Anonymous wrote:It’s en vogue to just spew hatred against white people and white women in particular. Seems like there was great decolonization during her “reign” which we all know was not a reign at all. She was a show pony with very little power. These disingenuous criticisms take away from legitimate complaints.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Queen was literally paid millions a year to represent the UK and quite literally wore jewels stolen from colonies in her crown. She did not apologize for any of these evils. Of course we should judge her legacy based on the British empire. There is no comparison to the average person.
Correct. Her country stole so many jewels and other resources from other countries and the royal family has many. Others sit in their museums. They should all be given back. This is not ancient history. India only got its independence in 1947.
Anonymous wrote:The Queen was literally paid millions a year to represent the UK and quite literally wore jewels stolen from colonies in her crown. She did not apologize for any of these evils. Of course we should judge her legacy based on the British empire. There is no comparison to the average person.
Anonymous wrote:This article does a good overview of the Caribbean countries
1 - countries can remove the queen/king as sovereign head; requires constitutional amendment at the country level
2 - The Commonwealth explanation - “The Commonwealth does not make laws but provides trade links between countries and, in some cases, a foundation for resolving disputes. While a majority of member countries have historical ties to the British Empire, the last two countries to join, Mozambique and Rwanda, never experienced British colonial rule.”
https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/04/28/caribbean-monarchy-queen-republic-reparations-jamaica-belize-protest/
Anonymous wrote:“What you would never know from the pictures — which is partly their point — is the violence that lies behind them. In 1948 the colonial governor of Malaya declared a state of emergency to fight communist guerrillas, and British troops used counterinsurgency tactics the Americans would emulate in Vietnam. In 1952 the governor of Kenya imposed a state of emergency to suppress an anticolonial movement known as Mau Mau, under which the British rounded up tens of thousands of Kenyans into detention camps and subjected them to brutal, systematized torture. In Cyprus in 1955 and Aden, Yemen, in 1963, British governors again declared states of emergency to contend with anticolonial attacks; again they tortured civilians. Meanwhile, in Ireland, the Troubles brought the dynamics of emergency to the United Kingdom. In a karmic turn, the Irish Republican Army assassinated the queen’s relative Lord Louis Mountbatten, the last viceroy of India (and the architect of Elizabeth’s marriage to his nephew, Prince Philip), in 1979.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/08/opinion/queen-empire-decolonization.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She benefited from it. Period.
And president Biden benefited from our history of slavery.
Anonymous wrote:“What you would never know from the pictures — which is partly their point — is the violence that lies behind them. In 1948 the colonial governor of Malaya declared a state of emergency to fight communist guerrillas, and British troops used counterinsurgency tactics the Americans would emulate in Vietnam. In 1952 the governor of Kenya imposed a state of emergency to suppress an anticolonial movement known as Mau Mau, under which the British rounded up tens of thousands of Kenyans into detention camps and subjected them to brutal, systematized torture. In Cyprus in 1955 and Aden, Yemen, in 1963, British governors again declared states of emergency to contend with anticolonial attacks; again they tortured civilians. Meanwhile, in Ireland, the Troubles brought the dynamics of emergency to the United Kingdom. In a karmic turn, the Irish Republican Army assassinated the queen’s relative Lord Louis Mountbatten, the last viceroy of India (and the architect of Elizabeth’s marriage to his nephew, Prince Philip), in 1979.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/08/opinion/queen-empire-decolonization.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She benefited from it. Period.
You realize that WE ALL benefitted from our grisly past. We are all benefiting right now-we exploit now .
But what did she do, singularly as queen to be called a serial killer?
I don’t know about you, but the Queen benefited a heck of a lot more from “our grisly past” than I have! She was literally one of the most privileged people in the world.
And you’ve not done your share of atoning for what you benefited.
Actually I was on the receiving end of the grisly past, hon. Much of my family died in pogroms and the Holocaust. My family didn’t come here until after WW2. Now you show your receipts. Who’s your family? How have you benefitted? Have you atoned sufficiently?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She benefited from it. Period.
You realize that WE ALL benefitted from our grisly past. We are all benefiting right now-we exploit now .
But what did she do, singularly as queen to be called a serial killer?
I don’t know about you, but the Queen benefited a heck of a lot more from “our grisly past” than I have! She was literally one of the most privileged people in the world.
And you’ve not done your share of atoning for what you benefited.
Actually I was on the receiving end of the grisly past, hon. Much of my family died in pogroms and the Holocaust. My family didn’t come here until after WW2. Now you show your receipts. Who’s your family? How have you benefitted? Have you atoned sufficiently?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She benefited from it. Period.
You realize that WE ALL benefitted from our grisly past. We are all benefiting right now-we exploit now .
But what did she do, singularly as queen to be called a serial killer?
I don’t know about you, but the Queen benefited a heck of a lot more from “our grisly past” than I have! She was literally one of the most privileged people in the world.
And you’ve not done your share of atoning for what you benefited.
Actually I was on the receiving end of the grisly past, hon. Much of my family died in pogroms and the Holocaust. My family didn’t come here until after WW2. Now you show your receipts. Who’s your family? How have you benefitted? Have you atoned sufficiently?