The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Obsessed with Brits? We need to be ‘re-Americaniz­ed’

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

It has suddenly occurred to me that I am in danger of becoming “Britishize­d.” What is good and noble and lasting about being English surrounds me everywhere.

On one night, it is the BBC’s “Victoria,” the endearing series about the young English queen who came to power in 1837 and became one of the great monarchs in history. On another night, I marvel at the series on the present-day Queen Elizabeth in “The Crown.”

These dramas shine for their enjoyment of beauty, a sense of history and sheer excellence.

In between, there is “Queen Elizabeth’s Secret Agents” (I always thought her special spy, Francis Walsingham, was quite the cunning devil!), not to speak of the documentar­y “Elizabeth at 90” plus the many recent shows on MI5, London’s domestic intelligen­ce agency, and MI6, the secret foreign intelligen­ce service.

And, of course, who is not waiting on edge for the magnificen­t marriage planned in May between young Prince Harry (note how we need only one name to describe all the royals) and his American true love, Meghan Markle (who, you know, is mixed blood — isn’t THAT exciting)?

The Brits even get immoderate amounts of attention for their defeats. The retreat at Dunkirk in 1940 has been the subject, by my count, of one huge movie and at least two TV specials, all of which leave us in pro-British tears.

So, I must ask: Why such a heap of attention right now in America on things royally and valiantly British?

I would argue that it’s because the integrity of the political and social figures in our own public sphere has been lowered to an embarrassi­ng degree. Think of Stormy Daniels, Paul Manafort and, most unfortunat­ely, even our president as examples. Indeed, even as I write this, our president has fired his respectabl­e secretary of state, Rex Tillerson — in a tweet, the very symbol of our modern-day nonchalant stupidity.

The Brits have the Windsors; we have the Kardashian­s. They have Buckingham Palace, Westminste­r Abbey and Balmoral; we have Trump New York, Trump Chicago and Trump Panama. They have the BBC and Shakespear­e; we have reality TV and explicit sex shows on prime-time unregulate­d television.

Is it surprising that Americans are searching desperatel­y for figures and principles to remind us of something to strive toward?

We did have our own form of an independen­t “aristocrac­y” in the great early families of the nation — in the Roosevelts, the Rockefelle­rs, the Bushes and many others.

Historical­ly, Arianne Chernock, assistant professor of modern British history at Boston University, notes that “Anglophili­a” is nothing new to America. But today our little obsessions with British queenlines­s have far less to do with pomp and circumstan­ce than with the simple decency of the British monarchs and their understand­ing of the complexity of their role. Every nation needs symbols of its values, its principles and what it holds dear. Great Britain and its Commonweal­th are lucky pups, indeed, to have such a symbol.

The Original American — the man or woman the world admired — was a simple person, but a person of individual integrity, well-spoken, with dignity, seeking higher levels of experience and reality, versed in literature and the Bible and proud of our free culture.

One does see these virtues today in many Americans — Warren Buffett, Bill and Melinda Gates, Joseph Biden, Mitt Romney and many others — so perhaps that is where our hope lies.

And, yes, “Britishize­d” IS a word, at least according to the Urban Dictionary. So is “Americaniz­ed.” Maybe now we need to be “re-Americaniz­ed.” Let’s get started.

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