:00:14. > :00:19.Welcome to Washington and to BBC News The Editors. Is America
:00:19. > :00:25.finished as the world's superpower? Immigration, good or bad for
:00:25. > :00:35.Britain? Is Russia now a rogue state? And has something gone
:00:35. > :00:44.
:00:44. > :00:51.seriously wrong with English It's almost 50 years to the very
:00:51. > :00:59.day since I first came to America, a gawky, innocent 18-year-old. I
:00:59. > :01:04.was absolutely blown away by the place. It seemed like -- light
:01:04. > :01:07.years away from class-driven Britain. I adore this country still,
:01:07. > :01:10.but it doesn't feel like the future any more. The rest of the developed
:01:10. > :01:15.world has caught up with it. According to the New York times
:01:15. > :01:19.Britain is now socially mobile than America and has a fairer
:01:19. > :01:24.distribution of income too. Nowadays this country can sometimes
:01:24. > :01:30.seem distinctly backward looking itself. President George Bush
:01:30. > :01:35.banned stem cell research because Christian fundamentalists didn't
:01:35. > :01:40.like it. America still executes prisoners, just like Iran, Saudi
:01:40. > :01:44.Arabia and China. It has practised torture and imprisonment without
:01:44. > :01:49.trial and it assasinates its enemies, just like all those
:01:49. > :01:54.country it's always criticised. 50 years on, then, America is still a
:01:54. > :01:57.wonderful place, but it doesn't seem to me like the pinnacle of
:01:57. > :02:04.civilisation any more and its position in the world isn't what it
:02:04. > :02:13.was either. In fact, is it really a superpower any longer? Mark Mardell
:02:13. > :02:17.Come on, let's get the horses in. It's a land of big skies and bigger
:02:17. > :02:21.dreams. Welcome to the west. It was in part the drive to the west that
:02:21. > :02:27.gave the sense that America was a land of endless possibilities with
:02:27. > :02:32.a unique destiny. But in the four years I've been here, there's been
:02:32. > :02:39.a stampede of politicians and pundits fretting that America is in
:02:39. > :02:42.decline, about to become ordinary. Its influence on the wane, head
:02:42. > :02:50.over he's in debt, its infrastructure crumbling and
:02:50. > :02:57.economy faltering, about to be outstripped by more dynamic rivals.
:02:57. > :03:03.Even my jeans and cowboy boots were made in China.
:03:03. > :03:07.The idea that a rival nation could leave the USA in the dust owe fends
:03:07. > :03:12.some Americans more than it scares them and it is true America will
:03:12. > :03:15.never again bestride the world the way it once did. There's a
:03:15. > :03:20.rebalancing after centuries when first Europe and then the USA
:03:20. > :03:26.seemed to hold all the cards, have all the power and the wealth, the
:03:27. > :03:33.rise of the rest - China, India and South America, means that's already
:03:33. > :03:37.history. So I'm in search of the future of
:03:37. > :03:42.American power. The USA's feeling of superiority and indispencibility
:03:42. > :03:47.has a lot to do with the fact that they won two world wars and the
:03:47. > :03:52.Cold War. American power grew in part from a barrel of a gun or a
:03:52. > :04:01.minuteman missile. Minot air base is the home to the most devastating
:04:01. > :04:06.weapons in their Arsenal, ballistic missiles and B-52s to deliver a
:04:07. > :04:12.nuclear bomb. What's the job of the fifth bomb wing? In one word I'd
:04:12. > :04:18.say deterrence... All the mission statements said if that fails, hunt
:04:18. > :04:21.down and destroy America's enemies. Chris Duff and Chris Brown are
:04:21. > :04:27.navigators. Their job would be to drop the bomb. You would be the one
:04:28. > :04:31.that drops the nuclear bomb? As the offence team, we're the ones
:04:31. > :04:35.responsible for weapons activities, making sure we're within parameters
:04:35. > :04:39.and that we're dropping the right type of weapon on the right type of
:04:39. > :04:44.target. That's quite a responsibility. It is. Is American
:04:44. > :04:49.power as great as it ever was? jet has been around for 50 years.
:04:49. > :04:54.It's still capable of reaching out and touching anyone in the world at
:04:54. > :04:57.any time. The testament to the B-52 is that we'll never have to do that
:04:57. > :05:03.because people know we can do it. Do you feel confident that America
:05:03. > :05:07.acts for good in the world? Yes. I'm a Christian and it's found on
:05:07. > :05:10.Christian morals. I have faith in the President and my leadership
:05:10. > :05:14.that they will only make that decision if they need to. America
:05:14. > :05:18.still spends a lot more on its military than the rest of the world.
:05:18. > :05:23.In fact add together the military budgets of China, Russia, Britain,
:05:23. > :05:31.France, Japan and the next four big spenders and you still don't get
:05:31. > :05:33.anywhere near America's staggering $1 trillion in 2011. Because the
:05:33. > :05:37.budget is being cut but the military might represented by these
:05:37. > :05:47.planes won't disappear overnight. The gap is overwhelming, it would
:05:47. > :05:48.
:05:48. > :05:52.take generations to erode, but that may be a burden not a blessing.
:05:52. > :05:56.Other source of American might has been its economy and that has
:05:56. > :06:01.suffered serious shocks playing second fiddle to China does seem
:06:01. > :06:06.inevitable, but you wouldn't know it here. 200 years ago this was the
:06:06. > :06:12.edge of the wild frontier, as America expanded to fill a
:06:12. > :06:18.continent and well, to become itself and still has this frontier
:06:18. > :06:24.feel here. Once again in north Dakota it's boom time. The state
:06:24. > :06:29.has the lowest unemployment rate in the USA and it's all down to a huge
:06:29. > :06:33.skpranction in fracking. It's a controversial technique shattering
:06:33. > :06:38.rocks miles underGround Forceing them to yield their bounty of oil
:06:38. > :06:42.and gas. They call this Kuwait on the prairie. Before long an
:06:42. > :06:48.abundance of cheap fuel will mean America won't rely on the Middle
:06:48. > :06:52.East or anyone else for its power. We're on what was the frontier,
:06:52. > :06:57.America pushed to the Pacific, there's nowhere left to expand is
:06:57. > :07:03.there? Sure there is exactly what we're doing here, we are expanding
:07:03. > :07:07.underground. We have a new frontier. I would say that we would be very
:07:07. > :07:10.short sighted if they think that's the best we can do. Isn't the truth
:07:10. > :07:15.that you've had your day, the British had their day, the Greeks
:07:15. > :07:19.their day. America's day is going. America's day is building. We are
:07:19. > :07:24.still on the upswing. We are getting better every day and north
:07:24. > :07:33.Dakota is a perfect example of just how American ingenuity is improving
:07:33. > :07:36.and taking us on to the next frontierment -- Frontier. There are
:07:36. > :07:41.few boundaries to the optimism of Americans, but fear of decline has
:07:41. > :07:48.a political edge. This is a very young country, still growing up and
:07:48. > :07:51.changing. Ran dal's family has ranched in southern Montana for
:07:51. > :07:55.five generations. He's 87 and doesn't like the way things are
:07:55. > :08:02.going. It don't look very good to me. This Government and politics is
:08:02. > :08:09.all getting everything screwed up. I don't like the way it's going.
:08:09. > :08:13.America is still the greatest and I hope it always will be. The sun is
:08:13. > :08:17.setting on a certain sort of American power, but a new dawn can
:08:17. > :08:21.be within reach if Americans themselves can embrace a world
:08:21. > :08:31.where they no longer effortlessly outshine the rest but are still a
:08:31. > :08:36.
:08:36. > :08:41.bright point of light amid the All together then we seem to be
:08:41. > :08:46.move ago way from the era of the superpower to a more open
:08:46. > :08:51.international system with no one country predominating. Every major
:08:51. > :08:58.power, except China, is far less exclusively national than it used
:08:58. > :09:01.to be. Mass immigration has changed us all. But has it now gone too
:09:01. > :09:09.far? Nick Robinson has been to the English town of Peterborough, which
:09:09. > :09:16.has been changed out of all recognition by immigration.
:09:16. > :09:24.This is how much of the country used to look, a typical town and
:09:24. > :09:28.market, so very British, so very white. Not any more. The face of
:09:28. > :09:34.Britain is changing. And nowhere more so than here in Peterborough.
:09:34. > :09:41.In the last decade in this city, 24,000 immigrants moved in. That's
:09:41. > :09:44.more than one in eight of the population. Over the past decade
:09:44. > :09:48.more than a million eastern Europeans came to Britain and
:09:48. > :09:58.stayed. Now politicians are competing to say that the country
:09:58. > :10:05.
:10:05. > :10:14.They're listening to the voices of those telling them that their towns,
:10:14. > :10:18.their cities, their lives have changed. I'll be honest I want to
:10:18. > :10:23.move out of Peterborough to give my son a fair chance in the schools.
:10:23. > :10:29.Because obviously, you know, everyone's entitled to education,
:10:29. > :10:34.but locally there is obviously so many that the classes will be
:10:34. > :10:39.getting bigger and therefore, one or two schools English isn't the
:10:39. > :10:44.first language. Is it just the scale? I think it is. It is just
:10:44. > :10:49.such a massive, massive change and lots of people, my father very
:10:49. > :10:53.rarely comes into town or his wife because they don't feel safe.
:10:53. > :10:58.uncomfortable? Yes, don't feel safe because obviously, you don't know
:10:58. > :11:02.what, when they talk in their native tongue, you don't know what
:11:02. > :11:11.they're rabbiting. Have you got a customer? There is one hiding there.
:11:11. > :11:21.How long have you been living here? I been yesterday. How long have you
:11:21. > :11:22.
:11:22. > :11:25.lived in the city. One day. Ian is very, very far from being alone,
:11:25. > :11:28.about three quarters of people tell pollsters they think immigration is
:11:28. > :11:34.too high. More than half of us say that we think immigration should be
:11:34. > :11:38.cut by a lot. Now that's been true for a long time, but something has
:11:38. > :11:46.changed in the last few years - the number of people who say the impact
:11:46. > :11:53.of immigration is very bad has almost doubled. Interestingly,
:11:53. > :12:00.that's a view shared by first and second generation immigrants.
:12:00. > :12:04.new arrivals are not integrating as well. There's ghetto situations.
:12:04. > :12:07.Parim's father came from the Punjab to Peterborough to set up this
:12:07. > :12:13.stall. How different would he think Peterborough was now to what it was
:12:13. > :12:20.then? I think he would be shocked. Really? Yes. I think so. Because?
:12:20. > :12:24.mean, he was a very proud man, who was British in a way, he came here
:12:24. > :12:29.and embraced Britain as his country. Do you see the irony in this?
:12:29. > :12:36.You're a Sikh. You say the problem with the immigrants is they don't
:12:36. > :12:41.mix in. That is probably in a nutshell. Here in East Anglia,
:12:41. > :12:45.thousands of eastern Europeans work on the land picking fruit and veg
:12:45. > :12:50.and flowers. People Steve believes help keep locals like him in their
:12:50. > :12:56.jobs. People say no, we haven't got space for them, there's no room
:12:56. > :13:03.here. That's a load of rubbish. There's plenty of room. We will
:13:03. > :13:09.always fit them in. What if your customers said my son, grandson,
:13:09. > :13:13.couldn't get a job because a Polish is taking it or Lithuanian?
:13:14. > :13:18.somewhere else, work harder. decades the question of immigration
:13:18. > :13:22.was linked with race, which is why mainstream politicians were so
:13:22. > :13:29.terrified of the subject. But now the new influx of immigrants are
:13:29. > :13:33.white and from Europe, that link has been largely broken. The
:13:34. > :13:43.pressure is still on the politicians because of questions of
:13:43. > :13:47.integration and whether the country is simply too full.
:13:47. > :13:50.This is a Polish paper for here? Poles are known for being hard
:13:50. > :13:57.workers, doing the jobs many others won't do. They're also known,
:13:57. > :14:00.though, for keeping themselves to themselves. We are Polish shop, you
:14:00. > :14:04.know, so that's why people are coming here, especially Polish
:14:04. > :14:09.people which are not speaking English. Stkpwhri guess 40, 50
:14:09. > :14:13.years ago, Maybe new arrivals in Britain thought "We have to learn
:14:13. > :14:20.English." Now we don't have to really because if you got some
:14:20. > :14:23.problems you can even come to the shop. This city has already
:14:23. > :14:29.successfully absorbed many waves of immigrants, including thousands of
:14:29. > :14:33.Italians. One of whom is now Peterborough's political leader. My
:14:33. > :14:38.sense is you're kind of a big optimist about immigration, whereas
:14:38. > :14:45.I might have expected you not to be. My view is the glass is half empty
:14:45. > :14:48.or half full. Now, we can't stop immigration coming to the city, as
:14:48. > :14:52.a council, I cannot stop people coming here. What do you do? You
:14:52. > :14:55.either say there are huge -- they're a huge problem and we want
:14:55. > :15:05.them to go away or you say they're coming any way, so letsz' make the
:15:05. > :15:10.
:15:11. > :15:16.best of it. -- let's. Italians, Poles, Africans, Asians, a fifth of
:15:16. > :15:20.the population of this city were born afraud. -- abroad. A tenth of
:15:20. > :15:24.households speak no English. The opinion polls are clearly
:15:24. > :15:30.telling politicians that people want that flow to stop or at least
:15:30. > :15:34.to slow down. Perhaps, though, people are as concerned about
:15:34. > :15:39.integration as they are about immigration. Because in truth, most
:15:39. > :15:49.people know that Britain is not simply going to go back to the way
:15:49. > :15:59.
:15:59. > :16:03.Ever since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, this country,
:16:03. > :16:08.America, seems rather to have missed the simple certainties of
:16:08. > :16:15.having one, single, major enemy. Russia now much diminished is
:16:15. > :16:22.trying to find a new role too. Under Vladimir Putin, the former
:16:22. > :16:32.KGB man, it's been behaving pretty questionably. Bridget Kendal asks
:16:32. > :16:37.
:16:37. > :16:45.if Russia is now actually a rogue The ultimate hangout in Moscow on a
:16:45. > :16:50.Friday night. Most of them weren't even born when the Soviet Union
:16:50. > :16:59.collapsed in 1991. They probably can't imagine what it was like and
:16:59. > :17:07.just how dramatically this country has changed. I can travel a lot. I
:17:07. > :17:13.can be where I want, so I like my life. Nowadays, you can choose your
:17:13. > :17:23.job, travel abroad and own a flat, all simple rights, unthinkable for
:17:23. > :17:27.
:17:27. > :17:32.most people when this country was For over 30 years I've been coming
:17:32. > :17:38.here. First as a student, then as a journalist. I can't help feeling
:17:38. > :17:42.optimistic when I walk around Moscow these days. But beneath the
:17:42. > :17:48.new veneer of prosperity there's a darker side. It's all to do with
:17:48. > :17:52.how power at the top in Russia is wielded, as though laws and public
:17:52. > :17:57.accountability matter less than security. When I was here in the
:17:57. > :18:02.1980s that building, the old KGB headquarters, used to give me the
:18:02. > :18:05.shivers, the seek rote state within a state that spied on its citizens
:18:05. > :18:10.and controlled the country from within. It's still here and still
:18:10. > :18:14.hugely poufrpl and probably bigger than ever, because it's directly
:18:14. > :18:20.connected to the Russian President, Vladimir Putin, himself a former
:18:20. > :18:30.KGB officer. So, is Russia a dangerous force in the world? A
:18:30. > :18:34.
:18:34. > :18:40.I've come to see one journalist who has dared to take on the secret
:18:40. > :18:43.world of the FSB, as the KGB is now called. He says the Russian
:18:43. > :18:47.Security Services are out of control and their tentacles stretch
:18:47. > :18:56.everywhere. The Soviet Secret police was built,
:18:56. > :19:01.formed to produce mass oppressions in every Russian town and cities.
:19:01. > :19:08.This system was not changed with regards the new regime. It's a
:19:08. > :19:12.battle between the good and the evil. It's not easy to penetrate
:19:12. > :19:17.the black hole at heart of Russia and to know how high up the
:19:17. > :19:20.corruption and violence go, even for those of us who have
:19:20. > :19:26.interviewed Vladimir Putin, it's hard to know what makes him tick
:19:26. > :19:33.and how rich he really is. Those who try to dig beneath the surface
:19:33. > :19:42.tend to come to a sticky end like this journalist, gunned down in her
:19:43. > :19:47.own apartment building or Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned in
:19:47. > :19:57.London. The whistle-blowing lawyer who ended up dying in Russian
:19:57. > :20:05.
:20:05. > :20:15.police custody and now he's being In this park, they dance in the
:20:15. > :20:15.
:20:15. > :20:20.open air, just like they used to 30 years ago. Most of these pensioners
:20:20. > :20:24.were reluctant to be interviewed, nervous about giving their views.
:20:24. > :20:34.But Vladimir Putin has his supporters who voted him in as
:20:34. > :20:34.
:20:34. > :20:40.President three times. What do you think about your President? "He's
:20:40. > :20:44.wonderful. He's made sure we get a decent pension."
:20:44. > :20:52.At the Parliament, politicians loyal to Mr Putin say it's not
:20:52. > :20:57.Russia which poses a threat, it's the west. We do not organise
:20:57. > :21:04.Guantanamo prisons to torture people. We do not invade other
:21:05. > :21:10.nations. We do not use drones to kill thousands in anti-terrorist
:21:10. > :21:14.operations. Russia being evil, imperial is just part of the
:21:15. > :21:20.Western psyche or the Western mentality. It's just a way the West
:21:20. > :21:30.per receives -- perseives itself as different from Russia which is evil
:21:30. > :21:36.
:21:36. > :21:39.May 6 last year, the police block an anti-Putin rally in Moscow.
:21:39. > :21:48.We have the constitutional right to protest peacefully this woman tells
:21:48. > :21:53.them. Now the young mother is awaiting trial for provoking unrest.
:21:53. > :21:59.Her flat was raided. She can't find work and she's banned from leaving
:21:59. > :22:05.Moscow. That's the worst thing. I can't find no work inside Moscow
:22:05. > :22:09.and I can't go outside of Moscow. Do you feel scared now? You have a
:22:09. > :22:13.small son? I'm scared. I have a small son. They told me that they
:22:13. > :22:19.are going to kill me. Of course, I realised that these are just phone
:22:19. > :22:26.calls. You are scared when something tells you that you are
:22:26. > :22:30.going to die. But strong-arm tactics don't
:22:30. > :22:34.necessarily mean the Russian state is in control. The posturing is
:22:34. > :22:37.more a sign of weakness than strength of a system that's
:22:38. > :22:42.politically dysfunctional and corrupt. I don't think you can call
:22:42. > :22:48.Russia a rogue state. Yes, its behaviour can seem thuggish and
:22:48. > :22:52.macho at times, but it's more of a spoiler than a threat. This is no
:22:52. > :23:00.North Korea. If it is a danger, then it's to some of its own
:23:00. > :23:05.citizens not to the outside world. The question is - how long might
:23:05. > :23:08.this last? Don't expect an Arab- style uprising. Few here want
:23:08. > :23:18.another revolution. The real danger is that Russia could stumble on
:23:18. > :23:23.
:23:23. > :23:28.America is the one country where football, our kind of football that
:23:28. > :23:34.is, has never made a final breakthrough. Now, though, the
:23:34. > :23:38.English Premier League has done a huge rights deal with NBC and as a
:23:39. > :23:45.result, football will air regularly on one of the big TV networks for
:23:45. > :23:48.the first time here. Yet, for all its wealth and high profile abroad,
:23:49. > :23:53.there always seems to be some crisis back home for English
:23:53. > :24:00.football. David Bond, our sports editor, asks whether something has
:24:00. > :24:04.gone seriously wrong with it. The pre-match pint, for as long as
:24:04. > :24:09.people have been watching football, they've been gathering in pubs like
:24:09. > :24:17.this to get ready for the match. The difference here - it's just
:24:17. > :24:21.gone 6am in the morning. I've come to the Crown Inn to meet up with
:24:21. > :24:26.250 City fans travelling south for their FA Cup semi-final against
:24:26. > :24:33.Chelsea. This is a way of life. No matter how much money flows into
:24:33. > :24:38.football, you sense reassuringly that some things may never change.
:24:38. > :24:44.Hello? Manchester City... No club typifies English football's
:24:44. > :24:51.revolution better than this one. Top flight football and money have
:24:51. > :24:54.always gone hand in hand, but back in the 1970s, it was more of a
:24:54. > :25:00.cottage industry. TV companies paid less to nothing for live rights.
:25:00. > :25:03.Clubs were more closely tied to their communities.
:25:03. > :25:13.These days they are global brands to be bought and sold by the super
:25:13. > :25:15.
:25:16. > :25:21.Last year, City became English champions for the first time since
:25:21. > :25:25.1968 with a team paid for by a member of the Abu Dhabi Royal
:25:25. > :25:33.Family, who rescued the club from the brink of bankruptcy five years
:25:33. > :25:35.ago. With all that oil-fuelled success you'd think City's fans
:25:36. > :25:41.would be unquestionably happy. Football has changed so much from
:25:41. > :25:47.when you started going. Do you find now that it's lost touch with the
:25:47. > :25:51.common fan? Yeah, it has, without a doubt. It's down to expense more
:25:51. > :25:55.than anything. You are governed by expense. Basically, if you want to
:25:55. > :26:02.go and do every single game, unless you're worth a lot of money, it
:26:02. > :26:05.can't be done. They know they have a captive audience. You are a fan,
:26:06. > :26:12.you follow your team. Whatever you can afford you will try to do it.
:26:12. > :26:16.At the moment you're right on the edge. Sometimes, I mean, I probably
:26:16. > :26:23.don't go to half the amount of away games and that's because of cost.
:26:23. > :26:26.This place knows a thing or two about costs. Wem blip's �800
:26:26. > :26:31.million redevelopment transformed a relic into a state-of-the-art
:26:31. > :26:35.cathedral for the game, a fitting symbol of English football's
:26:35. > :26:40.modernisation. But someone has to pay for these improvements. Meet
:26:40. > :26:44.the prawn sandwich brigade. This is the biggest corporate hospitality
:26:44. > :26:53.operation in world sport, squeezing the rich helps keep prices lower
:26:53. > :26:57.for the less well off. But all this has changed the sport's dynamics.
:26:57. > :27:01.personally am not overly in favour of the prawn sandwich brigade.
:27:01. > :27:06.Unfortunately, the finances in football dictate that the club
:27:06. > :27:10.tries to make as much money as it can. That's unfortunately where
:27:10. > :27:14.it's ended. It's fantastic facilities. You're having a
:27:14. > :27:18.fantastic meal, champagne, it's a good day out. It's only half a
:27:18. > :27:23.bottle of champagne. But you're having a great day out. Why not?
:27:23. > :27:27.Why couldn't it change? Yeah, sure, as long as the true supporters of
:27:27. > :27:33.the club, of the two clubs have been able to get tigts and be able
:27:33. > :27:37.to come with their families, then that's absolutely fine. Although
:27:37. > :27:45.some of this new money is filtered down to grass-roots, many at the
:27:45. > :27:49.bottom of the game say the top is out of touch.. Take the recent
:27:49. > :27:53.racism controversies. This Surrey junior team became so disillusioned
:27:53. > :28:00.by football's response that they took action into their own hands.
:28:00. > :28:08.It's a simple message - one black sock, one white to symbolise racial
:28:08. > :28:13.harmony on and off the pitch. And yet the coach said their initiative
:28:13. > :28:18.got no backing from those in charge. Clearly this is a point you're
:28:18. > :28:24.making about values, is there a sense that football at the very top
:28:24. > :28:28.level is has -- has lost its sense of values and morality? The value
:28:28. > :28:32.is to do with money now. I think money has just taken over football
:28:32. > :28:36.rather than being passionate and the majority of players now all
:28:36. > :28:40.they want is the money. That passion has come out of it. When
:28:40. > :28:44.you come down to see grass-roots football, you can see everyone is
:28:44. > :28:51.fighting for one another. There is passion. I think that is the part
:28:51. > :28:54.of the game is we've lost. Unpalatable as it might be, the
:28:54. > :28:59.answer to some of England's problems could lie with old rivals
:28:59. > :29:03.Germany. For these fans supporting Borussia Dortmund is about more
:29:03. > :29:11.than just buying a ticket or wearing a shirt. They have a big
:29:12. > :29:14.say in how this place is owned and run. Dortmund are one of Germany's
:29:14. > :29:19.biggest clubs. That doesn't stop them offering cheaper tickets and
:29:19. > :29:22.free travel. What's more, rules prevent any one businessman from
:29:22. > :29:26.controlling clubs. While more than half of English teams have gone
:29:26. > :29:33.bust in the last 20 years, there's not been a single insolvency in
:29:33. > :29:42.Germany. According to the club's chief executive, the model creates
:29:42. > :29:45.greater stability for everyone. fans, in normal case, is member of
:29:45. > :29:53.Borussia Dortmund. He comes to the meeting every year. He can elect
:29:53. > :29:59.people. He has a feeling - I'm a part of it. I think in England,
:29:59. > :30:06.more and more, the fans of the clubs have not the feeling that
:30:06. > :30:09.they are part of the whole. They have a client feeling I think.
:30:09. > :30:14.There's no question the great football boom of the last two
:30:14. > :30:19.decades has improved the English game. But all that money has
:30:19. > :30:23.created different problems. With TV revenue set to increase again next
:30:23. > :30:33.year, this feels like a defining moment. Carry on and leave the
:30:33. > :30:38.market to decide or find another, fairer way.
:30:38. > :30:44.All round us are the classic monuments to America's self-
:30:44. > :30:52.confidence, yet every since 9/11 and reinforced recently by the
:30:52. > :30:59.Boston bombings, the old sense of impreingnablt seems to have faded.