Brighteye said:
This is dross, rhetoric and deliberately misleading. A drop in life expectancy within a period of rule does not show the effect of that rule: it probably shows effects that occurred within that rule.
Actually it
does show the effectiveness of that rule, or more precisely, the level of
neglect and
absence of policies to contain the effects of famine. Such phenomena did happen fairly regularly in India's history (it's got a high rural element to its economy and always has done) but....you should compare the policies of the British against those that pre-colonial leaders such as Sher Shah Suri had in such events [*1], and you'll find that you, sir, are quite mistaken. A look at Parliamentary records from the 1880s, and also in the early 20th century, shows evidence of British parliamentarians pretty much crapping their pants over what to do about famine. They simply didn't have any response policies in place, unlike many Indians rulers who had a tradition of such policies. This was made all the worse by what I speak about in the next paragraphs...
Brighteye said:
What was the life expectancy before the British came to India?
You mean, what was the life expectancy 400 years previous? I think you know why I won't bother answering that one. You could find much the same with British life expectancies over the same period.
Brighteye said:
If you call being ruled over by millionnaire maharajas 'just fine' that's acceptable, but to claim that this was a huge contrast with the British rule is ridiculous. The Indian princes absorbed far more of the money than the British, leaving their populations at least as poor.
In a word, bollocks. Once again, if you went and had a look at the policies enacted by pre-colonial rulers (such as Akbar [*2]) then you will see that there was unprejudiced access to government positions - unlike under British rule, which saw a veritable ceiling (issuing from racist policies) being placed upon Indians to work in their own country.
Brighteye said:
The Indians were not generally subjugated or worked to the bone. Nor were most of them deliberately half-starved (if any at all). It is true that for much of colonial rule the British regarded themselves as superior, and beatings and 'brutalisation' took place for simple things like getting in someone's way.
I'm sorry brighteye, but to someone who has spent much time reading up and writing on all these matters, your post comes across as somewhat ignorant. Again, look to policies the Brits enacted around "indentured labour" (who do you think built India's railways? The Brits? Don't make me laugh!) and find that what you have posted is quite erroneous, or at least highly economical with the truth. And you say I've posted rhetoric!
To bring it back onto topic for the thread title, look to British policies in Africa to find both slave labour and also indentured labour for black Africans. Once again, do you think the white man got his hands dirty building the east African railway?! That goes a bit further than "regarding themselves as superior". Not only did they regard themselves as superior, they legislated, fired guns, established sweatshops and enacted taxation policies which made their opinion real.
Brighteye said:
It's not really much different from the princes' ways of punishing a crime by bagging anyone who was nearby. At least with the British you could avoid that sort of injustice by avoiding the white people.
Sorry, I'm not getting what you're saying here. Please re-phrase.
---
[*1 & *2] Look to
this article posted in History Forum by Allhailindia for a snappy bite that will save you reading many other texts that say much the same (which are probably kept from you / neglected in Oxford to preserve your supremist bias).