Yes jonas you right. This is basically impostor syndrome or what I like to call brown sepoy syndrome. Very few indians or people of indian descent love the empire so much they start viewing it from the eyes of colonial power. This common among people who were traitors to their own people and served British in some position. Later British awarded them by taking them back to Britain. That's where the sense of 'we' emerges in such ppl. Which is kind of partially true but mostly misguided.
Slavery started thousands of years before we got into the game ...fact check your history .
@@roddgrieve7287 you’re being purposefully obtuse when you know the context of this discussion is trans Atlantic slavery, so get off your high horse
"We"?! This guy is literally Indian
He is born and bought up here... He is British in every way... He pays his taxes here not in INDIA.... Just live with the facts.
Yes jonas you right. This is basically impostor syndrome or what I like to call brown sepoy syndrome. Very few indians or people of indian descent love the empire so much they start viewing it from the eyes of colonial power. This common among people who were traitors to their own people and served British in some position. Later British awarded them by taking them back to Britain. That's where the sense of 'we' emerges in such ppl. Which is kind of partially true but mostly misguided.
Born in the UK, educated in the UK, studied at Cambridge University, wrote for a prestigious UK newspaper (The Times). So yes, it is "we" not "them".