![]() ![]() From football to the monarchy to the armed forces: Why do us Brits always think we're best? Voices. From whichever angle you inspected the proceedings, it was a very good week for the English men’s football team. Not only did our heroes – to borrow the vocabulary of the tabloids – qualify for next year’s European tournament with an effortlessness not seen in decades, but Wayne Rooney’s 5. Sir Bobby Charlton for more than 4. Doubtless all manner of alarm bells will be sounded between now and next summer – there will be injuries, calamitous losses of form and savage personal traumas – but no one could say, at this admittedly early stage, that the omens weren’t promising. Significantly, the aftermath of the victory over Switzerland coincided with some unusually reflective remarks from Martin Glenn, incoming chief executive of the Football Association, a body not generally known for its love of introspective theorising. Addressing the age- old topic of why it is that the cornucopia of talent and pizzazz from which the English team is customarily assembled has a fatal habit of losing on the big occasion, Mr Glenn hesitated to make a scapegoat of foreign imports or Premier League amour propre and focused on less visible fault- lines. One of England’s major weaknesses as a footballing nation, he alleged, was what could only be described as a superiority complex. Exhibit A in the substantial body of evidence was the fact that its administrators called themselves the Football Association – the implication being that it was the sport’s first governing body, and “the ultimate expression of arrogance”, according to Mr Glenn. Exhibit B was perhaps less tangible but ultimately more injurious still, for it consisted of the widely held impression that England was trying to tell the world how to run the game. I think we are perceived as arrogant,” he maintained. I don’t think we necessarily are. But perceptions matter. We are not admired in terms of our international performance.”As a long- term student of the national game, I think Mr Glenn – who should be congratulated on going public with some deductions that most FA chieftains would prefer to keep to themselves – is on to something here, for the history of English football is pretty much built on the assumption of an innate superiority. ![]() Kids learn about the United States Armed Forces including the different branches of the military such as the army, air force, navy, marines, and coast guard. Why do. Voices; From football to the monarchy to the armed forces: Why do us Brits always think we're best? The Armed Forces Bowl is a college footballl bowl game played at the Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth Texas. This years game will feature a match up between a. The Armed Forces Bowl (officially the Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl for sponsorship purposes) is an annual postseason college football bowl game. May 29, 2014 Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl announces January 2, 2015 Kickoff. FORT WORTH, Texas – The Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl will be played in Fort. The Lockheed Martin Armed Forces Bowl is played each December at the Amon G. Carter Stadium in Fort Worth, TX. Since 2003 the Armed Forces Bowl has treated millions. And while the 1. 96. World Cup win over what was then West Germany is usually seen as the authentication of our claim to have taught the world how to play, the seeds of our condescension to many of the other footballing nations were sown a great deal earlier – in the FA’s refusal to take part in the first three World Cups, for example, or in the hubris that, in 1. US. Naturally, Mr Glenn, as a football administrator, confined his complaints to sport. But he could easily have gone further, extrapolated from the particular to the general and hinted that the superiority complex which apparently blights England’s prospects in soccer tournaments is a national characteristic, and one that colours attitudes to “Englishness” or “Britishness” in far more significant arenas than sport. The Prime Minister’s attitude towards Europe, from his pick- and- mix stance on pan- European legislation to his unilateralist position on the refugee crisis is, it might be argued, an example of this tendency, calculated to leave anyone he comes up against in a Brussels committee room with the suspicion that, to cannibalise George Orwell’s famous phrase, all animals are equal but British animals are somehow more equal than others. Wayne Rooney’s 5. Sir Bobby Charlton for more than 4. Getty)If we can accept that the British tend to have an unusually high opinion of themselves, then it is worth asking where the roots of this self- fixation grew and prospered. The standard view is that this is a late- imperial phenomenon and that the extraordinary growth in material and military power that occurred during the 1. R F Delderfield, that staple of the post- war library shelves, once wrote a best- selling novel entitled God is an Englishman (1. Victorian panoramas in which top- hatted industrialists are cheerfully plundering the proletariat while 1. However ironically conceived, Delderfield’s title conveys some of the assumptions on which a great deal of lower- level life was lived in the early 2. Great Britain at the apex of a pile of inferior nations and, on the other, involved patronising or sometimes merely despising them from one year to the next. When my grandfather, a veteran of the Boer War and the First World War, died in 1. He was British”. Imagine an inhabitant of the Dordogne pronouncing “Il était français” over a departed spouse! No, it takes someone steeped in centuries of British history, subconsciously alert to the implications of otherness, separation and severance to make this kind of imaginative leap. In much the same way, my father, a veteran of the Second World War, really did believe, or affect to believe, that three British soldiers armed with a Bren gun could see off several hundred Italians. It was simply a question of upbringing, and of millions of other upbringings, whose legacy is responsible for the Farage tendency in modern British politics – the idea, usually expressed in more cautious language, that foreigners need watching, Britain’s affairs are best left to the British and one of the UK’s most attractive features is the water that surrounds it. Naturally, this sense of superiority extends far beyond presumptions of military, political or even sporting heroics. It can be glimpsed in literature, where the “English novel”, it might be argued, possesses an abstract glory far exceeding its actual merits, and it can be seen in popular music – an almost entirely home- grown phenomenon, according to certain readings, which takes its cue from the Beatles and the other inhabitants of mid- Sixties Tin Pan Alley, with only a very small space for the black American musicians from which this tradition derived. There were, inevitably, echoes of it in last week’s coverage of the record- breaking reign notched up by Her Majesty the Queen. Even when it comes to heads of state, the unspoken assumption ran, we do things better. And no doubt there is something to be said for a system that gives us Elizabeth II rather than a dictator in a peaked hat or the oligarchs of Moscow. ![]() As for the future of our national superiority complex, optimists occasionally suggest that cultural diversity will eventually see the end of this partiality. All the evidence, alas, suggests that if there is one thing Britain is good at it is perpetuating the belief in its own exceptionalism. Evelyn Waugh’s novel Brideshead Revisited, for example, contains a wonderful scene in which Charles Ryder, in search of his dissipated friend Sebastian Flyte in 1. Casablanca, is escorted to the latter’s house by a native porter. Very dirty peoples,” the porter complains of his fellow citizens, as they trek through the thronged Moroccan alleys. No education. French leave them dirty. Armed Forces Bowl Tickets | Buy and sell bowl game football tickets at TicketsNow! Two teams with productive running attacks, suspect defenses and that won just enough games to become bowl eligible face off when Rice and Air Force take the field at. Not like British peoples. My peoples always very British peoples.” No Victorian propagandist for our right little, tight little, Dreadnought- defended and thoroughly exceptional island could have put it better. And no England football fan, either.
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