March 15, 2010

Now that you mention it.

The evil of such as system and the fact that the English tolerate it and have not risen past indignation and strongly worded notes, shows one how befitting of total collapse English society is.

And where are the Royals? Where are the God chosen defenders of English faith, culture and law? Where are those, designated by God to rule and veto this insanity? . . . . A sorrier lot is hard to imagine.
I don’t agree with Stanislav’s conclusion about why the British Crown is AWOL in this most critical hour for Britain, i.e., because of hedonism. Engaging in sensual pleasures doesn’t necessarily neutralize common sense and resolve. Nor have all of them been touched by scandal. Nonetheless, even allowing for merciless press coverage where every quirk or mistake heads straight to page one, one is struck by their lack of any kind of serious purpose, military service aside, and Stanislav is not without evidence for his opinion.

However, to ask Where are the Royals? is merely to ask a variation of the question that is asked every day about virtually all other political, intellectual, and spiritual leaders in Britain. Like them, the Royals seem to have been injected with some kind of Meccan brain curare that suppresses the reptilian neuron storm when the tocsin sounds, as it has for a long time now.

It’s just more obvious when the screaming silence issues from those who possess royal authority, no less, and who at the same time can look back to examples of consummate English leadership, royal or otherwise. Even if their political power is today reduced to almost nothing, there is a vast reservoir of royal moral authority. Any one of the Royals could electrify the British if he or she would but describe reality accurately and demand that Britain cease its surrender to a vastly inferior culture and religion and defend its ancient liberties.

Stanislav has most definitely put his finger on the nerve. It’s difficult to understand how that particular family can remain silent in the face of the tragic transformation of Britain into a partly free, third world society. The examples of leaders who helped to advance England to the first rank of nations in times past should have been the daily fare of their upbringing.

But there is only silence. A silence that is appropriate for the grave of a great nation.

Queen Boudicca led a revolt that killed 70,000 Romans and others after the Romans flogged her. That was how one queen of the island dealt with enemies of her people.

What does the present one do with her time?

"The Failed State of England." By Stanislav, Matt Rodina, 3/13/10.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sean Gabb:
http://www.vdare.com/gabb/100314_british.htm
(...)
Britain is no longer a free country. It is a police state, in which freedom of speech is being narrowed to allow nothing more than polite disagreement with the authorities over things not regarded as central to the 1997 New Labour Revolution—and in which freedom of association means nothing at all.
(..)

Col. B. Bunny said...

I wish I could dispute that in any particular. The recent decision against the BNP signals the end of any political movement not in lock step with mass immigration and destruction of the British way of life. Or the grievous crippling thereof.