Charles is Booed in Cardiff and Celtic Fans Chant ‘If you hate the Royal Family Clap your Hands’ as the Wheels Begin to Come Off the Royal Pantomime
UPDATE
If you hate the Royal Family clap your hands – Glasgow Celtic fans
It is often said of the Queen that
she did a good job. And in one sense that is true. She did do a good job but the question is for
whom did she work? Certainly no one who lived in the colonies benefited and it
is difficult to see how anyone who is poor, on the streets or working class is
any the richer.
On the other hand there is no doubt,
judging by the million or so fools who spent 24 hours or more to see her coffin,
that the late Queen performed a very useful function for the class that she
came from. A role not dissimilar to that of religion.
Marx didn’t simply describe
religion as the opium of the masses but also as the heart of a heartless world,
the soul of a soulless world. Royalty performs a vital political and social
function in binding the poor and oppressed to their oppressors in a sham show
of national unity that is underpinned by the honours system.
The honours system itself is divided into ordinary and common
OBEs, CBEs and MBEs (all of which refer to the Empire) up to the the Most Nobel Order of the Garter, of which there are only 34 at any one
time, all of whom are chosen personally by the sovereign. In this way, however rich or poor you are you can
identify with the monarch.
That is why virtually every business
of any size adorned itself with the image of Elizabeth Windsor. The Monarchy
provides social stability as well as a back stop against revolution.
Republican demonstrators greet Charles in Cardiff
Despite all this there is a growing
mood of republicanism amongst the young in particular who are almost
equally divided on whether or not to have a republic. However much the BBC
rams the idea of an unelected monarchy down our throats it offends against
democratic instincts and reeks of class snobbery and contempt.
The Monarchy is depicted as the
ideal family, just like you and me however there is nothing ordinary about the
monarchy from the past-times they indulge in (hunting, shooting) to the company
they keep.
Despite being told that the Monarchy
has no influence politically this is not true. The royals vetted
at least 1,062 laws during Elizabeth’s reign in order to ensure that they didn’t
hurt her interests.
Whereas it is well known that Royal Assent is needed when a
bill becomes law very few people know that the Monarch’s consent is needed
before legislation can be approved by parliament. The website of the royal family describes it as “a long established convention”.
Documents in the National Archives suggest that the Consent
Process enabled Elizabeth Windsor to lobby for changes before legislation was
tabled. Thomas Adams, a constitutional law expert at Oxford University said that
these documents revealed “the kind of
influence over legislation that lobbyists would only dream of”. It gave Liz
“substantial influence” over draft
laws that could affect her. See Revealed:
Queen lobbied for change in law to hide her private wealth
We can see their results. The Queen’s
Estate will pay no Inheritance Tax unlike ordinary mortals, saving them
hundreds of millions of pounds. But
there is more to this than mere corruption although there is that too.
The Monarchy in the form of Prince
Charles played
a large part in the canonisation of Jimmy Savile. He was also knighted. In a memo addressed
to the royals in 1989, and titled ‘Guidelines
for members of the Royal Family and their staffs’, Savile claimed he was “in the palaces on a regular basis”.
Under ‘personal observations’, Savile stated
that he was ‘well-placed’ to make
observations and comment on the Royal Family’s image due to the access he had
inside their residences writing:
“Because I get
into St James’s Palace and Buckingham Palace on a regular basis, one thing is
becoming quite obvious. There is a strong movement now towards some members of
the family and their staff towards an… attitude.”
The Netflix documentary Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story showed how
Charles
had gone out of his way to seek out Savile’s advice and help in repairing the
monarchy’s image and reputation. Because if there is one thing the ‘firm’ is
careful about is its image.
A British horror story
In Imposed
Insanity – Royalty, Propaganda And The Coming Catastrophe Media Lens remind
us that
‘wherever there is royalty,
there is militarism, organised religion, bipartisan political agreement,
patriotism and, of course, concentrated wealth.’
The
Monarchy is the symbol of all that is rotten in society. Its function being to hide
the nexus of power in pageantry, pomp and mystique. It’s secret weapon is its
insincerity.
A leaky pen
As Walter Bagehot
argued the
monarchy needed mystique. “Its mystery is
its life. We must not let in daylight upon magic.” Charles has done quite
the opposite. He allowed cameras into the accession council, where he made his
oaths. He has already had two public hissy fits involving malfunctioning pens,
which have gone viral. Charles finds it difficult, unlike his mother, to keep
his mouth shut.
Power is exercised most effectively
behind closed doors not in public. As Media Lens pointed
out we are quick to ridicule countries where there is a cult of the
personality –
‘those poor lost souls who glorify leaders with
hagiographic portraits and statues; and militarised patriotic festivals and
grand commemorative events’.
This type of thing happens in Putin’s
Russia, Xi Jinping’s China and Kim Jong-un’s North Korea not in Britain. Yet
how does one describe hundreds of thousands of people queuing for over a day to
catch a glimpse of the coffin of a woman they never knew?
The BBC naturally was determined not to
be outdone in its servile, sycophantic prose. Royal correspondent Jonny Dymond wittered:
‘This is the
moment history stops; for a minute, an hour, for a day or a week; this is the
moment history stops.
If history stopped, then time itself must
have stopped! A quite remarkable feat, even for a monarch.
The Leaky Pen and why Charles is angry with his manservant
Newspapers
ran full, front-page
portraits with forelock-tugging headlines:
- ‘A life in service’ (The Times)
- ‘Our hearts are broken’ (Daily Mail)
- ‘Grief is the price we pay for love’ (Daily Telegraph)
- ‘Thank you’ (Daily
Mirror’)
- ‘Our beloved Queen is dead’ (Daily Express)
- ‘We loved you Ma’am’ (The Sun)
As Media
Lens asked ‘Does The Sun have any idea what the word ‘love’ means?’ This is
the paper that marked the death of 96 football fans at the Hillsborough Stadium
with the headline
‘The Truth’ alleging that fans picked the pockets of the victims whilst
urinating on the ‘brave cops’.
Nor was
the Guardian any better. The day after Windsor’s death it led with
19 pages on the Queen plus a 20-page supplement. Columnist, Gaby
Hinsliff, wrote a piece
referring to Elizabeth Windsor’s ‘grandmotherly
manner’, ‘female power’, ‘rare trick for a woman’, ‘a woman in charge’, ‘“ultimate feminist”’, ‘a legacy for women’, etc.
Hinsliff’s
unctuous prose managed 14
retweets and 72 likes.
Not to be
outdone Sir Keir Starmer, Knight Commander of the Order of Bath and Leader of
the ‘Opposition’, declared:
‘For seventy
years, Queen Elizabeth II stood as the head of our country. But in spirit, she
stood amongst us.’
One
wonders just how many homeless people felt her spirit as they bedded down for
the night. Perhaps those weighing up how to heat their home immediately felt
her presence besides them?
Not
content with this nonsense Starmer told us
that:
‘as the world
changed around her, this dedication became the still point of our turning
world.’
How many
of you felt that your world revolved around Liz Windsor?
But all this servile nonsense aims to
enable the new King to emerge, as if by magic, like a butterfly from its
chrysalis. And history therefore has to be rewritten. It is no accident that the
BBC Panorama Interview with Princess Diana has been suppressed.
The BBC have pretended that Diana was
tricked into the interview, even though she herself declared at the time that
she was happy with it. The BBC is asserting its copyright to prevent it being
shown anywhere. There is nothing like censorship to help change the narrative.
However you can still see it on my blog,
at least for the moment!
As Andrew Morton, whose 1992 book Diana:
Her True Story exposed Charles adultery with ‘Queen’ Camilla said:
"It is a supreme irony
that it is her son who has led the calls to posthumously muzzle Diana, to
silence her, to prevent her from being heard, from saying what she spent her
life trying to articulate"
As the BBCs former Director-General
Tony Hall admitted:
The first investigation we
did before Christmas under Tim Gardam talked to all the people concerned
and produced a letter where she said very clearly that she had been shown no
documents by Martin Bashir, she was not made aware of anything by Martin Bashir
that she didn’t already know and she had no regrets, underlined, by the
interview. It is quite interesting that Lord Dyson himself
says that an interview of some sort would probably have taken place anyway. At
that point in our inquiries, in our investigations with Tim Gardam, we came to
an end that there was no case to answer.
In now trying to silence what her
mother wanted to reveal, Prince William is acting with contempt for her. But
that too is part of the price to be paid for keeping the royal show going.
As for Andrew, the death of Elizabeth
Windsor has been quite fortuitous in his attempt to achieve rehabilitation. Instead
of mourning in private, Andrew was one of the 4 royals who formed
the vigil around her coffin. In full military uniform it might be added.
Expunged from memory are the stories
of Prince Charles with carrier bags full of notes donated by a kind Qatari politician.
And why, in this age of Internet banking, did Charles not have the money sent
electronically? Guess it was his addiction
to all things old-fashioned!
Also forgotten is how Charles protected
the serial child abuser Peter Ball, Bishop of Lewes, who eventually served half
of a 32 month prison sentence after the Police originally let him off with a Caution.
Charles wrote to him after he had
been cautioned saying that
“I wish I could do more. I
feel so desperately strongly about the monstrous wrongs that have been done to
you and the way you have been treated.”
There is no
record of Charles having expressed any sympathy for Neil Todd, one of Ball’s
victims, who killed himself in 2012.
In classic Establishment
understatement, the Official Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse described Charles’
support for Ball and the Duchy of Cornwall
buying a house for him to rent as ‘misguided’.
Why are you strangling me?
Charles maintained a correspondence with Ball for more than
two decades after Ball’s 1992 caution for gross indecency. Charles told
the inquiry that he did not realise the truth behind allegations against Ball.
Most people understand that accepting a Caution means accepting one is guilty. But
not Charles. That child abuse offences were dealt with by a Caution suggests
Police complicity and cover up.
Charles explanation as to why he corresponded with Ball was
that it was the “polite” thing to do but the inquiry found the replies were “suggestive of cordiality rather than mere
politeness”. Charles explanation, that he did not know the exact details of
the allegations, was not believed by the inquiry which found that he did not
try to find out.
All this however will be hushed up and forgotten because it’s
now a case of ‘God Save the King’ and the Establishment of which he is such an
integral part.
Or as the old
saying goes ‘Hypocrisy is the homage that vice pays to virtue.’
Tony Greenstein
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