Is Anglophilia common for people on the spectrum?
Jack Frost nipping at your nose...
I know that its been said
many times and many ways...
Merry Christmas...
You make fun, but some parts of the country now have a serious problem with labrador over-population since we moved to peanuts and crisps. They have no natural predators to keep the numbers down.
This short documentary focuses on the challenges some of us face every single day:
That aint nuthin !
Here in the US those white Labrador pups talk, and even break out into song!
https://youtu.be/1umbFOLztAw
Cor blimey, speak for yourself, guv'nor.
I didn't actually realise how disliked the British are by Americans in general. I mean, I don't blame them, I just didn't know.
A few years back I was listening to a podcaster I liked and he was doing a geneology test or something and I think he thought he was of Irish descent and his test revealed like, 90% English and the sheer disappointment in his voice. Really opened my eyes. I started to notice it everywhere. I noticed how every bad guy in a Hollywood movie has an English accent.
It's always seemed strange to me that Americans venerate Irish descent because, of all the people the English are traditionally casually racist about, the Irish seem to hold a special place.
But when I hear about American anglophiles, it always seems that what they like is the history, not the people. Again, I don't blame them. We suck. But we have thousands of years of history to explore to America's 400-odd. And it's written in English. I think that's what some Americans like.
Here's the explanation I've heard (of why Irish ancestry is romanticized more than English ancestry among us Yanks)
The English are viewed in a somewhat negative light because this country began as a revolution against the English (Also, the English are seen as oppressors worldwide. Not that I agree. But that's what a lot of the population thinks)
The Irish, on the other hand, are seen as an honorable group that came here starving from famine, then eventually made it all the way to the White House (JFK). The popularity of Saint Patrick's Day could play a role in romanticizing the Irish too.
funeralxempire
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Except -philia means love or fondness for.
Except -philia means love or fondness for.
Right and I think the post was suggesting that it appears most are hostile to Englishness and fondness of them is a niche limited to autistics.
Anglophobia has always been there but I think it is increasing as the lefts victimhood mentality is culturally dominant at the moment. So they cherry pick the bad and ignore the good the English have done.
I also think most people don't really care, also some of it might be little brother style banter and not passionate hatred.
...Being in a different country/culture, in all honesty, keeps me at bay too. I know I say I'm an Anglophile. But being born and bred American, I feel my cultural differences might get in the way if I were to visit the UK. I probably unknowingly do things that are faux pas in Britain.
In other words, I like to admire Britain from a distance.
We'd love you to visit! Britain is overwhelmingly pro American even if the loud minority might make it seem different (most of whom will be far left. We had a far left, Americanophobic politician try to get in to power here in 2019 and he was strongly rejected in a landslide result)
I knew an Autist who was both Japanophile and Anglophile. He knew fluent Japanese, visited Japan and he also watched mass produced English comedy panel shows which I thought was surprising and also cute.
But he also expressed some anglophobia too. He was very into Vikings and was disgusted with the English destroying Viking culture during an invasion if I remember correctly
I also know a Slovenian autist who posts a lot about Britain and has an interest, a lot of it is negative and he listens to IRA songs which is kinda weird to me
funeralxempire
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Except -philia means love or fondness for.
Right and I think the post was suggesting that it appears most are hostile to Englishness and fondness of them is a niche limited to autistics.
Anglophobia has always been there but I think it is increasing as the lefts victimhood mentality is culturally dominant at the moment. So they cherry pick the bad and ignore the good the English have done.
I also think most people don't really care, also some of it might be little brother style banter and not passionate hatred.
OP appeared to be suggesting folks with ASD might be more likely to be anglophiles; that's the premise of the thread.
I'm not sure what the left has to do with anything, unless condemning empire is the deciding factor between having a positive and negative view of the UK. Last I checked I'm both a leftist and an anglophile (for example).
Vikings invaded England, not the other way around.
ASPartOfMe
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Did I mention something about the accents?
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Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 23 Mar 2023, 12:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
By curious coinicidence you sound like every British migrant to Melbourne I've evert spoken to.
Half a century ago eh, I guess London would have looked different
Except -philia means love or fondness for.
Right and I think the post was suggesting that it appears most are hostile to Englishness and fondness of them is a niche limited to autistics.
Anglophobia has always been there but I think it is increasing as the lefts victimhood mentality is culturally dominant at the moment. So they cherry pick the bad and ignore the good the English have done.
I also think most people don't really care, also some of it might be little brother style banter and not passionate hatred.
OP appeared to be suggesting folks with ASD might be more likely to be anglophiles; that's the premise of the thread.
I'm not sure what the left has to do with anything, unless condemning empire is the deciding factor between having a positive and negative view of the UK. Last I checked I'm both a leftist and an anglophile (for example).
Yes.
The left generally hate colonialists, and Britain did a lot of colonising.
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