There's a story that's told about Queen Elizabeth. According to this
story, when asked about her ideology, she is said to have replied: "We
are older than capitalism and socialism."
The story is almost
certainly apocryphal. But, like many such made-up anecdotes, it does
have a ring of truth to it. Indeed, the monarchs are not socialists or
capitalists, per se. They are part of a much older tradition that sees
the world in a very different light.
In order to understand
this royal worldview, we have to go back to the beginning. No, not the
beginning of Elizabeth's reign in 1952. Not the beginning of the English
branch of the House of "Windsor" to which she belonged. Not even the
beginning of the monarchical system in England.
We have to go
back to the beginning of monarchy itself. And, to the surprise of
absolutely none of my readers, we will discover that the royal ideology
was a forerunner to what we know today as eugenics.
The ancient
Egyptians worshipped the Pharaohs as progeny of the sun god, Ra. The
Japanese were told that their Imperial family descended from the sun
goddess, Amaterasu, and the sea god, Ryuujin. In Europe, monarchs
claimed that God Himself had directly granted them a "Divine Right" to
rule over their subjects. In China they called it the "Mandate of
Heaven."
For as long as there have been royalty there have been
elaborate theological justifications for why monarchs deserve to rule
over the people . . . and there has always been royalty.
It's
easy to see why the ruling class has tried to foster this idea of godly
rule in culture after culture. After all, if the Kings and Queens and
Emperors and Pharaohs were not gods, or at least chosen by God, why
would anyone listen to them? The difference between a regal king and a
tinpot dictator disappears if the king's divinity is denied.
Even today, in this "post-monarchical" era, ancient superstitions about
royal families persist. They are still referred to as "blue bloods" as
if the very blood that flowed through their veins is different from
yours or mine. There is still an elaborate etiquette for meeting the
Queen of England, and it is still strictly enforced without exception.
Even Obama had to take a lesson before he could meet with Her Majesty Elizabeth II.
The rituals of class distinction are not merely for show. The royals
have always considered themselves of superior stock to the commoners, a
breed apart from the poor downtrodden masses who toil in squalor beneath
them. Yes, the ancients were taught to believe that their emperors were
literal gods. The European dynasties, meanwhile, flourished for
centuries under the mass delusion that these families were specifically
selected by God to rule over their people. Should it come as any
surprise that at some point the royals started to believe their own
propaganda?
But, as these proto-eugenicists soon figured out,
if their blood was too precious to mingle with the commoners', then that
blood must be kept in the family. And so began centuries of royal
inbreeding that resulted in the deformities, abnormalities and genetic
weirdness that today pervades the royal bloodlines (congenital haemophilia
being just one of the most well-known examples). Perhaps the most
notable example of intra-family marriage leading to genetic ruin is that
of the Spanish Hapsburgs, who, after 500 years of ruling over vast
swathes of Europe, managed to inbreed themselves out of existence.
To
finish making sense of that history, we just need to add one other
element to the story: as it turns out, the "British" royal family isn't
very British at all. The House of "Windsor" only became the House of
"Windsor" in 1917, after all. Before that, it was Saxe Coburg-Gotha. But the British public were a bit fired up about the Huns because of that whole, you know, WWI thing, so "Windsor" it became.
Noting the true origins of the House of "Windsor" is not just some
cheap anti-Germanic slur, of course. It points to something even more
fundamental. These royals — connected, as we remember, through
inbreeding — had much more in common with their European brothers and
sisters, cousins and uncles, than they did with the populations they
were supposedly ruling over.
With that historical background in
place, we can understand, for example, the Windsors' well-documented
fondness for the eugenics-promoting Nazis. Where do you think the Nazis
got their eugenical beliefs from, after all? Given the royal pedigree of
the eugenic worldview, it is perhaps unsurprising to learn that the
pseudoscience of eugenics was pioneered by Royal Medal recipient Francis Galton, himself hailing from the celebrated (and thoroughly inbred) Darwin-Galton line, which boasted many esteemed Fellows of the Royal Society.
The overt ties
between the Edwardian (VIII, for those keeping track at home) court and
Hitler's eugenics-obsessed regime are well-documented. The covert ties
are even more intriguing. (Hmmm, that gives me an idea for a documentary
. . . .) But it isn't just the home movies showing the future queen giving the Nazi salute
or Edward VIII's hobnobbing with Hitler or King Charles' lifelong
friendship with unreformed SS officer (and Bilderberg co-founder) Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands or Prince Harry's predilection for Nazi cosplaying. More to the heart of the matter is Prince Philip's infamous desire to be reincarnated as "a particularly deadly virus"
in order to contribute to the depopulation of the planet (a remark that
has been fact checked by Snopes, so you know that it's true!).
You see, the royals' blue blood pomposity wouldn't be so bad if they
simply felt themselves superior to the commoners in a "What, you groom your own stool?
My heavens!" kind of way. Sadly, it is not mere snobbery that motivates
them, and their great desire is not simply to be kept apart from the
commoners. As it turns out, the royal family doesn't just feel superior
to their subjects, they actively dislike them and constantly scheme to
subjugate them, rob them, impoverish them and mislead them...<<<Read More>>>...
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