See, at least you realize you are a tiny country with a small population and the ego adapted to that.
I am French and we are a country with a great past - but not looking ahead. We still assume that we radiate across the world and that our voice counts.
It does not, and this has to be clear. There are countries that can influence events, but this is not ours.
A typical example is how angry we were after the recent pirate act of Lukashenko (Belarus forced a EU plane flying form one EU country to another to land when above their territory to arrest an opponent of theirs). Our president said that there would be consequences and there are no consequences.
This is not to spit on my contry but sometimes egos are much bigger than the reality. We are in good company there.
I am British but have lived in [redacted] for a while now and I feel the same as you about [redacted].
If Brexit showed us anything it is that the UK is no way near as important as they like to think they are. Watching the UK and [redacted] at loggerheads has been a mix of frustration and amusement for someone like myself clearly caught in the crossfire.
As an "outsider" in [redacted] my biggest complaint is the staunch opposition to change. Any change. As you say they simply cannot look ahead. It is as if they only know how to live in their past glories rather than working towards future ones.
The UK is sort of the opposite but in a terribly executed manner. They have dreams of the future but do everything possible to make those dreams harder to achieve due to arrogance they can "do it alone". Harping back to "the good old days of the Empire" and "Blitz spirit!" as if the Blitz was some wonderful time (wtf?).
The sad thing is the [redacted] could learn a lot from each other but seems both sides are too myopic to do so.
I am French and we are a country with a great past - but not looking ahead.
I feel the same as you about both the British and the French.
Add India to the list.
The right-wing in India are obsessed about our past, and worse, desperate to associate everything about it with "Hindu religion" or "Hindu culture" despite the huge influence of Buddhism, Islam and the imperialists (largely the British who finally got the upper hand on our sub-continent).
"We were the richest country in the world till we were looted by Muslims and Christians."
"We had brilliant Hindu brahmin scientists who excelled in mathematics, medicine and astronomy / astrology.
"Look at these huge ancient temples built with extraordinary artistry that have survived for centuries."
And so on, are proof of our "great past" that they believe automatically should earn us the respect of the world.
In their obsession with the past, they totally disregard the achievements of modern independent India just because our freedom movement were lead by people like Gandhi and Nehru who opposed their idea of a theocratic-fascist state, and chose to create a secular state that treated everyone as an equal and gave every citizen equal rights.
For a country that won its independence in a non-violent manner from the most powerful empire of the world, and a country that has lifted millions of its citizens from poverty and is today self sufficient in agriculture (one of the largest in the world), and one of the few countries with an active and self-sufficient space, nuclear and defence program we have really made a lot of strides.
But for the right, India is not "respected" by the world because anti-Hindus chose secularism and thus since "we Hindus" don't respect our "Hinduness", the world also ignores Hindu cultural achievement and denies us our true place.
Have you seen the coverage of the interview of Roman Protasevich? The visible injuries on his wrist and his recently adjusted attitude are alarming.
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-57353413
TV/film - is there something new even remotely popular across the world that's French?
It was the case up to the 2000's, I think, but I can't even remember the name of a new French director since then. The last one I remember is Luc Besson. Kind of similar story for actors/actresses, are there some major French stars popular across the world?
I feel most of the influences are leftovers from a different era, folks like Depardieu.
TV/film - is there something new even remotely popular across the world that's French?
Indian here who doesn't know French - just finished watching all four seasons of Dix Pour Cent (Call My Agent) and really enjoyed it. I also watched Lupin (after learning that it stars Omar Sy who I loved in the movie The Intouchables).
I am French and we are a country with a great past - but not looking ahead. We still assume that we radiate across the world and that our voice counts.
It does not, and this has to be clear. There are countries that can influence events, but this is not ours.
A typical example is how angry we were after the recent pirate act of Lukashenko (Belarus forced a EU plane flying form one EU country to another to land when above their territory to arrest an opponent of theirs). Our president said that there would be consequences and there are no consequences.
This is not to spit on my contry but sometimes egos are much bigger than the reality. We are in good company there.