Remember the “British
Invasion?” It occurred in the 1960s (and 1970s) when bands like The
Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Who, The Animals, The Kinks, The Hollies-- and
several others—became wildly successful in the United States.
Can you name me a wildly popular
British band today? (Okay, other than The Rolling Stones.)
Crickets.
There is a reason for this, albeit
a sad one. Britain is spent. Its society is in decay. It has lost its
toughness, its confidence, and its creative excellence. A kind of benign
snobbery has been replaced by an ennui and world-weariness more suitable to the
French.
The notions of free speech and
individual rights are in tatters. Britain is the victim of another kind of
invasion and is being effectively annexed by mass migration from Muslim lands.
The vast majority of these immigrants are unwilling to assimilate to British
culture, odd for people fleeing violence and depredation. They are, in fact,
demanding that England—and the English—assimilate to them.
Remarkably, many Brits appear
willing to do just that.
In which case, music may eventually
be banned in (formerly) Jolly
Olde England. An England that is undeniably old, but increasingly less
jolly.
Tragically, the U.S. (which somehow
survived two other British invasions in the distant past), as well as several
other Western nations, are following hard on the heels of Britain.
And that should not be music
to anyone’s ears.
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