of its members was in the least compromised by the largely symbolic organization of the whole.
In 1909 the British Empire encompassed 20% of the land area of the Earth and 23% of its population. Although the first industrial power, by 1900 Britain had been surpassed by both United States and by Germany; but Britain was still the financial center of the world and the premier merchant carrier.
country
or area
19001909-1913
average/year
1914
Import/Export
millions of £
Import/Export
millions of £
Import/Export
millions of £
Investment
millions of £
Canada22/822.2/9.627.3/21.2500
United States139/20138.8/37.4--750
India
& Ceylon
27/3027.4/31.044.8/54.0400
Australia24/2223.8/23.656.3/39.8400
New
Zealand
10/611.6/5.9
West Indies2/41.8/4.72.9/3.4750
South
America
28/24287.3/216.5--
Europe221/118200
Medi-
terranean
27/21
Middle East19/121000
East Asia20/2622.7/12.2
Sub-Saharan
Africa
8/208.4/21.65.8/7.9
South Africa10.7/19.6
SourceBayly's Atlas,
pp.170-171
Lloyd's British
Empire
, p.423
Dalziel's Atlas,
pp.94-95
Lloyd's British
Empire
, p. 258
British trade in 1900 and between 1909 & 1913, and foreign investment in 1914, is shown in the following table. Somewhat different figures for trade are given in Cristopher Bayly's Atlas of the British Empire and T.O. Lloyd's The British Empire, 1558-1995 so both sets of figures from are given. Where there is disagreement, Lloyd tends to show slightly greater British exports than Bayly; but if we add Bayly's figures up for Lloyd's "world" category, we get 315/201, which is slightly smaller exports and much larger imports (against 287.3/216.5). Nigel Dalziel's The Penguin Historical Atlas of the British Empire only gives trade figures for British possessions, thus obscuring the predominance of foreigntrade in the British economy. We get a hint of Leninism in Dalziel's heading for the chapter, "the country became increasingly dependent on foreign markets to absorb rising industrial output" [p.94] -- as though rising output requiredexport. See below. The long term problem of the British economy would be lack of production, not lack of markets.
Indeed, Britain in this period is running a large trade deficit. This is usually taken as a sign of British decline. However, as David Hume noted as early as 1752, this really just means that enough money is exported to make up the difference. This would cause a deflation, unless enough money is created or brought in (for investment) to make up the difference. Since Britain did not experience any deflation after the 1890's, it is fairly clear that the money flows were correcting the balance. This kind of thing was later thought to be indicative of American decline when the United States began to run large trade deficits and in the 1980's became a net debtor from foreign investment in United States securities. However, the dire predictions at the time gave no hint of the relative strength of the United States economy, with good growth, low unemployment, and negligible inflation in the 1990's, with the American advantage over Europe and Japan increasing in the course of the decade. By 1999, the United States economy was all but carrying, Atlas-like, the stagnant or shrinking economies of the rest of the world -- though it might be said that the financial collapse of 2008 raises new questions about the foundation of the prosperity after 2000.
The British balance of trade and balance of payments situation in 1900 thus need not have been an indicator of any real ill health. British decline ultimately had to be from other causes, like an absolute decline in innovation and investment at home. Indeed, when Americans in the 1980's worried about the Japanese buying up the United States, the largest foreign investors were actually British -- which for the future meant American growth rather than British growth.
Another lesson to be read off the trade figures is that a relatively small fraction of British trade involved colonies that would later constitute the "Third World." Indeed, the only trade surpluses in the table are with India, Africa, the West Indies, and the Far East, which might give some heart to Marxist claims that British colonies, especially India, were the outlet for Capitalist "excess production." However, the trade surpluses are small, and overall British trade with India and the other colonies is hardly larger than with the much, much smaller populations of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. No serious argument can be made that the likes of Australia and New Zealand, with their own autonomous governments and protective tariffs, were being "exploited" by Great Britain. Instead the largest British export market is simply with the rest of Europe. Indeed, Europe, the United States, Australia, Canada, etc. are the places where more people would have enough money to buy British goods.
The figures for investment reveal the truth about the thesis first advanced by J.A. Hobson in 1902 (Imperialism), and later taken up by Lenin, that British conquest followed British investment. Hobson wished to explain the recent Boer War as the effect of £400 million of investment in the South African gold and diamond minds. Lenin saw British colonies as the necessary outlet for British capital, as well as for British capitalist "overproduction." Unfortunately, if this thesis were true, then the British should have been conquering the United States, not South Africa, since the largest single destination of British investment was the Americas, but Canada was the only large scale British possession. But just as Hobson and Lenin were the kind of people who would never know how to invest capital productively, Britain itself was losing its previous genius in that area also. In the new gasoline economies of automobiles and airplanes, let alone the electronic industries of light and radio, Britain was never in the lead and never caught up.
Today Queen Elizabeth II is still the official Head of State of scattered former possessions, such as the Solomon Islands; but the British connection for the remaining Dominions (Canada, Australia, & New Zealand) has been increasingly compromised and questioned -- with even the term "Dominion" itself passing out of usage. Canada has come up with its own flag (losing the Union Jack canton), its own national anthem ("Oh Canada!"), its own constitution, and its own perhaps fatal political division between francophone Quebec and all the other, sometimes bitterly resentful anglophone provinces (resentful in part for the cost of bilingualism -- mandated for federal business everywhere, while Quebec restricts or prohibits public uses of English -- New Brunswick is the only Province that is officially bilingual). Why Canada should then continue with a "Queen's Government," or even as a single country, is increasingly an open question. When I visited British Columbia as a child in 1959, there were Union Jacks as well as Canadian Ensigns on sale everywhere for tourists. On my last visits to Canada, in 1995 (at Niagara Falls) and 2004 (Toronto), there were no Union Jacks to be seen at all -- but in a park in Toronto I did notice a statue of Edward VII that had been relocated from Delhi! Meanwhile, Australia, always resentful of much of what happened in World War I (at Gallipoli) and in World War II (at Singapore and in Burma), contains a powerful movement to become a Republic. Recently, however (November 6, 1999), this was put to stand-up vote and lost; so Australia will remain a Dominion (or whatever) for a while yet. The British Empire, in one sense long gone, confirmed with the return of Hong Kong to Communist China in 1997, thus continues a slow fade everywhere. At the same time, British sovereignty in Britain itself becomes increasingly compromised by participation in the ill designed, ill considered, corrupt, and heavy handed Euro-government of the European Community, and by separatist movements in Scotland, Wales, and, as always, Ireland.
One artifact of British influence is the side of the road on which traffic moves. In Britain, you drive on the left, and cars have the steering wheel on the right. It was probably France and United States that established the larger international pattern of driving on the right, with the steering wheel on the left. In Europe, only Austria-Hungary, Portugal, and Sweden followed the British pattern The successors to Austria-Hungary -- Czechoslovakia, Austria, and Hungary -- switched to the right, ironically, only under the occupation or influence of Nazi Germany. Portugal and Sweden, however, switched on their own. Elsewhere, switches from left to right reflect the decline in British influence. This would appear to be the case with places like China, Argentina, and Ethiopia. In former British colonies, this is also understandable. However, three significant countries still drive on the left, without a heritage of British control:  Japan, Thailand, and Indonesia (I once had a student who, after visiting Japan, positively affirmed that they drove on the right!). Otherwise, major former British possessions, like a large part of Africa, India, Pakistan, Australia, New Zealand, etc. preserve the British preference. The Indian Ocean still looks like a British Mare Nostrum in terms of driving preference.

So what went wrong with the British Empire? I have examined in detail elsewhere what went wrong with Rome, and here I have already compared the British Empire to the Holy Roman Empire, which might imply a parallel analysis. But if the reality of the power of the later Holy Roman Emperors was actually the power of the Hapsburgs, and the power of the British Empire was Britain, what happened to that power? Would Britain inevitably be ground down by the greater resources, human and material, of the superpowers? Perhaps. But Britain hurried its decline with the dynamic of its own attitudes. For the key to British power was the Industrial Revolution. This began in Britain, and in the 19th century it made her the "workshop of the world." But that advantage did not last. The spirit of invention and entrepreneurship was often only honored in the breach. The actual individuals responsible for the Industrial Revolution were typically Non-Conformists, Scots, foreigners, and other marginal types. The stolid English squire, like "Uncle Matthew" Radlett in Nancy Mitford's books, had nothing to do with it. And what many prosperous English merchants really wanted was to make enough money to get out of "trade," buy land, and join the aristocracy -- an aristocracy to whom the "working class" meant, not the Marxian Proletariat, but all those in the grubby business of buying and selling. An English "gentleman" was, by legal definition, someone without a regular trade or profession. Neither capitalists nor proletarians need apply.
This was bad enough, and it had its effect. But the Empire itself exercised its own corrosive effect on British attitudes. The British Empire was said to have been won on the playing fields of Eton. But the education of a British Public (i.e. private) School like Eton was not an education in engineering or management or finance; it was an education in the qualities of command, leadership, and rule. The British were indeed properly educated to be Roman Proconsuls, and this was something often needed in the colonies; but it contributed nothing to the industrial or commercial strength of Britain, and its very prestige sapped, undermined, and degraded the material sources of British power. The Soviet mole in John Le Carre's classic Tinker, Taylor, Soldier, Spy [1974] was of a generation raised to rule, which then had nothing to rule. He really hated the Americans. But that tells the tale. The torch of innovation, invention, finance, etc. had been passed to the United States, and the British more or less forgot that they had simply dropped that torch, as it were, as they prepared to rule the Wogs for their own good. Thus, the true strength of Britain was in the principles fostered by the 19th Century Liberal Party. Yet now only the Tories and Labour remain, the former, despite Mrs. Thatcher, still remembering when the Sun Never Set and an Englishman could enjoy a good gin and tonic, brought by a native servant, on his veranda in Kenya, and the latter certain that those inventors, industrialists, and financiers were simply exploiting the workers. This became a folie à deux from which no good can ever be expected. In England today, it often seems like the most enterprising and hardest working people are immigrants from India.
But there is something else about the Empire. So much opprobrium towards "Imperialism" today arises either from the Leninist view of it, which ought to be (but isn't always) suspect, or from a simple moral principle that the British had no right to rule other peoples against their will. Against the Marxist-Leninist view that the exploitation of colonies was part of the larger capitalist exploitation of labor, there is the sobering truth, evident by the eighties, that many former British colonies, especially the African colonies, had been better off economically under the British than they were later. Colonies that nationalized industries and fixed prices saw the collapse of industries and the decline of their economies. Those that took the most up-to-date adivce, to keep out foreign capital, to adopt top-down Stalinist plans for development, and, in short, to go the Progessive route of socialism, typically ended up with dictators who practiced what was bitterly called "Swiss Bank Account Socialism." Eventually, anti-globalization protesters would be shocked to learn that what Third World countries wanted from the world economy was free trade -- their agricultural products were being kept out by the protectionism of the United States and the European Union.
But even if the British were better stewards of African economies, isn't it still true that they simply did not have the right to rule other people against their will? Well, I am presently, in a democracy, ruled by other people against my will. Indeed, since about 1988 I have not voted for anyone who ended up being elected, while those who were elected daily violate the Constitution, and criminally assault my rights, which they all swear an oath to uphold. There is a word for this:  the tyranny of the majority. So this raises the question:  Is it better to ruled by an irresponsible autocrat who nevertheless institutes justice and righteousness; or to be ruled by a corrupt political class that, with the justification of an occasional election, consists of liars, thieves, and looters? Of course the former is preferable, although the problem, sincePlato, has always been to identify an autocrat who has the wisdom to rule and not be corrupted by wealth and power. There is no solution to that problem.