I didn't state that to prove such a connection, it was to answer your question about how their interests aligned before WWII.Slash Gallagher wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2019 6:49 am
I fail to see how that proves that American exceptionalism is just a variation on British exceptionalism.
When it comes to the exceptionalism matter, one just has to look at Whiggish Historiography to see the connection as it presumes that all of history has been working towards an ideal, an ideal which happens to be everything the British system is.
Americans shake their head at that and then say "Silly English! No, sorry, but we're the end development of all of human history". One can see that expressed in was like Star Treks Federation and its fundamentally idealistic American sentiments.
In the end the Brits, and most of all the English, are a very arrogant lot. I say that as someone not simply of British descent, but from a family that kept the old cultural flames burning bright. It's a very annoying thing about us, but it's also the reason the thing behind their historically strong conviction to get things done, something which Americans then took up and continued.
I don't know how much of that is still alive in the British today, but I'm happy to see that still going, if faded, in Americans as nothing can be done without conviction, even if it does wind up a mistake.