The Great British Class System, Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 19 сен 2024
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    Today we explore the history and future of the British Class system.
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @JimmyTheGiant
    @JimmyTheGiant  3 месяца назад +83

    📣 Discord - discord.gg/dyhaYvqf

    • @GizmoMaxx
      @GizmoMaxx 3 месяца назад +7

      Damn you ! I have binge on this intro @:0:02 lol

    • @ronanbakker
      @ronanbakker 3 месяца назад +8

      I'm from a self made Dutch upper class we are even above the King Willem Alexander look up the Domeinen 2005 Act we are mainly interested in scientific or government jobs. Since the Netherlands loves auctions if you do that well the King will respect you. And we speak proper Dutch and RP English. We can buy clothes from the Bijenkorf and premier stores. Could you make a video about the Dutch aristocracy please? Lots of people don't understand our political system at all.

    • @satisfied656
      @satisfied656 3 месяца назад +2

      As always cool video🤗beside one little mistake: When related to aristocracy "blood-lines" or NOT a "Hitlery" thing,....fact is it´s more an "inbreed" thing!🤔

    • @satisfied656
      @satisfied656 3 месяца назад

      @@ronanbakker Bijenkorf💩is poop! You can buy ALL products there for a cheaper price elsewhere,...even on the original stores of the brands🤔....and i´m NOT talking about "outlets or 2nd-hand stores"!🙄This place is for dumb folks who like to burn money....😏

    • @satisfied656
      @satisfied656 3 месяца назад

      @@ronanbakker Ugh..c´mon.."de´Bijenkorf"💩is poop! You can literally buy ALL the products there cheaper elswhere...even at the original brands own stores/websites!🤔And i´m NOT talking about "second-hand & outlet stores"!🙄This is just a place for dumb folks who like to burn their money, nothing more...😏

  • @luwilliams9479
    @luwilliams9479 2 месяца назад +722

    I’m from a working class family and went to Oxford Uni and it was truly eye opening 😅 I didn’t know that a whole group of society didn’t have to work until I met people who thought I was joking when I said my dad delivered pizza.

    • @eggbert504
      @eggbert504 2 месяца назад +13

      Do attitudes towards the working class differ between colleges? I have an open offer so I don't know which one I'm going to end up at

    • @luwilliams9479
      @luwilliams9479 2 месяца назад +29

      @@eggbert504yeah a little! you’ll still encounter very posh people but some colleges you’ll feel more at home at. I went to St Catherine’s College, St.Catz, and made a lot of friends- it’s a lot more casual (you don’t have formal dinner every night) and you can choose to go to less formal events and eat at the Buttery instead. If you do go to formals they still expect you to stand up as the master comes in and speak some latin before you can eat though haha. Pals at St.Hughs also said it was way more relaxed.

    • @WickedVilla
      @WickedVilla 2 месяца назад +27

      Wow 🤩 Congratulations, truly! The fact that you could come from a background like you did and go to an Oxford university is amazing 🥰 I hope that you realize what a gift you have been given and make the most of your life☺️

    • @AmorLucisPhotography
      @AmorLucisPhotography 2 месяца назад +42

      Similar experience for me. I am from a working class family (e.g., clothes washed at a laundromat, no telephone until I went out to work, dad worked in a factory), but went to Cambridge as the first in my family to get to any university. What struck me was how much of the life of Cambridge was dependent on money that I never had. So despite making it to an elite university, I still felt excluded.

    • @luwilliams9479
      @luwilliams9479 2 месяца назад +5

      @@WickedVillathat’s so kind, thank you :)

  • @ericdane7769
    @ericdane7769 3 месяца назад +2152

    I like how in The Gentlemen Guy Ritchy states that "English nobility are the original gangsters."
    They grabbed power & money via violence, then solidified their position by pretending they were 'noble'.

    • @StallionStudios1234
      @StallionStudios1234 3 месяца назад +109

      Just like the Italian Nobility as well during the 14 and 1500s like the Medici. They were the real first Italian gangsters.

    • @LucyKelly-of6cu
      @LucyKelly-of6cu 3 месяца назад +40

      It has been thus since forever. Like when we were monkies up in the trees. It is the Beast System. But it will change soon, when Jesus returns.

    • @freeman10000
      @freeman10000 3 месяца назад

      Sounds exactly like the Chinese Communist Party.

    • @ianedmonds9191
      @ianedmonds9191 3 месяца назад +38

      Of course they did.
      There's a wonderful segment on the back of the book "the poor had no lawyers"
      A land owner comes across a guy walking through a forest he owns.
      The land owner says WTF? Get off my land.
      The guy says why is this your land?
      The land owner says "My ancestors fought to make this land ours."
      OK says the guy. I'll fight you for it now.
      The rich oppressed us because they were hard back then now they are weak and they expect the government to protect their position but we vote in the government and we can take back our lands.
      We could have with Corbyn but Starmer might be set in that direction with enough Campaigning.
      This is our time.
      Luv and Peace.

    • @JSmusiqalthinka
      @JSmusiqalthinka 3 месяца назад

      Yup. Tupac unironically contributed to sociology by pointing out the fundamentally gang-like nature of not just modern power structures like the police, but power itself.

  • @matthewcoombs3282
    @matthewcoombs3282 3 месяца назад +1087

    When you understand that Britain is an unreformed feudal society, a lot makes sense. Where I live in West Berkshire 40% of the district is still owned by three families.

    • @SavoyMaker9
      @SavoyMaker9 3 месяца назад +10

      Can ya explain more? you just made me curious lmao

    • @Intelligence_Failure
      @Intelligence_Failure 3 месяца назад +76

      nevermind the royal head of state, what I find really crazy is that the upper house of parliament is literally a house of lords, with most seats being inherited. [edit:not true anymore, but they all are lifetime-appointees, which provides just about 100% as much corruption opportunity]

    • @amberlayton1328
      @amberlayton1328 3 месяца назад +6

      i live in newbury and i didn’t know this wth. knew it was posh but that’s wild

    • @petesmitt
      @petesmitt 3 месяца назад +19

      That's not feudalism, just capitalistic wealth, usually inherited.

    • @castorchua
      @castorchua 3 месяца назад +14

      @@petesmitt The argument FOR inherited titles goes like this - it allows for people that are not solely competing for power to make decisions

  • @likatalikata3823
    @likatalikata3823 3 месяца назад +306

    I'm Kenyan and my country's colonial history was literally built on the British class system where the British aristocracy sent their scions to start a feudal state in Africa complete with castles, manors and landed gentry with white aristocratic Brits as the ruling class, Indians/Pakistanis taking up the merchant class and Africans acting as the serfs....it lasted for 60 years with an African revolt on the unjust system leading to independence.
    Now the curious part is Kenya still retained the class system. Only now in 2024 we have African political leaders as the landed gentry with a few remnants of the old British aristocracy. Both black and white still aspire to send their children to the elite UK schools, speak with the same posh accents and come back home to take key positions in Kenya's economic and social spaces. The Indians also rose up the economic ladder to form the upper middle class and wealthy merchants (part of Rishi Sunak's background is from this part of Kenyan society). The black Africans span the entire spectrum of the classes with almost the same attitudes and dynamics as described in the video.
    At least now I understand the origins of my country's class structure better after watching this.

    • @kevinligusi3525
      @kevinligusi3525 2 месяца назад +20

      This is so well explained. I'm Kenyan and I've never thought about it like that.

    • @jasonedwardblood
      @jasonedwardblood 2 месяца назад +13

      Be happy that you can speak, wear clothing, not live in a cave, have plumbing, electricity and education. You are blessed to have been colonized

    • @ANewBeginning2023
      @ANewBeginning2023 2 месяца назад

      @@jasonedwardblood don’t worry mate, they colonised you too. They just make you think you’re part of them as well haha. Freedom is an illusion and people feed into this delusion. Divide and rule my friend.

    • @cummincider
      @cummincider 2 месяца назад

      Kenyan here and I 100% agree. I was picturing the same thing while watching this.

    • @cummincider
      @cummincider 2 месяца назад

      Kenyan here and I 100% agree. I was picturing the same thing while watching this.

  • @TheFearlessArtsJon
    @TheFearlessArtsJon 3 месяца назад +113

    I’ve lived in council flats my entire life. Went to one of the worst schools in the country, but still entered Uni I am now just finishing up my degree in Psychology, working 50+ hours a week in a mental health ward. I’ll work hard enough to make a comfortable living in future. But that’s not to say it was easy, Uni exposed me to people who weren’t always struggling and it took a while to come to terms with the fact that I will have to work harder than some to achieve the same.
    The working class are looked down upon as lazy when it’s frankly untrue, I know some many people from within my town that were smarter than I, could’ve done incredible things if their families didn’t experience these struggles or if the schools were better. I got lucky in so many different ways to be in the position to finish university but others aren’t and it hurts because they shouldn’t be. The country needs to do better.

    • @KottonPye-vo6fe
      @KottonPye-vo6fe Месяц назад +6

      Thanks for sharing your story. Best wishes to you

    • @yazmin9483
      @yazmin9483 Месяц назад +9

      I’m one of nine and my mum didn’t work.She encouraged us to ditch school and to go straight into work so we could help her financially and to take care of our younger siblings.My dad was a drug addict that abandoned me when I was 7.As a drop out myself who has struggled with suicide for many years it doesn’t matter how hard I work I will never go to a elite university with all the rich kids.I went to a catholic secondary school with a bunch of stuck up kids though,I could of probably been something but my mental health took over.
      It is the sad reality for many of us.

    • @fiqhonomics
      @fiqhonomics Месяц назад

      The people who dont work, but subsist on the labour of others, are the lazy ones.

    • @DDXY2K
      @DDXY2K 28 дней назад

      Now, you are a higher slave in the system, helping lower-class slaves cope.
      Reflect.

    • @TheJthom9
      @TheJthom9 9 дней назад

      That is life. Story of Cain and Abel is a lesson in how the resentment you develop against those who sacrifice less but attain more will drive you mad, so it is best to let go

  • @harrywelfare4449
    @harrywelfare4449 3 месяца назад +2153

    squarespace keepin this guy off the streets fr

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  3 месяца назад +1138

      I actually can be found on street corners selling squarespace

    • @MrKingkz
      @MrKingkz 3 месяца назад +86

      ​@@JimmyTheGiant Yo canna get a Q of Squarespace in 40 min 😂😂😂

    • @the.watcher.on.the.wall..
      @the.watcher.on.the.wall.. 3 месяца назад +20

      ​@@JimmyTheGiant 3 for 100 bro?

    • @louiefielding163
      @louiefielding163 3 месяца назад +13

      JimmyTheJunkie for squarespace

    • @jamesdreads7828
      @jamesdreads7828 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@JimmyTheGiantgen

  • @r.hagenau3541
    @r.hagenau3541 3 месяца назад +415

    It is rather simple: Lower Classes -- they are owned. Middle Class -- they own themselves. Upper Class -- they own others. Or in economic terms terms: Lower Classes -- living day by day, no assets, no access to capital. Middle Class -- they own as personal assets what they utilize, but need to work for a living, some have capital. Upper Class -- no need to work, living off capital gains, own and control resources and societal narrative.

    • @mrgladstone4044
      @mrgladstone4044 2 месяца назад +16

      This is so simple yet true. I will no doubt drop it into conversation to sound clever.

    • @htee7426
      @htee7426 2 месяца назад +3

      Yes , well done. When defining class in financial terms, this just about sums it up.

    • @iainwall
      @iainwall 2 месяца назад +3

      This is very true but there's also an element of what you are born into. As pointed out in the video David Beckham would be considered 'working class' but obviously has enough cash to live off the interest today. It's more 'If my parents were owned I am lower class...' etc.

    • @stefanieberg1569
      @stefanieberg1569 2 месяца назад +8

      @@iainwall, yes, but as he said, not everybody has got great talent, and Beckham grew up in a time, when even being talented was an easier way to (long term) success, than these days. And… also said, that if you are poor, trying to survive, as many do these days, it’s hard to become inventive, creative, have cool business ideas.
      However, the above comment is really impressive… when it comes to a comparison between colonialism and how the ‘peasants’ were treated by the same white upper class twits in their own country… no, there wasn’t much difference. Africans or Brits - all being mistreated by some few, ‘born into power’ people with delusions of grandeur. And as he states… in Kenya it doesn’t make much of a difference any more either, which colour, nationality you are, or which social background you have. As soon, as you make it somehow to a good education, and speak the right way, you may succeed… with some talent and ruthlessness, likely, or background money or class, which still make it easier to go places.
      But saying, that poverty is always something self-inflicted, is becoming a more and more fashionable opinion, just as it was in the past.
      Having the poor as the scape-goat for society values declining, is wrong, as can be. Not looking, where the money goes, is a mistake. It goes into some rich people’s pockets, mostly out the lower and middle working-class bank accounts, who can’t afford tax advisers, property, or foreign hideaways. If it went into education, environmental protection (sewage…), health-care, ah education, did I mention education?, wages, more than minimum, affordable housing, education… society would thrive.
      However, I’m a little disillusioned by now… having grown up through the 70s, 80s, and 90s, I thought, we’d be on the way, to become better people in a better world, but the last 20 years, or so, were like a rollercoaster ride in reverse. Back to intolerance, class divide (only new classes by wealth or infamy), fanaticism - political or religious, or both - war-, and fear-mongering, propaganda. It’s so sad…

    • @aclark903
      @aclark903 2 месяца назад +1

      @@stefanieberg1569You sound surprised that things go backward when secularism increases..

  • @xiaomoogle
    @xiaomoogle 3 месяца назад +895

    My accent betrays me in some ways. I sound posh. My dad was a builder and my mum grew up in total poverty (but in a loving family). I went to a private school on an assisted place (because my parents couldn't afford the fees but I did so well in the entrance exam). I was kicked out of home while still at school when my mum died and my dad married a narcissist. I then self funded my way through the rest of my life with no financial aid. I developed anxiety, depression and chronic pain on the way - now I am over all of that and have a well paid job in London. I'm really proud of myself. However, I now get slapped with 'privileged white woman' in multi cultural intersectional victimhood loving London. It's a joke tbh. Growing up with no family support is really stressful on your body and mind, regardless of your background or skin colour. Having a loving, supporting family is the greatest privilege anyone can be blessed with, in my opinion. I do feel I've had to work twice as hard to get to where I am.

    • @sn-nu6wg
      @sn-nu6wg 3 месяца назад +20

      Fair play 🙌🏻

    • @annetoronto5474
      @annetoronto5474 3 месяца назад

      Victim privilege is definitely a thing in society, look at Oprah… billionaire victim!
      Sorry your dad married someone toxic, that sucks!

    • @Hali88
      @Hali88 3 месяца назад +34

      Quite the life story, losing your Mum must have been tough, hope the narcissist stepmother is out of the picture now. I guess the private school is what led to the posh accent? You can change your accent if you want to.

    • @JawandoOokomondo-cb7fm
      @JawandoOokomondo-cb7fm 3 месяца назад +5

      🙄

    • @Yolaeth
      @Yolaeth 3 месяца назад +65

      ​ i think its the money and the looking down ones nose, and writing off everyone else as intersectional victims that makes you a toff, ask any upper class what makes you upper class and they will say blood but ask any working class and they will tell you its power and the attitude towards those lower than themselves

  • @hassenmh2850
    @hassenmh2850 3 месяца назад +174

    Great job 👏🏽 I'm a French guy living in the UK for 5 years and it always amazed me how class based Britain is, I never really understood. Without the French revolution we would have the same class divide today

    • @DolphineAchonga-gn6kn
      @DolphineAchonga-gn6kn 3 месяца назад +43

      France isn't that different. They just don't have the titles. Much like the USA, Russia, Switzerland e.t.c, oligarchs have replaced aristocrats.

    • @etbadaboum
      @etbadaboum 3 месяца назад +22

      @@DolphineAchonga-gn6kn France is still much more egalitarian. UK and US are the worst unequal countries in the developed world.

    • @randomthgt7807
      @randomthgt7807 3 месяца назад +14

      @@etbadaboumI would ask you to check with France’s neo colonies and ask them how egalitarian France is….

    • @etbadaboum
      @etbadaboum 3 месяца назад +1

      @@randomthgt7807 France has no colonies, and when I say France is egalitarian it's not just metropolitan France

    • @randomthgt7807
      @randomthgt7807 3 месяца назад +33

      @@etbadaboum If France has no colonies, explain the situation in Caledonia? Explain why a number of African states (who have flag independence from France) have been required to maintain their gold reserves in French banks and said countries do not control their currency (France does)…Explain why the ppl in Niger and Burkina Faso have kicked the French out…Explain where the uranium that powers French homes comes from (and ask what % of homes are powered by uranium in said country)? Just start there and report back please.

  • @merigarcia201
    @merigarcia201 3 месяца назад +190

    Let’s be honest here: if the UK truly wanted an equal society, they would start from the very bottom with high-quality, affordable (or free) education. Replicating the Nordic model, as seen in Finland, is the best example. Having lived in both the UK and Finland for a long time, I can tell you the difference in how society functions in each is abysmal.
    In the UK, there are so many elites in the upper spheres who’d start trembling at the very thought that maybe their historical privileges would go down the drain a few generations down the line if we actually used a meritocratic system. Imagine this: if everyone received the same high-quality education and qualified for the best public universities based on merit, they’d have the skills and knowledge to apply for the jobs they are most qualified for, purely based on merit. At this point, we would have a final sample of people who are there for purely meritocratic reasons.
    Let’s cut the nonsense about the idea that “some” Eton kids are middle class who just work hard. That’s bullshit! The price tag is too high to enter that “equality” illusion.

    • @samuelphillian1286
      @samuelphillian1286 2 месяца назад

      Education is one of the lies the upper classes sell, innovation is the only way up

    • @noneofyourbusiness1114
      @noneofyourbusiness1114 2 месяца назад

      Does this mean I can have your phone number 😊

    • @xxxxxxxyyyyyyy
      @xxxxxxxyyyyyyy 2 месяца назад

      All the rest also have access to schools. If a person is talented or have exceptional intelligence, the school doesn't play any role nowadays.

    • @xxxxxxxyyyyyyy
      @xxxxxxxyyyyyyy 2 месяца назад

      Plus success is based on multiple factors.

    • @user-nf8ke1rf2u
      @user-nf8ke1rf2u Месяц назад

      Yup

  • @ctlspl
    @ctlspl 3 месяца назад +1263

    In Germany aristocrats were expected to become officers in the army. It was sort of a unwritten contract, that they had to repay their privileges by serving the King / Kaiser/ Führer.

    • @ericdane7769
      @ericdane7769 3 месяца назад +231

      Showing military prowess was how you became aristocrat in the first place. You win wars, you get rewarded a castle.
      Nothing honourable or sacrificial about it. Heck, without ambitious aristocrats, 90% of wars wouldn't even have happened.

    • @ctlspl
      @ctlspl 3 месяца назад +69

      @@ericdane7769 In Germany it was that the land owners lent their peasants to the military of the kings and received nobility titles as a reward.

    • @rodionradchenko7708
      @rodionradchenko7708 3 месяца назад +81

      @@ctlspl yeah, but how did they become land owners in the first place? They were part of a local warlord's warband, razed a bunch of villages and got the land in their posession. Long before Germany existed as a nation state.

    • @brendanpells912
      @brendanpells912 3 месяца назад +71

      Continental countries had to live with armies sweeping across their territory from time to time, upsetting the established order. Britain hasn't endured a successful invasion since 1066, so the Establishment has had almost 1000 years to bed in.

    • @fredlfesl6026
      @fredlfesl6026 3 месяца назад +16

      My family has always been in military positions, although my line never exeeded the rank of a knight. My granddad still sold weapons to the persians for a german company in the Wirtschaftswunder- era.

  • @rock3tcatU233
    @rock3tcatU233 3 месяца назад +710

    Anytime an aristocrat goes broke, a chav receives his Adidas tracksuit.

  • @Planktilious1
    @Planktilious1 3 месяца назад +194

    There's an excellent book called Watching the English - The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour. It's a fascinating study of what makes English people English.
    Being able to determine someone's class is hard-wired into the English. From the way you speak to what school you went to are all loud pointers towards someone's class. How you dress and even what you eat. The English (As well as the Welsh, Scots and Irish) recognise very quickly which class you occupy. How you got your money also comes into it. Inherited wealth is superior to newly earned wealth. You can't jump class with cash. You're simply born into it.

    • @andrewwotherspoona5722
      @andrewwotherspoona5722 3 месяца назад +23

      Actually, only the English have a true preoccupation with class. The class system is largely imposed upon them by the English. Before the English the Scots and Irish were much more egalitarian. Which is why they had 4 universities at a time when the English only had two (despite England having four times the population).

    • @keithwellerlounge74
      @keithwellerlounge74 3 месяца назад +25

      ‘You can’t jump class with cash’ - one thing I can’t stand is people like Alan Sugar claiming to be working class just because they have a cockney accent. Sure, the born upper class may scoff at him, but I’d like to think the true working class would scoff at him as well. At the end of it money defines your life, not playing up to stereotypes.

    • @hannah60000
      @hannah60000 3 месяца назад +9

      @@keithwellerlounge74 Yes, he’s definitely not “working class”. Alan Sugar is part of the “millionaire business class”, but he is from a “working class” background.

    • @cultfiction3865
      @cultfiction3865 3 месяца назад +11

      ​@@andrewwotherspoona5722It doesn't mean they can always determine someone's class accurately though. They can only form an impression of what they think it is. My mother was raised in one of the most impoverished parts of UK but because she loved period dramas and related books, she always was well spoken compared to most others in her town. All her life people from her own town asked her where she was from, thinking she must be from a family with jingly pockets. Until she told them she was from the same town as them. So yeah, people made their determinations but still got them wrong.

    • @jackwilliam2965
      @jackwilliam2965 3 месяца назад +7

      ​@@cultfiction3865Exactly education plays a big factor in what class your perceived. Sometimes even if you are working class but have the right mannerisms and understanding of the English language and literature then they don't care if you have a working class background.

  • @magules13
    @magules13 3 месяца назад +73

    Charles Dance literally changed his lower class accent to an upper class one with a dialect coach when he went into acting. I watched him having lunch with his brother on Finding Your Roots and they sound completely different.

  • @TheClintonio
    @TheClintonio 3 месяца назад +27

    I'm from the working class, though given my mother didn't work and we relied on benefits and crime I prefer "criminal class". Anyway, so I looked at my life in poverty at 13 and decided I needed to be middle class to be happy so I changed my accent, my dress sense (at 18), mannerisms, and focused on getting into a top university, getting a masters and working as a programmer.
    I succeeded and yet despite that middle class people sometimes tell me that there's something off about my accent and personality and that I don't seem fully British. Even after 15 years of acting middle class I couldn't perfect it.
    So I moved to Japan. Fuck it if I'm gonna be an outsider I'll be one where I expect it. UK class system is shite.

    • @lightcardsatlisas3932
      @lightcardsatlisas3932 Месяц назад +1

      😂 💯

    • @minniemoe4797
      @minniemoe4797 11 дней назад

      Not seeming British because you're self made 😂. Reminds me of 1890's jokes that a self made person can only be American.

  • @CrazyMama75
    @CrazyMama75 3 месяца назад +412

    I'm a lower class disabled single mum on benefits, not due to choice, but I sound upper middle class because I was taught to speak with a BBC British accent (I had to learn local regional accents to fit in in my peer group). It is hilarious when talking to people, especially middle class people who love chatting with me, at the theatre or a cafe in town, for example, they love talking or debating philosophy, politics or theology (the top subjects I've noticed), until they find out I'm on benefits then suddenly they're extremely confused and trying to hide their disgust 😂

    • @songoku9348
      @songoku9348 3 месяца назад +24

      Unbelievable 🙄

    • @JawandoOokomondo-cb7fm
      @JawandoOokomondo-cb7fm 3 месяца назад +5

      🙄

    • @ashley-fk6dp
      @ashley-fk6dp 3 месяца назад +19

      sounds terrible i suffer from migraines and severe adhd what is your dissability ...sorry about the posh snobs u soud like an interesting person

    • @epfizerdoolittleajl2165
      @epfizerdoolittleajl2165 3 месяца назад +2

      Caroline, is that you?

    • @kiuk_kiks
      @kiuk_kiks 3 месяца назад +3

      What caused you to be in such a state?

  • @OldQueer
    @OldQueer 3 месяца назад +866

    Worst thing about this country. I have a very mild Geordie accent (locals often ask where I'm from originally) but work in finance and IT for London based firms. The shit I've heard in professional meetings would be an insant sacking if I was a Pakistani or something.
    I've had my accent mocked, been told I can't be taken seriously, told didn’t realise you lot could use computers, etc. The class system in this country is pervasive and vile. Can't wait to leave the UK eventually. I'm always made to feel like a lesser person here.

    • @OldQueer
      @OldQueer 3 месяца назад +227

      To add, when I'm home my family take the piss out of me now "talking posh" and thinking I'm above my station. Can't win.

    • @user-im8bv8po2w
      @user-im8bv8po2w 3 месяца назад

      @@OldQueer fuck this country honestly

    • @freddiemedley5580
      @freddiemedley5580 3 месяца назад +56

      Yeah it definitely goes both ways. I'm from Nottingham but hung out with and played Rugby with the kids from the local public school (I went to a school that had three one star off stead reports in a row 💀 btw), so I picked up alot of etiquette rules and posh mannerisms. Anyway due to that I often get odd looks when I go up to Northumberland or Yorkshire to see family, they see me as a posh tory even though I'm just as working class as them.

    • @mortarien
      @mortarien 3 месяца назад +51

      I have a guy at work who is a Geordie and he speaks very, very slowly - claims so that he's understood. I asked him once to speak normally and I had no issues understanding him, despite not being British and english not being my native language (okay his accent is thick, but not unreasonable; I would've had real trouble understanding him if we were talking over a bad line or next to a busy, noisy road, but not in a quiet environment like home or an office). It's sad how many people just stop listening if they don't hear what they expect, like an accent.

    • @OldQueer
      @OldQueer 3 месяца назад +39

      @@mortarien I've had a lot of foreign people say they can understand me more clearly than other English people. I make an effort to speak at a pace and with a cadence that's understandable to all and try to mute some of the way I'd say words if I was speaking to locals

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz 3 месяца назад +564

    Seen as the election has been announced it becomes official that this is the first time in British history where living standards have dropped during a single Parliament and it is the largest drop in living standards since the Napoleonic war. And at the same time the richest in society have got a lot richer deepening the divide.

    • @fathertedczynski
      @fathertedczynski 3 месяца назад +67

      Yea, I used to be someone who wasn't too concerned by the inequality that existed here, but the old illusion of meritocracy has been completely eroded in the UK now. It wasn't until I spent time away, experiencing how social classes exist in Australia, that I realised the extent of our problem. But I think it runs deep, it's often the attitude of the upper class to totally disregard any merit of anyone 'below' them, to the point that even the middle class is in an eternal uphill battle to be comfortable while the rich look down in disgust.

    • @ruaridhcameron3863
      @ruaridhcameron3863 3 месяца назад +6

      @@fathertedczynski just moved to Melbourne from Glasgow and couldn't agree more.

    • @travisoutlaw9511
      @travisoutlaw9511 3 месяца назад +26

      Britain might need another peasant revolt and the US might need another revolution. The King's taxes are out of hand all across the land. Cheers down under mate. My dad was from Brisbane

    • @stephenwonghongweng4298
      @stephenwonghongweng4298 3 месяца назад +9

      Thanks to the Torie Party

    • @admiralbenbow5083
      @admiralbenbow5083 3 месяца назад

      So does that make Alan Sugar, sorry LORD Sugar, `upper class` ??

  • @sombody1596
    @sombody1596 2 месяца назад +12

    One of the highest quality, most coherent and well made youtube videos i've seen in a long time, well done mate

  • @redhot663
    @redhot663 3 месяца назад +21

    The intriguing thing to me is that the poorest person in the UK can go and live in Nigeria right now and immediately be rich. You'd instantly be part of the upper class, live in a mansion because nigerian currency is peanuts compared to the pound, get a top job in the government beause you have mandatory western education and chill with the country's elite because your british accent makes you automatically be seen as elite. But we all just stay where we are and stay poor. £1 is equivalent to around N2000 right now.

    • @redhot663
      @redhot663 3 месяца назад +12

      And its also crazy because many of the immigrants that make up the poorest sectors of UK society came from the upper class in their home countries. I know a lady whose parents were Nigerian royalty before they emigrated to UK. They spent the rest of their lives living in a Croydon council estate.

    • @stevencooper4422
      @stevencooper4422 2 месяца назад +6

      The issue of course being the fact you moved quite far away from your family back in England if you settled in Nigeria, and also the aspect of safety (being white in such a country would make you a target for kidnapping) should be the primary reason why not too many Englishmen move there.

    • @riyadougla539
      @riyadougla539 2 месяца назад +5

      I from London and my grandparents are from Bangladesh. I went there last year, and they were literally treating me like royalty and a celebrity.

    • @magnuscord
      @magnuscord 23 дня назад

      It seems that German pensioners often move to live in Greece / Bulgaria.

    • @bgbek602
      @bgbek602 9 дней назад

      @@magnuscord Хахахаххх! Те продължават да са пенсионери/обикновени, при това...

  • @helenagackowska8398
    @helenagackowska8398 3 месяца назад +368

    Using Stepen Merchants face when you talk about the merchant class is cracking me up so much lool

    • @dockerdave
      @dockerdave 3 месяца назад +10

      It's a great gag

    • @mikehamilton367
      @mikehamilton367 3 месяца назад +7

      That was too good 😂😂

    • @error-xn7hn
      @error-xn7hn 3 месяца назад +4

      The first time I saw a Merchant, I thought "hilarious". Then next time I saw it, I thought "Oh... It's going to be every time is it? That's going to get old." But after that, it didn't get old! It was still awesome!

    • @CafeLu
      @CafeLu 2 месяца назад

      I cracked up every single time I saw it!

    • @charlesrobinson4244
      @charlesrobinson4244 21 день назад

      I had no idea who it was, so thanks for clearing up the mystery. 🙂

  • @imkirbo3094
    @imkirbo3094 3 месяца назад +215

    The UK Class system basically has no relevance to someones income. It's all about how they were brought up and what they think of themselves. You've got pensioners who can't afford their heating bill calling people scum because they think of them as a lower class, despite that "scum" earning 5x the money the pensioner has ever earned in their life. It's weird.

    • @Ray.Norrish
      @Ray.Norrish 3 месяца назад +28

      You're right. Money is only one small part of the class structure (if at all). Everything from how you speak to holding a knife and fork weighs in. Music preference, behaviour, upbringing, dress choices... it goes on and on.

    • @richardhall5489
      @richardhall5489 3 месяца назад +4

      Is it weird though? If it was primarily about money would it be...whatever the opposite if weird is?

    • @evm6177
      @evm6177 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes considerably true facts.

    • @user-zz9gn2dc3l
      @user-zz9gn2dc3l 3 месяца назад

      Scum refers to the level of your integrity and mortality certainly not your bank balance!

    • @user-zz9gn2dc3l
      @user-zz9gn2dc3l 3 месяца назад

      My comment was immediately deleted

  • @evedonaldson8446
    @evedonaldson8446 3 месяца назад +514

    People like Rishi didn't necessarily earn their own money by their own merit. He was born into a good amount of wealth and had all the tools to make more at his fingerprints. That combined with the fact he married a billionaire.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar 3 месяца назад +110

      This is often overlooked. It's not so much the money you have but the doors you have open to you by virtue of going to the "correct school" for example. If you're from a poor background but your family can somehow pay to put you through a fancy school, you're not better educated than those in the state system, but you have connections there for later life that those in state school would never, ever have had access to even if they were the most intelligent and brilliant minds of a generation.
      There's a reason most people in positions of high office or power in this country went to places like Eton and Winchester, or one of the fancy universities. Both of them Just having that on your CV gets you through doors that wouldn't even be closed for people who went to other schools, they wouldn't even SEE the doors.

    • @JohnyWickerson
      @JohnyWickerson 3 месяца назад +18

      @@TalesOfWarthe difference is that in britain you could do service to the empire and make a name for yourself but in india if you were born in a low caste or untouchable hindu family you would never be able to be a high rank officer or have wealth or own land.Many British officers were not nobility of course and still reached high ranks.Europe has been ahead of Asia in this aspect for centuries.

    • @JohnyWickerson
      @JohnyWickerson 3 месяца назад +2

      Yes that is true

    • @cultfiction3865
      @cultfiction3865 3 месяца назад +24

      Exactly no way is Rishi Sunak self made. For a start he does have an aristocratic accent, and had an expensive education at high end private schools and all the right connections to use honest people's heads as stepping stones

    • @pcprinciple3774
      @pcprinciple3774 3 месяца назад +4

      and how much he made off covid

  • @bangnikabang6501
    @bangnikabang6501 2 месяца назад +20

    as an educated immigrant who decided to change professions & go back to university while in the UK, I worked a lot of low-paid jobs. it was hard to find friends because most people around me took little interest in history, politics, art, etc. seemed like thats reserved for the upper class. my husband says it's better to be an immigrant in the UK, than to try changing social status. regardless, because of where I am from (Poland), it seems like people still class foreigners ! it's very visible in the mimics and approach and I cannot stand the ever-present 'where are you from' question. very different in mainland Europe, where high culture is desired and accessible to all. im glad so many European countries got rid of the titles.

    • @BonMooney
      @BonMooney Месяц назад +4

      This is true, I live in Bulgaria where it's as cheap to go to the opera or ballet as it is to go to the cinema. Ordinary working class people know about classical music and art because it's accessible to them, maybe a remnant of communist times, which may also be responsible for a pride in national history before and after communism.

    • @bangnikabang6501
      @bangnikabang6501 29 дней назад +2

      @@BonMooney oh Bulgaria is beautiful ! I absolutely loved it. My Polish friend is dating a Bulgarian guy, much more similar mindsets, social customs, etc. they are thinking of leaving UK and moving there.

    • @minniemoe4797
      @minniemoe4797 11 дней назад +2

      I remember the case of Dagmara Przybysz, a school girl from Cornwall. She was bullied at school, constantly called "stupid Pole" and that was the reason she comitted sui cide. Of course there's a certain "class structure" for immigrants as well according to their birth country, race, economic situation back home. And Central and Eastern Europeans take double hate from both the British and non white immigrants. Some British individuals, who want to be nasty, will not verbally attack South Asians or Carribeans becauce in that case they'll be reported for hate crime immediately. But Central And Eastern Europeans could be an easy target because they share the same skin colour with Brits. It's complicated🤷‍♀️

  • @Campaigner82
    @Campaigner82 3 месяца назад +106

    As a Swede (Scandinavian) the UKs classism sounds so old fashioned and weird.

    • @chrisr8080
      @chrisr8080 3 месяца назад +1

      Bröllopsfotografen :)

    • @sams3015
      @sams3015 3 месяца назад +6

      I can’t speak for Sweden but in Denmark when I lived there, social class was very much there but it sort of ignored until people wanted to vent. My ex bf family were divorced and the dad was very working class and the mum and her partner were very middle class. It was definitely there, not to mention there are still aristocrats and Royalty as there is in Sweden and Norway (not sure if they have aristocracy)

    • @Campaigner82
      @Campaigner82 3 месяца назад

      @@sams3015 Royalty have no power and aristocrats are the same

    • @theelusivepyroshark5119
      @theelusivepyroshark5119 2 месяца назад +4

      @@sams3015 Yea I don't know what their on about, I'm also Swedish and I'm middle class but many of my friends are lower class. There is a clear difference between how we're perceived and treated.

    • @anthonyrybicki1000
      @anthonyrybicki1000 2 месяца назад +2

      Not really.You had a similar system until the 1800's when democracy kicked in.Sweden lost its empire fairly quickly but Britain hung on until after WW2 instilling the notion that the ordinary people benefited from colonial trade and upper class governance. We wish that we were more social democratic like Scandanavia but have a powerful elite that manipulates elections and cries false tears for tge nation under the pretext of national pride. 😢

  • @badnewswade
    @badnewswade 3 месяца назад +88

    It's so refreshing to see someone speaking honestly about our suffocating class system!
    Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!

  • @tombutler4184
    @tombutler4184 3 месяца назад +452

    we did decapitate a king in England, or rather the middle class did. And we didn't nerf them, rather the middle and upper classes nerfed everyone else. Then Thatcher sold them the American Dream

    • @righteousmammon9011
      @righteousmammon9011 3 месяца назад +17

      America is pretty good to live in actually.

    • @pumpkinpatch5
      @pumpkinpatch5 3 месяца назад +66

      @@righteousmammon9011Depending on the State. Ever seen the poverty-stricken areas of Florida? I have. I floored it through those neighbourhoods.

    • @aregularperson7573
      @aregularperson7573 3 месяца назад +33

      ⁠@@righteousmammon9011it’s depends on where you live in if you live in the suburbs your Doing okay but if you live in the Hood my only advice is to avoid them or learn how to dodge bullets.

    • @mrhacker99999
      @mrhacker99999 3 месяца назад +8

      @@righteousmammon9011 Full of paranoia over there

    • @John_Kennedy27
      @John_Kennedy27 3 месяца назад +32

      ​@@righteousmammon9011Just don't look at all the poor people eh?

  • @occamsfarm1675
    @occamsfarm1675 3 месяца назад +206

    I think it was on the Second Thought that I heard: There is no middle class, upper class or lower class. There's only working class and the ruling class. If you have to work to get through the month and don't get to call the shots, you're working class.
    I liked that painful reality check.

    • @rogerstone3068
      @rogerstone3068 3 месяца назад +17

      Not so. The concept of 'working class' is founded in the idea of people who are employed by other (owners, maybe through a structures of managers) to do tasks. They are relatively powerless; they need not be educated; they can change jobs but they don't control what they do. Professionals - doctors, teachers, lawyers, managers, accountants, etc - are different in that they earn more, they have qualifications. There is a difference in lifestyle, house ownership, pensions and in expectations, but they are still working for a living, at someone else's beck and call. The upper classes OWN stuff and can take decisions about how to derive income from it. They have more control over their lives (and their decisions affect the lives of thousands of others. However, they do still have to work in as much as taking those decisions, and getting it right - that's work, too.

    • @Joyride37
      @Joyride37 26 дней назад +2

      @@rogerstone3068the point of the comment is that the professionals and working class still have more in common with each other than the either do with the upper class that own everything and want to stay at the stop. Divvying up the differences is what the elite want

    • @CafeLu
      @CafeLu 21 день назад

      @@occamsfarm1675 also, many people think they are middle class but they are really just playacting middle class when you into account mortgages, car loans and consumer debt

  • @TheNigelrojo
    @TheNigelrojo 2 месяца назад +22

    Unlike in America, the British class system is mainly defined by education, not money; although of course there is still a general correlation between class and wealth. If you've been to an elite public school like Eton, you're upper or upper-middle class. If you've been to a minor public school, you're upper-middle class. If you've been to a comprehensive, you're working or lower middle class, depending on the quality of state schools where you live. Likewise, if you've been to Oxbridge or a Russell-group university, that gets you into the middle class if you're not there already. This is why private schooling reinforces & perpetuates the class system. When there were more grammar schools, and university student grants plus free tuition fees, there was more social mobility because this allowed kids from working class families to move into the middle class - this was my own experience, & I'm grateful for it. Much of that opportunity has now gone. With little opportunity for social mobility, inequality tends to increase. Inequality in Britain is now significant and increasing; and this is why reducing incentives for private education is so important, because it tackles a large part of the root of the problem.

    • @mzo.7333
      @mzo.7333 10 дней назад +1

      Education AND social standing/mobility

  • @Drakelett
    @Drakelett 3 месяца назад +72

    Working class: Uneducated
    Middle class: Educated
    Upper class: Inherited

    • @stevencooper4422
      @stevencooper4422 2 месяца назад +2

      Well said

    • @chrisbacos
      @chrisbacos Месяц назад +1

      Then as an American, I am a hybrid of the middle and upper classes.

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Месяц назад +2

      And it’s not a uniquely British concept either.

    • @chrisbacos
      @chrisbacos Месяц назад +1

      @@phoenixrose1192 true class/caste systems are all over the world 🌎

    • @mzo.7333
      @mzo.7333 10 дней назад

      ​@@chrisbacosBritish system often means its incredibly difficult to enter the upper class. Its not simply inheriting common things like homes. More so estates, social status, titles etc

  • @MegaCooliam
    @MegaCooliam 3 месяца назад +274

    Rishi sunak is self made?? HE MARRIED A BILLIONAIRE'S DAUGHTER!!!!

    • @CartoType
      @CartoType 3 месяца назад +63

      Yeah, but he chose to do that himself. Nobody gave him that marriage on a plate. He had to go out and find her.

    • @dariusalexandru9536
      @dariusalexandru9536 3 месяца назад +22

      His father is a buisnessman and a chemist,sooo...

    • @NR-fd9wv
      @NR-fd9wv 3 месяца назад +71

      that's why it's called marrytocracy

    • @Hunnid24
      @Hunnid24 3 месяца назад +33

      Yeah Rishi Sunak’s wife is worth $700m but Rishi himself is worth $200m. A billionaire wouldn't marry off his daughter to a bum..

    • @westgabandon2463
      @westgabandon2463 3 месяца назад

      Richi is apart of the East African Elite.

  • @selfcaresally
    @selfcaresally 3 месяца назад +188

    It’s interesting how the 17th century British colonists along the North American midatlantic were a weird mixture of aristocratic “second sons” who had to make their own fortunes, destitute peasants who were cleared off the common land by the Parliamentary Enclosure Acts, and skilled laborers from the middle class. They mostly felt pretty ok adopting a new lowest-class (enslaved and indigenous people) because they thought that was how the world works and they were just glad that bottom class wasn’t them. And yet we still act like peoples’ place in society is because of their own personal choices. Some things haven’t changed.

    • @DillardAlpaugh
      @DillardAlpaugh 3 месяца назад

      My fucking ass America has ever had a class system, and anybody who's complicit and indifferent to one ever being established in this country will also be on the receiving end of a barrel of a gun.
      If you're frustrated with our American standard of living, then be a citizen and organize. And keep this bullshit on the other side of the Atlantic, fucking repulsive.

    • @AstroboyAdventures
      @AstroboyAdventures 3 месяца назад

      My ass America has ever had a class system. And anybody who is complicit and indifferent to one ever being established will also be the receiving end of the barrel of a gun.
      If you’re frustrated with our American standards of living, then be a citizen and organize. And keep this on the other side of the Atlantic, fucking repulsive.

    • @celticdeamon567
      @celticdeamon567 3 месяца назад +4

      Being enslaved ultimately requires your consent.

    • @obrnenydrevokocur9344
      @obrnenydrevokocur9344 3 месяца назад +4

      "And yet we still act like peoples’ place in society is because of their own personal choices. Some things haven’t changed."
      Quite a few things have changed since the 1860s, a lot of immigrant groups had to endure serfdom or even slavery-like conditions many decades later, and yet they are doing much better on average.

    • @houseofvenusMD
      @houseofvenusMD 3 месяца назад +11

      ​@@celticdeamon567how can a child consent to slavery?

  • @Itsembish.
    @Itsembish. 3 месяца назад +266

    that’s my gcse history revision done for today 😂

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ 3 месяца назад +11

      Best of luck in your exams 🤞 I can think of worse teachers

    • @nukelertoonz8418
      @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад +4

      icl same like half of power and the people is in this 😂😂

    • @Arsenaldude21
      @Arsenaldude21 3 месяца назад +6

      Just make sure you don't mention going down the pub with da boyz

    • @Rachel_M_
      @Rachel_M_ 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Arsenaldude21 good gosh!!! we'd never do such a thing when I was young...
      .... It was a bottle of 20-20 down the park before heading to the nearest rave 😂

    • @tryingcat
      @tryingcat 3 месяца назад +2

      ughhh i wish - i do health and the people 😭

  • @frankmacintyre5191
    @frankmacintyre5191 3 месяца назад +16

    Your class also depends on what your parents class is. So David Beckham can be a self made multi millionaire , but his father was a kitchen fitter, and his mother was a hairdresser and that and where he grew up will always make him working class .All the private jets and sports cars won't change that. But his kids will be middle class, and his grand kids who knows ? Grace Kelly became princess Grace of Monaco, and nobody's calling her kids working class oiks .

  • @Buc82
    @Buc82 24 дня назад +4

    I was actually surprised when my friend told me that in England you still have leasehold type of house ownership that was abolished on the continent. The new British govermnent restricted this on July 17th.

  • @airex12
    @airex12 3 месяца назад +61

    Would love to see a more detailed breakdown of the miners strikes and subsequent closures and the years that followed

    • @nukelertoonz8418
      @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah I second that; The 1926 General Strike is a great topic

  • @ZiggyZou
    @ZiggyZou 3 месяца назад +71

    As an American I find this whole class system so strange. I grew up upper middle class, but I had friends that grew up in trailer parks and grew up in broken homes. I didn’t care.
    We have a class system in the US, but not like this. Cmon England

    • @ReeRee_Donita
      @ReeRee_Donita 3 месяца назад +28

      England is stuck in the Georgian era. If you’re talented, intelligent or have a knack for something, they stifle your creativity or try to get you to humble your expectations. With you guys, you find a way to nurture, mature and make talent/knack great. There’s also opportunities for developing it which we don’t have here in the U.K. The U.K. has no regards for excellence, until you make it elsewhere and then they claim you. That’s why, in my opinion, they currently can’t even compete on the same global stage as some of their formerly “lower” counterparts. Quite a few former balkanised economies doing well right now and most of them are geographically closer to Russia.

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band 3 месяца назад +18

      Yeah England, switch your class system to be based only on income and race like us normal people 😂

    • @stephj9378
      @stephj9378 3 месяца назад

      Softer...

    • @mickimicki
      @mickimicki 3 месяца назад +5

      At least in England, they can all afford to see a doctor… even those from "broken homes" (whatever that is supposed to mean).

    • @joendeo1890
      @joendeo1890 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@mickimickiafford, maybe. But from what I hear the current conservative government has pushed austerity so hard for some specialists you will be waiting years for first appointments.

  • @rjflores438
    @rjflores438 3 месяца назад +121

    I grew up in both Manchester and London as a kid, on a council estate in South West London and a coucil estate in South Manchester, and I also lived in both cities as an adult as well, although I now live in North Yorkshire in a quiet rural area but I regularly visit London, and when I did last week, and especially when I visited areas like Chelsea, Richmond, Kew, Hampstead and St Johns Wood, there was just this horrible feeling inside me that I just didnt belong, despite the fact I got a degree and am an intelligent and decently dressed guy who has travelled, it always felt to me that I just dont have the social, economic and cultural capital or the accent of these people. Even sitting having a coffee in some of those areas made me feel even more of an outsider, as if I would be told to move away for the upper middle class patrons who deserve a seat and not me. Tje worst thing is that you feel ignored in these areas, I would prefer to be explicitly told I dont belong more than just feeling like I dont exist.

    • @manifestingcocreator3221
      @manifestingcocreator3221 3 месяца назад +25

      They're snobs. And you're not. They have always looked down on everyone else

    • @HomerIncognito
      @HomerIncognito 3 месяца назад +8

      I'm from Central Europe and I grew up in a somewhat rural area in a working class family. I got a degree and now I have a relatively good job. And I also feel the same way, while I can pass for middle class, I still identify with the working class more. I even prefer the company of my childhood friends, most of whom are much closer to the working class than I.

    • @hlc5410
      @hlc5410 3 месяца назад +25

      Fuck 'em. Get yer sen in pub and forget about it. The prices are gash and the beer's piss down South anyway, lad.

    • @nascarcricketer4702
      @nascarcricketer4702 3 месяца назад

      Broski u live in Merton council when u were london

    • @rjflores438
      @rjflores438 3 месяца назад +1

      @@nascarcricketer4702 I lived in Wandsworth for part of my youth.

  • @KVD-kx5wx
    @KVD-kx5wx 2 месяца назад +4

    Aristocracy
    Upper Class
    Middle Class
    Working Class
    RUclipsr

  • @francois37066
    @francois37066 2 месяца назад +9

    I am a French guy really enjoying this analysis. keep on.

  • @youknow6968
    @youknow6968 3 месяца назад +103

    In India, it's doesn't stop at the cutlery. It also varies from area to area.
    You can't use the same water well.
    You mustn't allow your shadow to touch the upper class.
    You can't walk in front of their house.
    You can't use the same temple. And so on...

    • @davidh6300
      @davidh6300 3 месяца назад +23

      Wow that's nasty.

    • @youknow6968
      @youknow6968 3 месяца назад

      @@davidh6300 that's the reality. Easily found on a Google search.

    • @amvideos1041
      @amvideos1041 3 месяца назад +4

      Only limited in dehati people lol.

    • @youknow6968
      @youknow6968 3 месяца назад +6

      @@amvideos1041 true, although not entirely. It happens in urban areas plenty, but I believe it's more refined, I've heard only untouchable students cleaning toilets in a school, urban area, not others.
      Plus, most people in India live in rural areas.

    • @amvideos1041
      @amvideos1041 3 месяца назад +2

      @@youknow6968 not happen in Bengal or Assam.

  • @janethammond5925
    @janethammond5925 3 месяца назад +92

    I remember being fascinated learning about the british class system in school (I'm from New Zealand) and seeing it played out on programmes such as Upstairs Downstairs. I was especially fascinated by the difference between upper middle class and lower middle class, and the attempts of those groups to climb the social ladder. I do remember Billy Connolly once saying that the aristocracy and working class get along ok as neither has any need to prove themselves...they are what they are. He said it was the middle class with their desire for upward mobility who were despised by both. Then again, in the words of Edmund Blackadder...." Toffs at the top, plebs at the bottom and me in the middle making pots of money out of both of them". Or words to that effect. 😊

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar 3 месяца назад +13

      The most often referenced example of this by most British people is Hyacinth Bucket from Keeping up Appearances. She pronounces her last name as "bouquet" and puts on a posh accent to appear better than everyone else.

    • @janethammond5925
      @janethammond5925 3 месяца назад +5

      @@TalesOfWar Yes I loved that series! Her embarassment of her working class roots was perfectly captured....love that her sisters and Onslow always managed to bring her maximum embarassment though 😊

    • @MozzieMutant
      @MozzieMutant 3 месяца назад +2

      This was basically the premise of saltburn

    • @sarahquill7423
      @sarahquill7423 3 месяца назад +2

      The British system has had a huge impact on our society as you'd expect, and while we don't really acknowledge it as much, I'd say Ao/NZ absolutely has the same nonsensical class system. You can be on the dole and still considered middle class just becausethats how you were raised, or be a homeowner but still considered practically an untouchable because you earn your living via sex work. Look at differently those two people would be treated by the justice system too, just as a couple of examples.

    • @janethammond5925
      @janethammond5925 3 месяца назад +2

      @@sarahquill7423 Yes I think we have remnants of the class system here, perhaps more in NZ than Australia? But people are often put into pigeonholes based on what their parents did, or how they were brought up. But it doesn't seem to matter quite as much over here...perhaps we have a more relaxed version of snobbery! 😊

  • @mrb6938
    @mrb6938 3 месяца назад +4

    im impressed, as a brit working class with a keen interest in topics discussed the guy gives good info, informed perspectives and doesn't push an agenda. subscribed mate well done im look for more investigative journalism and social commetary

  • @GolerGkA
    @GolerGkA 3 месяца назад +49

    Working class didn't lead revolutions around Europe. They provided the muscle, but revolutions were led by middle class and counter-Elite. Most of the victims of the French revolution were peasants from Vendee region. Most of the people who rose to power in French revolution were upper-middle class. Same in Russian revolution and most others.

    • @jointgib
      @jointgib 2 месяца назад +3

      yep, peasants revolt was the same, the old records for my town in Essex show it was the merchants who were wanted for arrest afterwards, basically shopkeepers running things mafia style

    • @aslc2547
      @aslc2547 Месяц назад

      @@GolerGkA That could well be the problem!!

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Месяц назад

      @@GolerGkA Well the English elite was dispossessed or killed off in 1066, then the Normans intermarried with English people so the lines became blurred.
      But it’s not like there weren’t any rebellions in our history either, the English Civil War being a good example. We could also class the Roundheads as middling class too.
      Interestingly enough, it was an Englishman called Thomas Paine who actually influenced the American War of Independence and in turn the French Revolution. Research the Rights of Man and Common Sense.

  • @FJames
    @FJames 3 месяца назад +4

    Some excellent points raised, very balanced and approached with thought. Brilliant video mate 👏

  • @senorpaella1492
    @senorpaella1492 3 месяца назад +142

    In Spain, it got so bad in the 1930s that we ended up having a civil war because of the clash of classes. Resulting in 1 million Spanish deaths. Unfortunately, those struggles still continue in Spain. But it is fascinating to see how different European countries adapt to their social hierarchies as well as the needs of their people.

    • @oh_rhythm
      @oh_rhythm 3 месяца назад +8

      Would you say you can still see remnants of classicism in Spain?
      I'm currently in Madrid, studying spanish, and I've travelled a bit through Andalusia and Valencia and the society feels very friendly and "eye to eye".... But it's obvious to me that without the language I just can't understand the culture.
      I'm slowly progressing, it'll be a while... But as i said, to me, the Spaniards seem very community oriented and not ones to be divided by classicism.

    • @guillesrl7569
      @guillesrl7569 3 месяца назад +15

      @@oh_rhythm Most definitely Spain has a classist undertone. I am a highly educated middle class expat living in Spain. Both lower and upper class individuals will make you feel you do not belong in the same lot as theirs.

    • @TheMingez2
      @TheMingez2 3 месяца назад

      @@guillesrl7569they're racist

    • @G_v._Losinj2_ImportantPlaylist
      @G_v._Losinj2_ImportantPlaylist 3 месяца назад

      A good docu by Juri Lina

    • @G_v._Losinj2_ImportantPlaylist
      @G_v._Losinj2_ImportantPlaylist 3 месяца назад

      *”CIach0fF0rzez”*

  • @pumpkinpatch5
    @pumpkinpatch5 3 месяца назад +34

    “We didn’t decapitate any kings…”
    *Cough! Charles the First, *cough! Cromwell, *cough!
    Regardless, I loved your upload mate and love the way you presented all this. Hit the nail on the head.

    • @user-sc7fk5ys6x
      @user-sc7fk5ys6x 3 месяца назад +3

      Cromwell’s proto Stalinism was way ahead of its time was it not?

    • @hannah60000
      @hannah60000 3 месяца назад +3

      Some of the “facts” in this video where shaky at best! However, the video tackled the topic in an engaging and well-presented way.

    • @TakeMe2UrDealer
      @TakeMe2UrDealer 3 месяца назад

      Didn't Cromwell die before he was dug up and his corpse decapitated?

    • @l.olliffe7364
      @l.olliffe7364 3 месяца назад +1

      This should have way more up-votes!

    • @010101110100
      @010101110100 2 месяца назад +2

      @@pumpkinpatch5 Cromwell was a ruling faction’s hatchetman. Ireland can tell you how much a man of the people he was

  • @georgeparsons7144
    @georgeparsons7144 3 месяца назад +4

    Its great how you present your videos, you provide great balance to them. We don't see much of that on social media or even on TV now. Keep up the good work

  • @TribalmonkeyS
    @TribalmonkeyS 2 месяца назад +3

    many people who think they got social mobility reward of solely working hard, "no-one was helping me up I did it all on my own ".
    you have to work hard but you also need a bit of luck . there are so many factors that can stop social mobility

  • @bhikariman-sigmamale
    @bhikariman-sigmamale 3 месяца назад +3

    I am from dalit community and have many friends from upper caste. We shared food. I know many upper caste people who are married to dalit. Caste system is a problem. Caste issues are reducing. And it has lost prominence. generalization is not good.

  • @MAJ0RMEL0DY
    @MAJ0RMEL0DY 3 месяца назад +12

    Doing a great job bud, top quality videos mate genuinely really watchable content made with passion. Top work!

  • @sunalwaysshinesonTVs
    @sunalwaysshinesonTVs 3 месяца назад +65

    Speaking of class & power, here's the key take away: power isnt something you have, it's something that's given, and while the working class possess the most power, they've given it all away.... effectively for free, for nothing. Actually not quite for nothing. They gave away their power in return for spite.... and unsurprisingly, to use towards each other.

    • @AutismIsUnstoppable
      @AutismIsUnstoppable 3 месяца назад +7

      True power comes from the barrel of a gun.

    • @chrisdonish
      @chrisdonish 3 месяца назад

      ​@AutismIsUnstoppable true power comes from the ability to lead people, what good is a gun if you have no one to use it?

    • @sunalwaysshinesonTVs
      @sunalwaysshinesonTVs 3 месяца назад +1

      @@chrisdonish NVM. Dude doesnt understand the concept. Force comes from the barrel of a gun, but these importance nuances wont register with "Autism is Unstoppable"...

    • @AutismIsUnstoppable
      @AutismIsUnstoppable 3 месяца назад +1

      @@chrisdonish Worked out pretty well for the guy who said it first.

    • @jhosue365
      @jhosue365 3 месяца назад

      And the only way a wirking class person can access that power is through proper taxation to the very rich.

  • @agnosticbeliever138
    @agnosticbeliever138 3 месяца назад +14

    I'm always real impressed by your videos. Thanks for sharing.

  • @stevegottenbass
    @stevegottenbass 26 дней назад +2

    Greate video
    Can see the amount of research you did -- nice!

  • @MichaelMayers-my3hm
    @MichaelMayers-my3hm 3 месяца назад +4

    As the middle class disappears so ladder upwards from the working class to wealth and a decent lifestyle also disappears. The gap between the working class and the middle becomes too much.

  • @jackiecornwall9160
    @jackiecornwall9160 3 месяца назад +6

    Within living memory, Britain lived in a state of unrecognised apartheid. The fault line running through society was whether or not you were a 'gentleman' (or lady). Qualifications for this evolved over time time, but the hallmark was breeding and education - before state education it would be public school, Oxbridge and posh parents. Gradually though, doctors and lawyers were accepted into the fold. You didn't have to be rich - 'impoverished gentlefolk' made the cut- because of their breeding and education. It was accepted that the 'common' people were there to respect and serve the gentry. So the different classes occupied different parts of the pub, train, public parks and every public space was effectively segregated.
    Oddly enough, many of the 'common' people were happy this this arrangement, believing it was ordained by God. You knew who you were and your place, and there were fewer of the insecurities and anxieties associated with meritocracy.

  • @habengurung8428
    @habengurung8428 3 месяца назад +4

    Amazing video, very insightful. First video ive watched on class that is not only well explained and informative, but entertaining too.

  • @camaderrygoat1314
    @camaderrygoat1314 3 месяца назад +80

    I have to say, as an Irish lad, I hate when people say oh the English this the English that... Most of those 'English' people give out about are actually Norman, not even the same race as the English... The Norman's were boss all over the place, and if you dig, you'll see that many top players are indeed decended from the Norman's... Class is really a racial thing, in the case of England that's forgotten but it's almost always a racial thing..

    • @matthewcoombs3282
      @matthewcoombs3282 3 месяца назад +24

      The names of the major aristocratic families are Anglicised French Norman names. These families still own huge areas of England. The Grosvenors, Cadogans, Beaufort, Howard's, Boelyns and Mercy's.

    • @liamchamba8114
      @liamchamba8114 3 месяца назад +19

      Ethnic*

    • @KolyaNickD
      @KolyaNickD 3 месяца назад +10

      That is a very accurate observation. I live in the west country near to the famous private schools Sherborne Boys and Sherborne Girls - seeing the kids walking around town you can clearly see that the upper middle to upper class are a different ethnicity from the local Anglo-Saxon working class.

    • @michaelpearl-r8w
      @michaelpearl-r8w 3 месяца назад +10

      This is an argument That I have put forward for quite some time, I am a working class English man, my family has been exploited by the ruling classes for as long back in history as I am able to research. Two were transported as convicts to America for poaching. One was pressed into the Royal navy in the Napoleonic wars. I finished my schooling at the age of sixteen with no option of taking it further, not through lack of ability but through lack of opportunity, so I started my adult life as one of Thatchers unemployed and its been a struggle ever since.

    • @evm6177
      @evm6177 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes feels racial indeed! And considerably even more today in the UK, as it is for the world at large dare I say. 😒

  • @TWHowl
    @TWHowl 3 месяца назад +4

    “Most people are normal” exactly, yet individualistic cultures instill dreams of stardom into them. Be a baker or plumber & be happy.

    • @hannelorefly
      @hannelorefly 3 месяца назад

      And get paid proper wages.

    • @TWHowl
      @TWHowl 3 месяца назад

      @@hannelorefly Bakery, hardware store, Main Street, nothing but cobwebs, but everyone’s got a content channel 😆 madness

  • @scallamander4899
    @scallamander4899 3 месяца назад +29

    How we tolerate and make light of a class system in this country is beyond me. Someone is basically denied or given a whole host of opportunities based on who their parents are. If it was based on race or gender or something else we'd be up in arms, but somehow it's okay to do it based on your accent and your family background. Amazing for a 'progressive democracy'.

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Месяц назад +1

      @@scallamander4899 Because it’s no better in most countries. The difference is, we’re frank about it while others hide behind a different face.

    • @Bromar1
      @Bromar1 26 дней назад

      @@phoenixrose1192 and that makes it ok because?

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 20 дней назад

      @@Bromar1 It’s not ok, but it’s just the way it is.

  • @fallfountain6038
    @fallfountain6038 3 месяца назад +52

    The start was so funny 🤣

    • @gunterification
      @gunterification 3 месяца назад +3

      Vlaams belang?

    • @fallfountain6038
      @fallfountain6038 3 месяца назад

      @@gunterification Vlaanderen weer van ons!

    • @gunterification
      @gunterification 3 месяца назад

      @@fallfountain6038 yup maar het gaat weer moeilijk worden zoals altijd.

    • @albertoamazing1
      @albertoamazing1 3 месяца назад

      @@gunterification Ben jij niet erg racistisch?

    • @fallfountain6038
      @fallfountain6038 3 месяца назад

      @@gunterification Na 9 juni zal het hopelijk makkelijker worden

  • @keggs73
    @keggs73 3 месяца назад +9

    @ 8:30 The Two Ronnies skit with John Cleese is class, no pun intended 😃🤓

  • @baddriddimworkshop
    @baddriddimworkshop 3 месяца назад +28

    In the western world it has became more revelant to talk about socio cultural background than social classes. Growing up in town or in the country makes a difference, growing up with books at home, etc... i think i never commented here but i love the work and topics here, i've always been fascinated in the study of different humain groups (these last years i discovered thomas sowell, if i dont agree with everything, his study of socio ethnical groups around tthe world within history makes a lot of sens imo).

    • @johnegan5967
      @johnegan5967 3 месяца назад

      You forgot to close your parenthese

    • @baddriddimworkshop
      @baddriddimworkshop 3 месяца назад +1

      @@johnegan5967 yup. sooooory. wow! 18 likes in a few days, i wouldnt have thought. But if it brings poeople to go seek about Sowell, that's cool.

  • @niwa_s
    @niwa_s 3 месяца назад +12

    It's not all rosy on the continent, either. Germany still hangs onto a school system that is blatant institutionalised classism. Filtering 10-year-olds so they go to the "right" type of school leading to the "right" qualifications (trade, 'nicer' trade, uni) is considered some kind of cultural treasure. People placed into one of the lesser tracks *can* still grind their way to higher education, but that ends up taking a lot longer; it's basically an endless game of catch-up.

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Месяц назад

      @@niwa_s Thank you! You are one of the few people on here who has perspective. It’s no worse in the UK than anywhere else in the world, we’re just frank and honest about it while other countries hide behind a different face.

  • @GT-tj1qg
    @GT-tj1qg Месяц назад +2

    My class radar is fire! Let me do you... your parents rose out of the working class to be middle class, and you had middle-class friends.

  • @user-gv6kd9sv6j
    @user-gv6kd9sv6j 3 месяца назад +12

    You seem to suggest that Sunak got power through hard work. What I think happened was high expectations from his parents and from his educational environment. You’re the odd one out if you don’t get into power if you’re in those circles. He just wanted to please his parents and peers. No-one who genuinely loves and cares for themselves would choose that path.
    In the school that I went to, in my year of ~100 I was one of ~5 people to go to uni. Did I work hard? Not really, I just didn’t have any friends so there was nothing else to do but study. And, being an immigrant, I had to work extra hard to meet the expectations my mum had placed on me.

  • @DACatface
    @DACatface 3 месяца назад +50

    There are only 2 classes left in the UK:
    The Owner class (other people work to like their pockets)
    The Worker Class (you work to survive)

    • @stanisawzokiewski3308
      @stanisawzokiewski3308 3 месяца назад +6

      False dichotomy fallacy.
      There is many social classes.
      There is the owner, investor, small enterpenouer, manual working, intelectual working, managerial, political and journalist classes

    • @smo-king6504
      @smo-king6504 3 месяца назад +6

      ​@@stanisawzokiewski3308not really, either you work for your money/living or others work for your money/living its one of those 2 and the things you listed fall under those 2 categories

    • @Casual93
      @Casual93 3 месяца назад +14

      ​@@stanisawzokiewski3308massive and unnecessary complications. Journalist class? Cmon.

    • @ikthranithul6000
      @ikthranithul6000 3 месяца назад +3

      @@smo-king6504 That level of over simplification is so astronomically idiotic you have to be joking. Someone on Universal Credit who doesn't bother looking for a job is suddenly part of the "owner class" because they are not working for their income? really?

    • @stanisawzokiewski3308
      @stanisawzokiewski3308 3 месяца назад

      @@Casual93 I quess information distribution and narrative creation is a bit too long.
      Maybe media class would be better, they arent quite celebrities but not exactly writers. I guess we could squezee them into those two depending on how much influence they have or how much work they do.

  • @iisig
    @iisig 3 месяца назад +16

    Britain did decapitate a king. That was a whole important part of history where parliament gained power above that of the king because he had betrayed his people.

    • @Derederi
      @Derederi 2 месяца назад +1

      Dont bring evidence and reason here.
      Stop taking away their hope of ascending in class. Else they might revolt. This video would be banned.

  • @teachmemaster2669
    @teachmemaster2669 14 дней назад

    Such a thoughtful well-put together video. Great job!

  • @JAMAICADOCK
    @JAMAICADOCK 2 месяца назад +1

    The game changer was imperialism, When Britain started exploiting slaves and peasants abroad in Ireland, the Caribbean, India etc serfdom became superfluous both to aristocrats and the gentry, who making a fortune from tobacco, tea, sugar, spices, cotton etc etc had not as much need to exploit domestic agriculture.
    In fact, many turned their estates into vast pleasure gardens while clearing peasants from their small holdings. As poverty in the countryside increased, many poor peasants surged into the cities to work in new industries
    Industries that fashioned products from the vast glut of raw materials emanating from the empire.

  • @ImmersiveSportsScience
    @ImmersiveSportsScience 3 месяца назад +45

    2:40 The unlucky aristocrats in this system were the Saxon noble families. When you look at genealogy, you find many but not all nobles will have a direct link to William conqueror. That's because they seized land off the Saxon nobles and gave it to the Norman Nobles. There were only 3 Saxon families who survived the Norman conquest. Many of them moved to the Byzantine empire where many Joined up and became Varangians, wh were the historically the Byzantine personal Viking body gaurd.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 3 месяца назад +1

      The King descends from Alfred the Great

    • @Cadence733
      @Cadence733 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@jasonhaven7170 yes but only indirectly.

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 3 месяца назад

      @@Cadence733 What does that mean?

    • @jasonhaven7170
      @jasonhaven7170 3 месяца назад +1

      @@Cadence733 By that logic, the King is also not related to the Stuarts or Tudors, because they had to go through 50 other people and a woman to get to the Hanovers.

    • @pelagaki97
      @pelagaki97 3 месяца назад +1

      I am greek and I find this very interesting
      Where can I find more info?

  • @Jo-sd3ch
    @Jo-sd3ch 3 месяца назад +20

    Another great one Jimmy. Just one thing:
    These days there is a separation of INCOME CLASS & SOCIAL CLASS. Although there used to be an intersection, these days its kinda important to distinguish

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band 3 месяца назад +2

      Good thing he just made a video about it.

  • @berkesinanyetkin5722
    @berkesinanyetkin5722 3 месяца назад +16

    My dad studied in England for a brief while when he was young. I never quite got why he believes in some stuff regarding "the levels of people" he does throughout my life, we're an educated but definitely not wealthy family and where he was born they didn't even have electricity until he was in his early teens. The chain of education if you can call it that started with my grandpa and his brothers, they were from a rather neglected village in a rather neglected city in Anatolia and together they all supported each other through school and all became teachers, judges and prosecutors. Money doesn't run in the blood but he still holds some of these beliefs especially those from the middle class you've mentioned in the video. Crazy how 2-3 years in a foreign nation can affect you. Thanks for finally enabling me to understand some of his views.

    • @stevencooper4422
      @stevencooper4422 2 месяца назад +2

      At least that kind of family mindset helps you to avoid "slumming it" by having the confidence to at least make ends meet. Sometimes the worst thing to happen to poor people is the mindset that things can never change for themselves, whether real or not.

    • @berkesinanyetkin5722
      @berkesinanyetkin5722 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@stevencooper4422 I guess so. After commenting that paragraph I dove deeper into the topic, apparently the belief of being born a minimum wage worker and dying that way is quite popular amongst the working class.

  • @philip.morris
    @philip.morris 2 месяца назад +4

    Your videos are brilliant, very interesting.

  • @RobertWarman-i9l
    @RobertWarman-i9l 3 месяца назад +3

    I when talking on the phone or in direct bissiness conversations I unconsciously step into a formal correct English,, a trait learned from listening to my mother as she was a secretary in good position for many years I'm guessing it has served me well

    • @FunkyTomo
      @FunkyTomo Месяц назад

      I do that, telephone voice!!

  • @chcomes
    @chcomes 3 месяца назад +13

    I like the turn that the channel has taken. Well documented, open, good commentary.

  • @farleymarly2575
    @farleymarly2575 3 месяца назад +15

    I dont have working class friends is classic nobility at its finest

    • @dannyfar7989
      @dannyfar7989 3 месяца назад

      So if I don't have any friends I'm noble too?
      'Cause I wouldn't have working class friends then.

    • @truthseeker8483
      @truthseeker8483 3 месяца назад

      😁

  • @theoteddy9665
    @theoteddy9665 3 месяца назад +5

    maaaate, that was awesome, funny and packed info, I thoroughly enjoyed this video.. wow🙋🇨🇿❤️

  • @amirmichaelroyer
    @amirmichaelroyer Месяц назад +1

    To be quite honest, there are glaring inaccuracies regarding this “history” of the British class system, not recalling the overthrow of Charles I, the very gradual long process of the rise of the merchants, the idea of noblesse oblige that held sway before the Industrial Revolution, and other related concepts.

  • @missbumblebee8633
    @missbumblebee8633 3 дня назад

    Well done, thoughtful and funny. That's always the best combination.

  • @helenagackowska8398
    @helenagackowska8398 3 месяца назад +4

    These videos are great. It's my birthday today and this is a fab gift! :D

  • @nukelertoonz8418
    @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад +9

    17:29 What about the execution of King Charles I?

    • @JimmyTheGiant
      @JimmyTheGiant  3 месяца назад +5

      shit, cheers for info!

    • @nukelertoonz8418
      @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад

      @@JimmyTheGiant Nah its all good man (the English Civil war was in large a parliamentary war against the monarchy to establish an English Commonwealth but what’s really interesting is in under 10 years the Brits gave up on that idea and reinstated the ExKing’s banished son (Charles II))
      Anyways the video was amazing, really informative and entertaining I’m definitely recommending it to my mates. Just some advice maybe look into cutting down the amount of cuts to different medias especially if it’s not representing anything new? (but reflect on it depending on others’ feedback ig). Also I’d love more specific references like you went over the peasants’ revolt but not directly so that’s another thing.
      All in all, I’m going to watch a few more of your videos tonight

  • @moisesamaya90
    @moisesamaya90 3 месяца назад +31

    Squarespace maintaining jimmy social class status 🎉

  • @nilimadas9143
    @nilimadas9143 28 дней назад

    Entertaining and informative.My British mother met my Bengali middle class father at Oxford where they were studying.They married at the height of India's Independence and raised three children.All three went to university and did Masters' degrees.My professor mother from Delhi University,took up a Spalding Professorship in Oxford after retirement.Wrote 17.books ,became an Internationally known specialist on Gandhian studies ,and died at 93.

  • @mdas5990
    @mdas5990 3 месяца назад +7

    It is caste sytem , it is same. Just named differently. House of loads 😂 is biggest joke in a democracy.

    • @vatsal7640
      @vatsal7640 3 месяца назад +4

      Agreed, house of lords should be scrapped.

  • @emilyh7912
    @emilyh7912 3 месяца назад +2

    Very interesting. As an Australian living in the UK, the class consciousness of the population is both foreign and exasperating. I understand why it exists, but it's just so fucking weird.

  • @alexanderoweka9716
    @alexanderoweka9716 3 месяца назад +4

    At 17:17, I thought the English revolution (Redcoats vs Cavaliers) led to the beheading of Charles 1

    • @lawrence.solutions
      @lawrence.solutions 2 месяца назад

      Quite @jimmythegiant. Check out Oliver Cromwells romp which led to the beheading of the monarch and the establishment of the Commonwealth. After his death we did the most British thing imaginable and said sorry, invited the monarchy back (with restricted powers) and we pretended it didn't happen. This was long before the Terrors of the French revolution and tore the country part to unify it. Yet we often over look it or forget it and it certainly isn't celebrated or taught much in our schools! I love your fresh takes on history so get stuck into this bit please 👍

    • @phoenixrose1192
      @phoenixrose1192 Месяц назад +1

      I’m frankly surprised he forgot about the English Civil War. It’s essentially the reason why parliament actually runs the country now while the monarch is a figurehead.

  • @kroooassant9899
    @kroooassant9899 27 дней назад

    This guy is great, I have been using youtube for more than a decade and his video are always so well sourced and informed.

  • @stefanpuxon
    @stefanpuxon 3 месяца назад +2

    The crown owns every inch of land in England, Scotland and Wales, as well as about 20 miles out to sea. No one “owns” land here, they just lease it from the crown.
    Their power is not just symbolic.
    But better for them if you think that’s the case.

  • @JaredJohnston
    @JaredJohnston 3 месяца назад +8

    Meritocracy in Britain existed between 1945 and 1975 until selective state schools were abolished

    • @tomwillcocks8627
      @tomwillcocks8627 3 месяца назад

      They still exist don’t they? It would be nice to have more but there’s definitely still lots

  • @paulflute
    @paulflute 3 месяца назад +4

    one fairly major mistake that a lot of people make is the idea that the king has only symbolic power.. this is not the case.. The royal family have huge sweeping political authority and they use it constantly.. this is an episode in itself..

  • @MrNibal01
    @MrNibal01 2 месяца назад +2

    Watching the video as a French guy, hearing "As you all know the French are the worst people on Earth" in a semi-gentrified british accent. Feeling complete.

  • @zknarc
    @zknarc 3 месяца назад

    You deserve serious respect for consistantly taking on very contentious issues and doing a well balanced job of it

  • @maradall
    @maradall 3 месяца назад +1

    Very accurate overview, and much more entertaining than my school history lessons!
    Also spot-on about the current reality today... not looking good, in the UK or anywhere else.

  • @Natez-vw4kd
    @Natez-vw4kd 3 месяца назад +19

    I think you missed a step. King Charles I? House of Stuart? Beheaded in 1649? Ring anything at all? Maybe Oliver Cromwell?

    • @mrmug4000
      @mrmug4000 3 месяца назад +10

      ‘We didnt decapitate any kings’ upset me more than it should have

    • @nukelertoonz8418
      @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад +2

      I thought it would be interesting to go over how they brought back the royalty showing maybe deeper fears within British society of not having this class system that remains ingrained to this day

    • @mrmug4000
      @mrmug4000 3 месяца назад +1

      @@nukelertoonz8418 it was mostly political how they brought back the royalty, done by aristocrats in the house of lords who had been kicked out of parliament by the army in prides purge the average person was mostly indifferent everything they jsut wanted the wars to be over and restoration of the monarchy was sold to them by the aristocracy

    • @nukelertoonz8418
      @nukelertoonz8418 3 месяца назад +1

      @@mrmug4000 Yes but there was a movement to include more of the lower classes in the wars from the roundheads’ side. Especially with the development of the New Model Army. Also, the rise of the ‘merchant class’ was after this period, during the interregnum as that’s when Cromwell mostly started expanding to the Caribbeans and passing laws like the Navigation Act (although Elizabeth kinda started it beforehand im pretty sure). So my point is that it’s all linked together; this point I feel might’ve started to change things?

    • @Natez-vw4kd
      @Natez-vw4kd 3 месяца назад +4

      @@mrmug4000 To be brutally honest, if you're making a video about British history and talk about the monarchy and are completely unaware of this fact of it.. You probably shouldn't be making videos about it as you don't know WTF you're talking about. Because from this moment on, the rest of the video was completely wasted on me as I spent the rest of it picking my jaw up off the floor.

  • @kayjami1996
    @kayjami1996 3 месяца назад +12

    My only disappointment
    Cannot, I repeat, cannot talk about how the merchants and middle class emerged without (at the very least) touching on the plunder of other countries i.e. colonialism. Before Capitalism there was Mercantilism.

    • @Derederi
      @Derederi 2 месяца назад +1

      Exactly. As if merchants were holy and saint, rather than becoming rich on the spoils of war and the slavery of colonialism.

  • @MrGetzenwithit
    @MrGetzenwithit 3 месяца назад +3

    "We didn't decapitate any Kings..."
    Oliver Cromwell must be rolling in his grave LOL.

    • @ianglenn2821
      @ianglenn2821 3 месяца назад +1

      the current guy they call king is supposedly the third Charles... huh I wonder who the previous 2 Charlie guys were?

  • @royandersen465
    @royandersen465 9 дней назад

    I really enjoyed your presentation Jimmy. Well done.

  • @alistairmonaghan6515
    @alistairmonaghan6515 3 месяца назад +12

    The amount of oldies that still buy the Daily Mail, queuing up and complaining about waiting hours in the NHS says a lot about our current society.