Death of a Queen
And the Mood of A Nation
1) The Queen
To have a sense of what the death of the Queen means for the United Kingdom is to appreciate the country’s history, and especially its current troubles. For nations to be able to hold together certain people must become larger than their individual selves. This is unfair. Nonetheless it is inevitable. From counselling Churchill during World War II through gently soliciting the Scots to think carefully about any referendum decision they make, no other figure will ever again emerge in modern Britain to possess such symbolic unifying power.
It is the end of an era. What comes next may not be as pretty.
2) The New Prime Minister
A new Conservative Party Prime Minister - Lizz Truss - was selected only two days ago and has not yet had a chance to secure her power. Brexit border uncertainty continues to reign over Northern Ireland. The economy is on the verge of a freefall due to lockdown inspired money printing. The proxy war in Ukraine has led to acute energy insecurity, while Zelenksy continues to demand - and receive - more depleted British funds. National strikes, albeit temporarily called off for mourning, are set to paralyse the country’s infrastructure. Add crippling globalist Net Zero policies to the mix and the country is barely left standing.
Financial vultures at Blackrock - the world’s most powerful fund, were busy betting against the UK before the Queen had even died. The new Prime Minister is in for a rough ride.
3) King Charles III
Unlike Her Majesty the Queen, King Charles III is not a uniquely loved and unifying national symbol. Due to his own choices, as well as the ever changing mood of the nation, the job ahead for him looks bleak and the nation weary. The symbolic power of his mother Elizabeth II rested largely in her silence. This King enjoys noise.
i) King Charles III is an advocate for Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum and his Great Reset:
ii) He also advocated for population control in the unindustrialised world.
The Telegraph reports in June 2010:
iii) And he promotes Net-Zero climate alarmism.
The Telegraph reports in July 2019:
iv) Most embarrassing of all, his assessment of character appears to be as bad as or worse than his brother Prince Andrew’s.
People magazine reports in April 2022:
4) The Regressives
Finally, those who call themselves ‘progressive’ will use this time to display their reactionary and sensationalist regressive side. It is best to leave the dead alone.
5) A Dark Winter
Unfinished Brexit, state sanctioned covid mandate abuse, excess death and vaccine injury, crippling inflation, job losses, energy insecurity, national strikes, looming food shortages and a new king who appears to be completely out of synchrony with the nation.
The Queen may be most missed when the nation remembers what it had after it sees what it has lost. A bitter population approaches a dark winter. There may be trouble ahead.