Monarchy

I’m not anti-monarchy yet I’m not a monarchist.

I think the masses need a monarchy. I don’t.

I am not anti-royal, I’m just not a royalist.

The date is September 6th 1997.

It was a Saturday and my salon was booked up.

Nervously I drove into town. I say nervously because every single shop in that town where my salon was is closed. It was a self-enforced closure under huge pressure from those that didn’t want to impose a shutdown. The guilt forced a shutdown.

There is no one around. No one sees me open the large metal shutters. They are so noisy I am sure people heard them. I pulled them up, unlocked the large glass-fronted door and went into my hair salon. All the lights were switched on and I was ready for whatever was coming.

All of my family told me not to open it. All of my pals told me not to open it. Other shops in the town told me I shouldn’t be open. But I was open. I am not a monarchist so why should I play along with the mass? All I was thinking then was, you are the same people, the same media the same conversation that had been verbally destroying lady Diana for years. Now you believe she was sent from heaven and the best person that ever walked God’s earth. It was as if her death reversed the course of thought. It didn’t, that was simply media hysteria.

Just a couple of staff came into work. They all had a special pay deal to work that day. We all worked, and did haircuts all day long. Nothing happened. Clients were thrilled we were open. The funeral of Diana took place. It came and then it went.

I got home and hardly any of my family would speak to me. They felt I was disrespectful. But I was happy with that. I survived that huge pressure to conform and went on with my own life barely unnoticed. 

As I say, I am no monarchist. I respect the monarchy, and I respect the thoughts of others on the monarchy but I am no monarchist.

The monarchy is based on a divinely inherited ideal. This is known as the divine right of Kings. This means each monarch believes they have been divinely appointed by god himself to rule over a country.

Even in times of war, they believe that each monarch has the divine right to send their innocent people to die in another land where they are mirroring the same words and actions. To monarchists, God is a nationalist. He even goes as far as blessing football players of different countries to score a goal. 

And in a world that barely believes in any god-like figure, the idea of a monarchy is even more farcical. Only 4% of the British even attend church. Even then that is maybe once a month or once a year.

Yet that is just my opinion. And in a world that has become almost terrified of sharing opinions having an opinion can almost be dangerous these days. It gets you cancelled, blanked, deleted and removed from the flow of society in seconds.

Today is Queen Elizabeth II funeral.

In a virally algorithmic thought-driven world, ideas are pushed at lightning speed into the minds of mankind through phones. These ideas are designed to create ‘instant’ mass thinking. That mass thinking is designed to think as one. The decision, opinions, thoughts and even dare I say you question ‘that narrative ‘you could be in trouble. Twitter and Facebook actively look for posts that oppose what THEY decide is right or wrong.

The narrative can be used for all kind of effects. We saw that in the U.K. very recently with a self-imposed climate lockdown for two days. The algorithms supported by the MSM fed endless fear into the population. This created a new belief. The belief was built on fear. The fear was around death. Yet. is was a heatwave or as we used to call it - hot weather.

Most of the UK believed in a matter of days that if they went out in the heat (39 degrees) they would die, others would die and a huge price would be paid for leaving the house. Nothing happened yet our economy was as good as closed for 2-days just in case it did.

Yesterday we went for our daily coffee early. At this time you can count the number of cars outside parked. Yesterday it was like Christmas. The shops were packed, items sold out, beer was loaded into carts and everyone was preparing for yet another self-imposed one-day lockdown. Today the economy in the U.K. is as good as in a self-imposed, peer pressure lockdown. Why? The Queen’s funeral. Or is it that the majority have taken the time to understand what monarchy actually really, truly is?

We went for an early walk. We found two coffee shops open. As we walked in it reminded me of the day I opened my salon in 1997 during the day of lady Diana's funeral. The guy immediately explained to me his need to open and kept apologising if I was offended and told me he has to pay his bills.

Nothing changes. Compliance is nothing new. Mass pressure is not a new way of doing things. It's always been this way. And now the way social media kings are writing and ruling the mortality manifesto for mankind. Mankind went from worshipping a god to worshipping social media gods. Their masters make the decisions about what is right and wrong for humankind. That includes compliance or deletion.

There has never been a stronger time in humankind to retain your identity. The identity of being one. The identity of being human. The identity of choice. The identity of doing what is right. The mass is strong and is becoming stronger. The single algorithmic voice is gaining ground.

I know it’s the Queen’s funeral today but I will do as I wish to do. I will respect the queen and the day of her death but I refuse to sit in front of a TV hypnotised for 10 hours pretending that someone of divine origin has passed on something greater and left a hole in my life. This belief is for the manipulated masses, the compliant and those that have surrendered their opinions to the fear of the viral algorithms.

Previous
Previous

The Zoomanic Trance Continues

Next
Next

War Is Back