Are these 2 countries objectively the best in history?

are these 2 countries objectively the best in history?

No

>implying

Funny joke there

Oh yeah, I forgot about luxembourg

that's a nice flag ship you've got there

would be a shame if someone...

steal it

at least half my country didn't secede after watching a play

>at least half my country didn't secede after watching a play

daily reminder that the Netherlands invaded and occupied your country and you guys called it a "glorious revolution"

I'm not British

But on that topic, he was invited by protestants (who were the majority) to crown himself

0 battles were fought outside of a few skirmishes. It was a coup, not a war.

Tell me more

>sjw shitholes
>populist shithole
checked

well hello there

like father, like son

>France
Consistent great power since the early Middle Ages

>England/GB/UK
Meme country that only became relevant after the Renaissance

Maybe because france had a population 5x the size of Britain until the 1800's?

What is a 'meme' country? What the fuck do you even mean by that?

It means he's from /int/ and has never touched a girl.

Middle-Age was a French World while Modern World is an English World, both stand at the top.

>They don't have a dozen+ aircraft carriers
>They don't have a million man army
>They don't have the largest economy in the world
>They aren't the current global hegemon, controlling or influencing more nations than either country at its prime

Either you are the bitch or you are the master and it seems you are not the master so you are the bitch

If you count the British colonies. Like America.

More like we stole your leader because ours wasn't working.
And you still had to share the rule with Mary II.

That's a nice fleet you got there

I think the rise of American influence on the world especially post World Wars is astounding. However their rapid power gain seems to have peaked decades ago and now they're going to shit like the rest of the west.

It would be a shame

if some cavalry happened to pass by

Your from /pol/

In history, yes.