9 September 2022

No Tears, No Joy –Elizabeth Windsor Faithfully Served the Rich, the Powerful and the Privileged Throughout Her Reign – She was No Friend of the Working Class or Oppressed

The Death of A Monarch is the Ideal Opportunity To Be Rid of the Monarchy – No one is Born to Rule Over Us



James Connolly on the occasion of George V's visit to Ireland in 1910

The Monarchy is, by definition, a reactionary institution based on the hereditary principle not merit. It is there to bind the poor to their fate, to give us the illusion that however rich or poor we are that we have something in common. In the inestimable words of Percy Shelley the Monarchy is “the String that Tied the Robber’s Bundle” (Shelley)

The Monarchy is the human face of the British Establishment in all its horrors.  An Establishment which, at this very moment, is forcing millions to choose between eating and heating as the energy companies are awash with money.

The idea that we have anything in common with the parasites who rule us, who steal the few assets that we had to hand over to their City friends, is cockamamie.  Patriotism is, in the words of Samuel Johnson, ‘the last refuge of the scoundrel’ and our rulers, as Boris Johnson amply demonstrated, complete scoundrels.

We are told that Liz ‘never put a foot wrong’ and it is true.  She did a wonderful job for those whose job it is to exploit the working class and poor.  Although even that is not strictly true. During the period immediately following Diana’s death, Elizabeth and her coterie were in danger of being seen to rejoice in the death of this uncontrollable former member of the ‘firm’.

Despite never having met Virginia Giuffre Andrew handed her over £10m

Not once, ever, did she express any sentiments in favour of those who are homeless, poor, destitute and without means but you can bet your bottom dollar that she and the other royal parasites expressed their contempt, behind closed doors of course, for those whom she reigned over.

The Queen was of course herself a very rich woman so it is natural that she should sympathise with fellow aristocrats. A tax dodger to the last, where she led others followed. She was happy to lobby the government to replace the Royal Yacht even whilst her subjects were sleeping on the streets. The idea of using her own wealth to purchase it probably never even occurred to her.

The Royal Family as they like to be known are a bunch of misfits, dysfunctional to the root. Not only the Prince of Paedophillia, Andrew but the racist Princess Pushy Michael of Kent who

sparked fury when she arrived at the Queen’s Christmas lunch in 2017 wearing a Blackamoor brooch on the day Meghan Markle was formally introduced to the Royal Family by Prince Harry. Blackamore brooches usually depict an African male as a servant, and are widely considered racist.

But it’s not about the Royals as individuals but what they represent.  The icing on the very ugly cake that is the British Establishment. In Ireland the Crown represented Unionism and the subjugation of the Catholics. In the Empire the Crown represented the super exploitation of India, Africa and Malaya. Not once did the Queen or her predecessors give voice to any criticism of the atrocities in India, Kenya and the West Indies.

Prince William IV defended the slave trade in the House of Lords and was known for his relations with African slaves

With the 200th centenary of the abolition of the slave trade the Queen failed to apologise either for the slave trade or the Monarchy’s role in opposing abolition.  In her paper, Uncovering Royal Perspectives on Slavery, Empire, and the Rights of Colonial Subjects, Dr Brooke Newman wrote:

Prince William, now the Duke of Clarence, emerged as a vocal defender of colonial slavery and a leading ally of the West India Committee in London. In 1799, in a reprinted and widely circulated pro-slavery speech delivered in the House of Lords, he referenced the long history of European involvement in the African slave trade and drew on his eyewitness knowledge of conditions in the Caribbean islands. According to the Duke of Clarence, the abolitionists had misjudged the effects of the slave trade on Africa and Africans and grossly misrepresented the treatment of enslaved men and women in the British sugar colonies. The abolitionist campaign to end the slave trade, he argued, was not only radical and misguided, like the actions of the fanatical French revolutionaries, but also deeply damaging to Britain’s national interests.

The Duke of Clarence later became King William IV. In her tributes to the abolitionist William Wilberforce, Elizabeth Windsor passed over her own family’s role in delaying the abolition of slavery.

We are told that the Elizabeth kept her opinions to herself. Perhaps but there is no doubt on which side of the class divide she stood.  She personally invited her blood-stained relation, the King of Bahrain to attend the Royal Windsor Horse Show. When his largely Shi’ite subjects rose up against his bloody rule in the Arab Spring, King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa not only set the military on them but he had the doctors and nurses who tended the wounded  tortured. Yet Elizabeth Windsor had no problem entertaining King Hamad.

Gough Whitlam, Australian Labour Prime Minister, was ousted by the Queen's man in Canberra

When Australia elected a radical Labour Prime Minister Gough Whitlam it was the Queen’s Governor-General Sir John Kerr who used Royal Prerogative to overthrow him in a constitutional coup d’etat and put in the conservative Malcolm Fraser. When the House of Representatives passed a motion of no confidence in Fraser, Kerr simply refused to see the Speaker of the House.

So we can see that when there is a constitutional crisis the role of the Monarchy can become extremely powerful as it nearly did when the Queen prorogued parliament, on advice from Boris Johnson, during the Brexit crisis.  In that case the Supreme Court overturned her order.

The Monarchy is anything but apolitical. It is intensely political and that is why BBC and ITV are currently boring us to death with interminal programmes about the death of Elizabeth Windsor. Fortunately this is likely to have the same effect as occurred with the death of Philip Windsor when there were a record number of complaints about the saturation coverage which was carried on every TV channel.

The close identification between the monarchy and the military is itself a threat to democracy. In times of crisis, as was signalled during Corbyn’s leadership of the Labour Party, the Generals could declare their loyalty, not to Parliament or the people but the Monarch.  After all their oath of loyalty is not to the people but the Crown.

However lest this blog be considered unduly critical even the most hard hearted would have sympathised with Elizabeth sitting alone in Westminster Abbey after the death of her husband Philip while Boris Johnson was throwing parties in Downing Street.  But that incident in itself demonstrates that our present rulers lack any gravitas or substance. They are as cheap as the alcohol that they packed into that suitcase smuggled into a Downing Street Party.

It says a lot about the times we live in that Boris Johnson has been succeeded by ‘thick Lizzy’ whose meeting with Elizabeth seems to have given the coup de grace to Elizabeth.

As King Charles III ascends the throne we should perhaps remember what happened to the first King Charles!  A Republic is in sight.

Tony Greenstein

26 comments:

  1. It is always a good move to have a “ human face “fronting a profoundly dubious firm and
    nobody would deny any death is sad especially that of a “sweet old lady” . But as Britain moves ever more towards authoritarian government intent on removing civil liberties and increasing inequality , will the myth that a monarchy provides a check to
    irresponsible politicians finally unravel ?

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  2. Thank you Tony for this honest article.

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  3. Thank you Tony for this insightful and honest article.

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  4. A very refreshing contrast to the blanket, nauseating fawning, thank you!

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  5. Very well said Tony Greenstein. All the monarchy are parasites. Joe Public is still paying for lottery s

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  6. Very well said Tony Greenstein. The monarchy are pure parasites. Joe public are still paying for lots of their bills. They don't care a damn about poor people and the homeless. With all their wealth they could at least house the homeless and make sure they are fed well. They could also help the poor and make sure they can pay their Bill's and not have to go to a food bank.

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    1. absolutely. Their concern for the armed forces doesn't extend even to homeless and broken soldiers

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  7. Excellent blog. Some people are deluded.

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  8. "A Republic is in sight."

    Nah. The pro-monarchy propaganda blitz, unprecedented in size that we're seeing right now will do its job. 'Team GB' has been moving to the Right for quite some time now and this dead QE II cult fits right in there.

    On top of that there's the upcoming massive photo-op of Charlie slithering onto the throne.

    No, I'm not optimistic...

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  9. Even the f*cking Grauniad is enthusiastically taking part in the 10 days of mourning!

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    1. No surprises there - the Grauniad was even pro-Confederate back in the day, despite all its sanctimonious twaddle about race nowadays. Its probably trying to over-compensate for its previous stances.

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    2. The Guardian and world have both changed substantially since the 1860s. You sound like a demented Bible fundamentalist visiting the sins of the fathers on the sons unto several generations I liked her, you didn't- fine But she was not responsible for things that happened before she was born any more than you or I are

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    3. Mark, how has the Guardian changed? It supported the Iraq war, it has betrayed Julian Assange, it demonised Corbyn. Fundamentally it is the same and that is not a biblical fundamentalist speaking but someone who isn't blinded by fashion

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    4. Your all over the place Mark. The Guardian used to be more overt in its racism and class interests, but nowadays tries to hide it by being sanctimonious.

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  10. I would love to sign a petition calling for the end of the monarchy. I think it will gain a lot of support.

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  11. Bang on the money Tony - nice one!

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  12. Corporate theft by both the Monarchy and elected officials in The Houses of Parliament, and others, has to be reversed, and fully repatriated to the people of this country, who worked and made the wealth they stole. As a matter of urgency !!!!

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  13. offensive and uncalled for on a day like today

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    1. which day would you suggest? I would have thought that when we are having wall to wall coverage of Liz Windsor's life from the sycophantic media that a little counter balance might be a good thing. What you are objecting to is any disagreement with the mainstream narrative

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    2. Why offensive? So which day do you propose for Tony's insightful article on Lizzy and her aristocratic gang to be published? After the funeral maybe? If one doesn't approve of the Queen when she was alive, why should they hide their disapproval because she is dead? Like when Thatcher died. She was vile when alive and she was still vile when she died. I was happy when she kicked the bucket. There was a simpleton in the Italian village were I was born and grew up, well, when somebody died, people used to say to him: "Roberto, such and such died" and his answer always was: "So what? If my mum could die, so can other people"!

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  14. Thank you Tony for being a concrete voice of reason in this sickening and sycophantic display of "grief" by the mass and mainstream media. As a person originating from a "Commonwealth" country (the clues in the name - commoners wealth stolen by corporate greed!) it's great to see a fantastic piece of writing like this. De-colonise your minds people of these parasites :)

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    1. Thanks Tony for an eloquent reality check in the face of obsequious sentimentality from the corporate and corrupt media. Long live the revolution. ✊

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    2. You're so hilariously thick13 September 2022 at 15:29

      Do you want to end up like Ian Ball?

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