Evolution of English as a Language

Forget the grammatical rules in the English language. Everyone speaks English differently across the world. From India, Singapore, to Australia and the United States have their own set of “proper” English. English belongs to the Germanic linguistic group, and came to the English isles from proto Germanic tribes of Anglo-Saxons.
In the year 2017 and 2018, I went to work in London, England with the expectation of meeting many people with the “Queen’s Language” or the “Cornish” accent, but only devastated me on the streets of Notting Hill and left me puzzled when I came to find out that being a native English speaker created me, an Asian-American, a ‘double’ minority in London. I was born in the United States, forced to speak only English in school, and left me only fluent in American English by my teenage years. Brazilian Portuguese, European Spanish, Polish, Romanian; all of these language could be heard every single day, but native British English could hardly be found common place.
England created English to become the most spoken language in the world by the 20th century, and the English language itself has multiple problems, not because of it’s broken rules, disputed grammars, and false phonetics, but because English and all other language are still a primitive way of communication that has not yet evolved fully to become advanced and beneficial for Humankind.
English happened, because of poor, uneducated and illiterate people created a “Frankenstein” language that even English writing itself is not even phonetically correct. A proto-Germanic language taken over by the Latin speakers; Old and Middle French spoken in the courts, and English was formed on the streets by the peasants as a common lingua franca.
Yes, English does have a set of rules and grammars to be properly spoken to communicate and to be understood, but understand that speakers of the English language has their own set of regional tones of accents and dialects. We can understand and comprehend those from who’s English is not perfect, but know that it can be spoken out and be understood.
Even in William Shakespeare, their English of “Where art thou” was thought to us in the 20th century that it meant “Where are you?”, but instead in his time in the 15th century meant “Why are you”?
You can break every rules in English, and still be understood. We do not have a “standardised English” academy like that of French or German that sets the rules how their language should sound, behave, and grows. English will continue to evolve and the more English is spoken across the world, will introduce new words and concepts into the language throughout time to even possibly create a singular understood communication across the world. English and all languages are still ever evolving, and advancing itself to create better and faster words to give meanings to things that we could not understand or directly communicate.
Capice?
