by Suff » 19 Apr 2021, 10:42
Meds I feel very much the same.
When you join the services and swear your oath to the Queen, if you are thinking, you realise that the monarchy provides an extremely important backstop to the country. If you consider Myanmar, the Generals just took over, nothing to stop them really, they owed no real allegiance to the government which keeps changing.
In the UK the military swear allegiance to the Crown and the King or Queen who is the crown at that time. It is something very different and means that no matter what the politicians are doing or HM Government are doing, there is virtually Zero chance of a military coup in the UK as the allegiance to the crown is extremely strong and hard to go against.
Our current Queen has headed off republicanism by giving the country almost all parts of a republican life without surrendering the crown. She doesn't interfere in government, although, as has been seen, when she has been quoted during an "off the record" comment; that her power in the country is still there. She chooses to leave the people and the people's represented electorate, to run the country and she provides the top level stability it needs.
Charles will not do otherwise and neither will William if I read him correctly.
I feel very deeply for HM, she was born into a role, took it up early through her father's illness, has carried out her duty with dignity and strength and now, more than ever, when her body is failing her, needs that strength to survive the loss of someone who has been the mainstay of her life for almost all of her life.
For what she has done in her life she deserves our support and our compassion. She looked very frail to me and nearly tripped and fell as she entered the chapel and it took a few steps to steady herself. She will keep doing what she was born to do until the day she dies. Just as her husband did what he committed to until the end of his life.
There are some very good examples to take from that.
There was one thing said which crystallises the entire family IMO. When one of the row of people the BBC brought in, who knew the Prince, said "I told him I would be honoured to accept the role. He said, rather sharply, it is a Duty, not an Honour and don't ever forget it". I can only suspect the depth of betrayal he felt over the whole US "pantomime" going on right now. He thought he had, at the very least, in his own family, made it clear the difference between Duty and the impression of Honour.
A whole lifetime (almost), lived in Duty. There was a time when the majority of the people in the UK would recognise and understand that. Now I suspect less than a quarter would. Because Duty is a word which is going out of use in our society.
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.