Hehehe. Faced with the most advanced military machine of its time the British people decided diplomacy was better than certain death. [/quote]Some people did welcome the Romans into the UK, indeed the first relationships, although the Romans may have desired invasion, were decidedly diplomatic.
I don't think the rulers welcomed the roman invasion or the intial contact much. The initial contact resulted in a King being "installed" and his rival being "brought to terms". I doubt the rival welcomed the romans even if the installed king did.I suppose you could argue that circumstances were somewhat similar, in that the people had little say while the rulers welcomed and encouraged the association.
I doubt any "culture" can be easily defined. If it can please demonstrate. Certainly this island has had 1000 years to become its own entity and it is clearly not the same culture as many of the people who choose to settle here.My point was that 'British' culture (which really is a misnomer, as there is no homogenous British or even English culture that can be taken in historical context like this) isn't something that is easily identified, and can be shown as something that 'X' is a threat to.
Again the term "a few" immigrants is massively misleading. The culture has evolved at its own pace, forced and massive immigration brings a very different evolution with it. If 80% of the native population are unhappy with the levels of immigration then clearly immigration is not "working" in the eyes of the vast majority.Society has changed massively in the last 60-70 years, and it would have done if immigration had been zero, due to social and economic shifts on a massive scale. If we are so intent on preserving tradition 'british' culture, then we have far more to worry about than a few immigrants.