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Queen Elizabeth II, like her great great grandmother, Queen Victoria, reigned (in theory) over Great Britain for many years -- close to 64 and 71 years respectively; and 135 of the past 182 years (with a few shorter-lived Kings reigning briefly in between.) Of course, the real power "behind the throne" of the far flung colonial empire that is no more was not the British Monarchy, but rather The House of Rothschild which seized the island's finances following the "Napoleonic Wars" and, shortly thereafter, it media and its parliament in the ensuing decades. By the time Queen Victoria (of the German House of Hanover) was crowned in 1837, the monarchy was not only politically detached from the parliament, but the parliament itself danced to Rothschild's tune. During the latter half of the 19th Century, two-time Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli (cough cough) was openly linked to the Rothschilds, as was political leader Randolph Churchill (Winnie's alleged dad).
Apart from not embodying the political power of Rothschild's Island, neither lady -- nor any of the men in between -- ever really boldly asserted themselves in terms of expressing opinions on matters political or economic. The only exception was King Edward VII (Elizabeth's uncle). Soon after ascending the throne in January, 1936, Edward caused a stink in parliamentary circles with words and actions that were interpreted as "interference in political matters." Edward's previous praise (while still a prince) of The Great One (that's Hitler for all you newbies & normies) had already placed him the cross-hairs of "the usual suspects." As King, during a tour of poverty-stricken villages in South Wales, his comment that "something must be done" for the unemployed coal miners (this was during the Great Depression) was criticized as an attempt to guide government action, though he had not even proposed any policy.
In December of 1936, after less than one year as King, Edward was forced to abdicate the crown to Prince George, his stuttering brother (Elizabeth's father) -- the phony pretext being that he was married to an American divorcee, Elizabeth Wallis Simpson. You see, because the King does technically retain certain powers (if he chooses to use them) the planned war with Germany would be difficult to pull off with an outspoken "pro-Hitler" King on the throne.
Apart from not embodying the political power of Rothschild's Island, neither lady -- nor any of the men in between -- ever really boldly asserted themselves in terms of expressing opinions on matters political or economic. The only exception was King Edward VII (Elizabeth's uncle). Soon after ascending the throne in January, 1936, Edward caused a stink in parliamentary circles with words and actions that were interpreted as "interference in political matters." Edward's previous praise (while still a prince) of The Great One (that's Hitler for all you newbies & normies) had already placed him the cross-hairs of "the usual suspects." As King, during a tour of poverty-stricken villages in South Wales, his comment that "something must be done" for the unemployed coal miners (this was during the Great Depression) was criticized as an attempt to guide government action, though he had not even proposed any policy.
In December of 1936, after less than one year as King, Edward was forced to abdicate the crown to Prince George, his stuttering brother (Elizabeth's father) -- the phony pretext being that he was married to an American divorcee, Elizabeth Wallis Simpson. You see, because the King does technically retain certain powers (if he chooses to use them) the planned war with Germany would be difficult to pull off with an outspoken "pro-Hitler" King on the throne.
1. Queen Victoria was of the German Hanover line. // 2. Victoria's spouse, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, came straight from Germany. // 3. In 1917, the First World War caused King George V (Victoria & Albert's grandson and first cousin to both Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany and Tsar Nicholas of Russia) to officially change the family name from the German "Saxe-Coburg & Gotha" to the current "Windsor."
Edward VIII had an activist streak and a political bent -- including admiration for Hitler -- which could not be tolerated. A pretext was cooked-up to force his abdication in 1936. The following year, Edward visited Hitler with his American wife. Just look at how both of them light up in his presence.
This bit of history brings us to the new King, Charles. Unlike Victoria and Elizabeth, but very much like his granduncle Edward, Charles has not been one to shy away from making political statements and openly advocating for policy changes. Heck -- Charlie makes Edward seem shy in comparison! However, unlike Edward, Charles has always remained in good standing with both the UK Judenpresse and the parliamentary class. Why the double standard, you ask?
It's very simple. Goofy Charlie's political forays -- specifically his advocacy of the Climate Con and his condemnation of Vlad the Bad -- align perfectly with those of "The House." It's not that royals aren't allowed to dabble in politics. If the political posturing is "correct," then a prince, a queen, a king etc may speak as he please, provided it pleases Rothschild and the Global Crime Syndicate. Unless the White Hats have this creep (who, for all we know, may have had his ex-wife, Diana, murdered) under some sort of submission, expect to hear more nonsense coming from the pretend "king" of England. It's also possible that, as King Charles, he may decide to finally keep quiet on these matters, especially since his brother, Andrew, was hooked up with Mossad pedo-sex-traffickers Epstein & Maxwell. Either way, we hope he will keep his stupid mouth shut. Better yet, we'd like to see someone shut his treasonous mouth, literally.
The Queen is dead. Short-lived be the King.
* This just in from reader Tom K: The number of days between Q's very first post on October 28, 2017 and the Queen's death is 1776 -- the year during which the American colonies declared their independence from the Britain of Queen Elizabeth's great great great great grandfather, King George III. Coincidence?
Boobus Americanus 1: Queen Elizabeth is dead.
Boobus Americanus 2: She ruled for more than 70 years!
St. Sugar: The only thing that usseless hag ever ruled was the sstaff at Buckingham Palace.
Editor: And even that limited authority came with the understanding that The House of Windsor -- unlike the defunct Houses of Hohenzollern (Kaiser Wilhelm) and Romanov (Tsar Nicholas) -- must recognize who the real bosses were.
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Boobus Americanus 2: She ruled for more than 70 years!
St. Sugar: The only thing that usseless hag ever ruled was the sstaff at Buckingham Palace.
Editor: And even that limited authority came with the understanding that The House of Windsor -- unlike the defunct Houses of Hohenzollern (Kaiser Wilhelm) and Romanov (Tsar Nicholas) -- must recognize who the real bosses were.
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