September 18, 2025

"The rebel commander and pioneering first President George Washington famously vowed never to set foot on British soil."

"And my five-times-great-grandfather King George III, for his part, did not spare his words when he spoke of the revolutionary leaders. Today, however, we celebrate a relationship between our two countries that surely neither Washington nor King George III could possibly have imagined. The ocean may still divide us, but in so many other ways, we are now the closest of kin.... The successes of the British Redcoats and of George Washington's Continental Army today stand shoulder-to-shoulder, brothers and sisters in arms, protecting the freedoms we both cherish...."

Said King Charles, at the extravagant dinner at Windsor Castle.

Gaze upon the ultra-posh scene and marvel. Watch the whole thing, with Trump speaking after Charles:


ADDED: Don't miss the elegant rendition of "The Star-Spangled Banner," beginning at 9:00. 

At 13:41, I believe the King is crying. Trump is reading a quote from the King himself, written in 1993, saying that he was "entirely motivated by a desperate desire to put the 'Great' back into Great Britain, in the finest tradition of British sovereigns."

Trump restates Charles's sentiment for the edification of Charles: "He has given his whole heart—everything he’s got—to those parts of Britain that are beyond the realm of mere legislation. It’s not easy, but they define its essence and its virtue, its harmony and its soul. It’s an amazing calling, and there’s nobody who has answered that calling like you have."

Trump segues without transition to everyone's favorite thing about England — the English language: "A fifth of all humanity speaks, writes, thinks, and prays in the language born on these isles and perfected in the pages of Shakespeare and Dickens, Tolkien, Lewis, Orwell, and Kipling."

Next is a nod to the "incredible people—unbelievable people": "The lionhearted people of this kingdom defeated Napoleon, unleashed the Industrial Revolution, destroyed slavery, and defended civilization in the darkest days of fascism and communism."

AND: The headline at The Daily Beast is "Trump, 79, Rambles Through Error-Filled Windsor Castle Address."

107 comments:

Achilles said...

Trump looks old in that picture.

wild chicken said...

The whole world hates our president and I feel terrible about it. Anyway,

Limited blogger said...

Man, the British do pomp and circumstance like nobody else

RAH said...

I thought that the King showed a bit of humor with that historical fact. George Washington wanted to advance in the British military. Colonials were not approved in upper ranks.
Many Colonials wanted to gain rank in British society. So many of them were second sons and were British in outlook. So the idea that once we were independent was that we still had the same culture and similar identity. To King George III George Washington was a traitor.

Yancey Ward said...

"Trump looks old in that picture."

He is old. He will be 80 years old next June. I have known lots of 80 year old men during my life and only my maternal grandfather had the sort of vitality Trump shows every day through his physical actions. However, my grandfather went downhill very quickly after about age 83 or so and died bedridden at 89. My mother is only 77 and can't walk more than about 30 feet or stand for more than a minute. I hope I am half as lively as Trump when I am 80- if I make it that far.

Dave Begley said...

UK has no First Amendment. People are getting arrested for Tweets.

Achilles said...

wild chicken said...

The whole world hates our president and I feel terrible about it. Anyway,

Only the rulers.

Most of the people like him.

Original Mike said...

Hilarious

doctrev said...

Wow. It's not often that King Charles gets heartfelt compliments from anyone who wasn't his former mistress. As ever, President Trump has a fine ability for making friends. Don't count on hearing this from the globalist British rags, though.

Biff said...

I agree with Althouse; that was a lovely, stirring rendition of the US national anthem.

I applaud both Charles and Trump for keeping their remarks restrained and appropriate to the occasion. It really does seem that both sides are trying to solidify the relationship in the face of significant policy differences.

I voted for Trump three times, but I do take a deep breath when Trump gets up to speak at events like this. He has a knack for informality and unpredictability. It's mostly an asset, but it can be nerve-wracking for an old fuddy-duddy like me.

Trump is starting to show some age, but he still has incredible stamina and energy. Through my career, I've been exposed to a number of CEOs. Whatever their differences, good CEOs seem to have the common traits of exceptional energy and stamina. By my early thirties, I realized that I was not CEO material when I noticed that I had a hard time matching the pace of CEOs decades older than me, and I thought of myself as being fitter and more energetic than average at the time.

RideSpaceMountain said...

The banner has truly passed. The British Empire is no longer an empire and now Great Britain is no longer Britain, or great.

The colony has surpassed the colonizer. Far surpassed. Sad!

wild chicken said...

Joyce Carol Oates tweeted that the only reason the king was treating them to such pomp is because he HAD TO since we stupidly elected Trump.

How can a writer be so perceptive her art and so dumb in her tweets. Of course he had to, but there it is anyway. Pomp and circumstance, and Trump!

Eva Marie said...

Melania’s gown is perfection.

Achilles said...

As long as Trump actually starts throwing Antifa thugs in jail and actually takes down the billionaires funding them then he can look as old as he wants.

He needs to start making some progress cutting us out of Europe's war with Russia though and get to work on government spending in a real way.

narciso said...

shes been silly for a long time, (recall the jurassic park hunting tweet)

narciso said...

there was a time she glorified the junior terrorists,

Lazarus said...

It would have been cool if Trump had responded in his mother's native Scots Gaelic, but I guess that wasn't passed down in the family.

Trump will be out of office in a little over 3 years. I hope and pray he's got 3½ more good years in him.

Eva Marie said...

@Original Mike OMG

Howard said...

You have to give Donald his props. He's living his most outlandish dream in real time.

Lazarus said...

Are the three saddest, most dispiriting words in the English language still "Joyce Carol Oates"? We had to read a story of hers in an English class. I thought it very good and "relevant" to our young lives, but I have to wonder, if she would go on writing and writing and writing if she ever got it right.

BudBrown said...

So the blonde sitting next to the Prez is Kate. I thought she's a brunette.

Howard said...

My monkeymind give the Brits the benefit of the doubt. Their island is a third the size of Texas. Our island is North America. In effect, the US was just a massive scale up of the British Empire with people from all around the world.

TeaBagHag said...

Our dementia ridden, pedo protector sure said a mouthful:
It is a privilege to be the first American president welcomed here,” said Trump, 79. “And if you think about it, a lot of presidents, and this was this was the second state visit and that is the first. Maybe that is going to be the last time—I hope it is, actually."

narciso said...

that would take too much self awareness on her part,

in the subsequent era, the Brits were pressganging our sailors in order to fight Napoleon, but still

Maynard said...

Watching Trump operate at age 79 makes me think that completely abstaining from drugs and alcohol is a good thing.

Bruce Hayden said...

“ Trump looks old in that picture.”

Yet Chuck looks and acts older. They are very close in age, but HRM shows it more.

I was surprised that HRH Wills is taller than Trump. And Kate is tall too. When they met the Trumps, there were four tall people standing there, and didn’t really realize it, until they met with Chuck and Camelia. The former two women acted their parts perfectly. The latter was the 1 of the 6 who really didn’t. More dowdy than majestic.

Oh, and I was surprised at the multiple playings of our National anthem by the British royal bands, when it celebrated a victory over them.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

They see themselves in each other. When young, both were not taken seriously. Both divorced. Both yearn for a greatness everyone around them believes is past.

Bart Hall (Kansas, USA) said...

My great grandfather was born on the grounds of Windsor, and grew up as a playmate of the future Edward VII. My GGgf was Chief Groundskeeper and Gamekeeper for Victoria, and I have several gifts presented by the Queen to my GGgf, presumably on Boxing Day, when he would have been invited to share a sumptuous Christmastide meal with the royal family.

Though a patriotic American by birth and temperament, I am also a loyal subject of Charles III. Because of the family connection, my grandfather was "inside the ropes" for both the Coronation and Funeral of Edward VII.

Despite differences, all of us in the Anglosphere are children of a common mother.

Mason G said...

"protecting the freedoms we both cherish...."

Freedoms? Aren't the British locking up people for saying mean things about muslims? And attempting to protect themselves from being attacked/raped by them?

gspencer said...

Chuckie thinks we have the closest of relationships. This could be true but only if we start showing our love for the Shariah.

Iman said...

What’s all this then!?

Gerda Sprinchorn said...

I'm digging the tiaras.

RCOCEAN II said...

Agree. Excellent rendition of Star spangled banner. Of course Trump lays it on thick with the Real Estate salesman puffery. "Destroyed Slavery" yeah ok. That's after being the greatest slavers of the 18th century and creating slavery in North America and the Carribean.

As for "Fighting facism and communism" guess that sounds better than "Dragged us into WW1, then started WW2, which lead to a 40 year Cold war"

narciso said...

they begging not to be hit by the tariff frigate,

RCOCEAN II said...

Who's the fat guy opposite TRump? He looks outta place.

rhhardin said...

The Brits can do the Star Spangled Banner. It's a British drinking song.

narciso said...

anacreon, something or other,

narciso said...

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/ushome/index.html

Scott M said...

Any hot mic moments where they are talking about organ transplants and longevity? I assumed all the cool world leaders are doing it now...

RCOCEAN II said...

After Joe Biden, Charles is probably just happy to talk to an American president who doesn't fall asleep in his soup bowl.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

That's after being the greatest slavers of the 18th century and creating slavery in North America and the Carribean.

I believe the Dinosaur Dynasty on the planet was much worse, but that's just me.

narciso said...

yes the Royal African Company was founded by the UK, but they also put the slavers out of business, with the Royal Navy,
and crushed the slave trading Ashanti empire,

Narr said...

"To Anacreon in Heaven."

George III called Washington the greatest man in the world.

Trump's encomium to the British people might have been cribbed from Victor Hugo.

Marcus Bressler said...

So the Brits started WW2? Are you that stupid? What, are you trying to say that when they declared war on Germany for Germany's advancing of war into the West was "starting WW2"? Sweet Jesus.

Mike (MJB Wolf) said...

My favorite moment is Trump saying that the UK "and America are like two notes of a chord, meant to be played together" (from memory). Poetic. Remember when Biden couldn't even keep up with the 100-year-old queen? That was fun.

narciso said...

A sort of Athens and Rome relationship,

Jaq said...

"The whole world hates our president"

The power of propaganda. Europe is propagandized beyond belief, the UK very much so,

https://www.declassifieduk.org/how-the-uk-security-services-neutralised-the-countrys-leading-liberal-newspaper/

But the rest of Europe too, it's because the globalists control the newspapers, and the main enemies of the globalists are the people of the various countries.

Jaq said...

"A sort of Athens and Rome relationship,"

that's what the neocons say. Some people say that the same families that have been running England since 1066 are now running US foreign policy.

narciso said...

its called an analogy, most of the papers are tripe from the once prestigious Thunderer, the Times to the Torygraph owned by the Barclays (don't get me started on them) the latter was stolen from Conrad Black,

Pete said...

My favorite observation about King George III was that if he had the foresight to move his throne to New York City, he would have better understood the Americans’ complaints, and they would have had more allegiance to him, and the British Empire would today rule the world.

narciso said...

ah the Daily Basilisk what would we do without them, plenty it turns out,

narciso said...

the Hanovers ran out of steam, pretty quickly, then they deferred to the Sax Kohbergs, (the Windsors) who are nearly at that point,

CJinPA said...

Do they really call Camilla the "Queen"? I didn't think a King and Queen serve at the same time. That's why I flunked out of British Royalty school.

RCOCEAN II said...

So the Brits started WW2?

UK declared war on Germany in both world wars. Stated reason - The first because Germany and the 2nd because they invaded Poland. That's called "Starting a war". But Rc, Rc Hitler was bad. Yeah, so was Stalin. And he also invaded Poland in September 39. But the UK didn't declare war did they? LOL.

narciso said...

in that Charles Stross tale, I referrenced the Hanovers had done just that after the Invasion by France, also in I Martha Adams, the Royals had done the same, after the Soviets took over the UK,

RCOCEAN II said...

Oops. meant to write in the first world war stated reason was German invasion of Belgium.

narciso said...

the why of the Royal African Company, the Brits needed to mine gold ore in Ghana, it was one of the slave trading regimes

Lazarus said...

"Athens and Rome." That was when England's leaders were still aristocrats (or aristocrat-adjacent). Now that they are the same kind of goons that govern us, that Athens thing doesn't fly anymore. Maybe the aristocrats weren't that admirable, but the crew running things now doesn't overawe anyone with their competence.

wildswan said...

We inherited a system of freedom from the Brits and have extended it.

But now unfortunately, thanks to President Autopen, we Americans have among us people who hate us though they emigrated here and won't go back to their supposedly better culture. They go about assaulting Jews, calling for an end to free speech and supporting violence against their political enemies. They abused the asylum laws on entry here and they continue to to abuse the system here by promoting the values of the culture they supposedly sought asylum from. And they have drawn in Americans who, for example, now support the Gaza system of murdering political enemies and calling for the destruction of Israel. Many of these now support "Turtle Island", an imaginary entity which is whatever glorious dream they want it to be, unlike reality which has to be dealt with as it is. And, thanks to the previous President's AutoPen, we now have among us people who have sworn allegiance when naturalized who were lying when they swore they supported the USA, in particular when they said they supported our constitutionally mandated separation of church and state.

This presents a problem. How do we keep the values which are being abused by those who use that abuse to work for our destruction? It can be done. We kept British values and extended them before and after the Revolution and we kept and extended American values during the Civil War. We have to acknowledge that an abusive pattern exists and we have to acknowledge the presence and actions of those who are doing it, the aliens and the academics, and those who won't see it, the media and the judges and the falling elite. And then?

They say the American Revolution happened in the hearts and minds of Americans before that Revolution happened. And the Civil War completely existed before the War began.
Is our time right now such a time? when the turning point is forming before the world turns.

At least, the Americans have a leader.

TeaBagHag said...

I wonder why Prince Andrew couldn’t make it?

Left Bank of the Charles said...

I am not in favor of royalty, but would be willing to trade Kings.

narciso said...

when the ruling class despises the values of the founders,
take King Charles, his instructions at the feet of Rab Butler, left him with a dangerous degree of relativism, that his groveling to the Dragon or the Brotherhood evidences,

Prof. M. Drout said...

Sometimes it's useful to question long-established narratives. Doing it all the time, and somewhat mindlessly, just makes you make stupid claims.
There's a balance to be found.

Tina Trent said...

Re: Joyce Carol Oates: a well-known poet I know took me to the Folger in DC to a dinner once with a lot of famous writers. The conversation of the evening was trading stories about how completely insane Joyce Carol Oates is, and these weren't particularly sane people themselves.

She had to be warned off stalking Mike Tyson some years ago. She thought they were in some sort of relationship.

narciso said...

Washington Franklin Jefferson all thought of themselves as Englishmen, till the Crown reminded them they were second class citizens,

narciso said...

wow that dangerous delusion, that could get some one killed,
the old Tyson who wasn't so mellow,

Rocco said...

narciso said...
yes the Royal African Company was founded by the UK, but they also put the slavers out of business, with the Royal Navy,
and crushed the slave trading Ashanti empire


Don’t forget the massive slave trade between Africa and the Middle East that the Royal Navy suppressed, too.

Or the Barbary Coast that enslaved several million Europeans. The US Marines got their start by crushing them, though, not the UK.

narciso said...

they certainly played a part, but without compliant kingdoms on the coast, many of those still remain influential in the political world

mikee said...

My wife's analysis this morning as she did her hair, with the pomp and circumstance in the background being played on CNBC (the only news channel worth a tinker's damn these days), was as follows in its entirety: He was almost killed during the campaign twice and he's 80. He DGAF what anyone thinks and will do everything he wants from here on.

Further deponent sayeth not. And I agree.

Rocco said...

CJinPA said...
Do they really call Camilla the "Queen"? I didn't think a King and Queen serve at the same time. That's why I flunked out of British Royalty school.

Yes, they do. For most of British/English history, the Queen has been the consort of the ruling King, although a few have ruled in their own right. Some of the queen consorts did conduct the business of the state when their husbands were otherwise occupied, usually war in France or something like that.

A king was always of higher rank. That’s why Philip never rose above a Duke; although I suspect some people did kick around the idea of him as a King Consort subordinate to Queen Elizabeth II.

John henry said...

Trump is reading a quote from the King himself, written in 1993, saying that he was "entirely motivated by a desperate desire to put the 'Great' back into Great Britain, in the finest tradition of British sovereigns."

How is Chuck going to do that? Everyone knows that the king is just a figurehead with no power. The fact that on paper he has powers to make Mao blush with envy means nothing because he can't use them.

Or maybe he can? Albeit under the blankets so to speak. And as "Power in being" that might disappear if he used them publicly.

I suspect that President Trump knows where the power is really located in England. That is why he spent several hours in meetings with the kind, not the king's prime minister.

John Henry

Rocco said...

Philip was a Prince, too. But he was born to that as part of the Greek royal family and not as a status in the British one.

narciso said...

there was that teleplay about King Charles, with the fellow who, once played the heroic character in Jewel, Pigott Smith, where he called out the Army to stop paparazzi or some such

mikee said...

CJin PA, re Trump calling Camilla a "Queen," our beloved elder statesman is following a long, long line of US presidents who have been feted by the Brits, and mucked up their speeches. It is apparently something the British people and the British press delight in, and have done so for a long long time. And upgrading the rank of a royal has never been an item requiring correction, those louts are all as hubristic as a fresh litter of Hampshire piglets. Could be worse, Trump could have emulated JFK in Berlin saying he was a pastry, in Deutsche.

Rocco said...

John henry said...
I suspect that President Trump knows where the power is really located in England. That is why he spent several hours in meetings with the[ir] kind, not the king's prime minister.

Well, you can't expect to wield supreme executive power just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you.

narciso said...

its a tailors shop on saville row, (kingsman)

John henry said...

Marcus Bressler said...

What, are you trying to say that when they declared war on Germany for Germany's advancing of war into the West was "starting WW2"? Sweet Jesus.

We could debate whether the Brits started WWII. They certainly did nothing to stop it in the early 30s when they could have done it with a couple dozen policemen.

But I am still pissed off about FDR dragging us into it. A war where were had no interests. Starting in 1939 or so. Giving UK destroyers and other war materials, lending money on the never never, invading iceland, sinking German ships and more.

All before December 41. These are the actions that finally prompted the Germans to declare war on us.

I don't really fault Churchill, If I was him I would seek help wherever I could get it. It was pretty much his job.

I do fault FDR for conniving with him to drag us in. Especially after getting elected on a platform of "Wait till after the election, I'll have more flexibility then."

Oh, wait, that was Obama. Roosevelt said

"And while I am talking to you mothers and fathers, I give you one more assurance. I have said this before, but I shall say it again and again. Your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign wars."

That was October 30, 1940, a week before the election.

Fuck FDR. Fuck Wilson who made similar promises about ww1 and LBJ who ran on a similar promise about VN in 1964.

John Henry


john mosby said...

mikee: "Trump could have emulated JFK in Berlin saying he was a pastry, in Deutsche."

Good thing Kamala wasn't elected - she would have said "I am a (custard) tart!" CC, JSM

narciso said...

one might argue his anti Japanese animus he expressed since the 20s, did his China trading father, Warren have something to do with it, also an imbalance between Stanley Hornbeck and the lefties like Harry Hopkins,
say Lord Halifax had taken over, England would likely have surrendered, then where would we be,

Tina Trent said...

Thousands of Britons have been issued arrest warrants and hundreds imprisoned for mere "hate speech." Jobs are lost; houses and bank accounts and salaries seized, mostly for objecting to the mass rape and pimping of white British girls. Britain is now a virulently anti-female fascist state. I don't want my President there acting as if this isn't happening.

Tommy Robinson scored a massive victory Saturday with a million native British and patriotic immigrants turning out to march against mass Muslim immigration, child rape, and supressing speech. Steyn says legitimate sources counted the crowd at one million, while the BBC said 110,000. A million looks much closer, making it the largest march for free speech in history. No media covered the march, except to insist it was irrelevant and racist. Trump should not be breaking bread with these child-raping, nation-killing fascists.

john mosby said...

John Henry: "Fuck FDR. Fuck Wilson who made similar promises about ww1 and LBJ who ran on a similar promise about VN in 1964."

Yes, yes, yes. All Democrat wars, as Bob Dole (pbuh) said before he was shamed into self-criticism. CC, JSM

John henry said...

The English slave trade was pretty minimal (If one can say that about such a monstrous crime.

About 100 million black subsaharan Africans were sold into slavery mostly to Arab slave traders. About 90% were sent north to turkey, Egypt, Persia, Arab countries. About half died o, the trek. Few who survived lived more than 2-3 years after arrival.

In contrast, about 10mm were sold to the Portugese in Brazil and french in Haiti and other places. Also to Spanish.

About 1mm were sold to the British and came to the Caribbean and to what is now US.

And, as others have noted, it is the British that ended slavery in the 19th century.

John Henry

narciso said...

the tariff grapeshot should be stronger,

john mosby said...

Tina Trent: "Britain is now a virulently anti-female fascist state. I don't want my President there acting as if this isn't happening."

True dat. But the Trump visit is a multi-phase operation. The mutual admiration society with the King is needed to establish his legitimacy. Charles isn't going to use his nuclear option to stop locking up patriots, even if he wanted to. And if he did, Labour would just clamp down harder. So why lecture him?

Once Trump is on all the royal-following magazines and sites, he is even more powerfully armed for a private sitdown with Starmer to tell him how things are going to be. Vance has already castigated the British and other Western governments for their oikophobic antics, so Starmer knows where Trump is coming from. Will Trump say "oh btw, if you guys try to lock up Tommy or screw with Farage, all deals are off?" He doesn't need to.

I also bet Trump will make some jabs about this stuff in press conferences: "I killed the head of ISIS. You're not going to have a bobby arrest me for that, are you, Keir?" Or just "I gotta watch what I say - I see the Old Bill are about" as he takes the podium. CC, JSM

John henry said...

Mungo Park was a famous 19th century British explorer of Africa. In one of his books he tells how tramping through the jungle, a long distance from anywhere, they came upon about 100 African slaves all chained together and being trekked north (IIRC). He says that one of the slaves had fallen or gotten sick or something. Since they were all chained together, they could only move by carrying him, then another and so on.

When he ran across them, about half were dead, the keepers were gone and the rest were unable to move, being chained to the dead. They were starving to death and dying slowly. Park gave them water and food but had no way to cut the chains and had to leave them.

I remember it being one of the most gutwrenching things I've ever read about African slavery.

John Henry

john mosby said...

Narciso: I at first read that as "the tariff on grapeshot should be stronger."

Make American Munitions Again! CC, JSM

deepelemblues said...

"That's after being the greatest slavers of the 18th century and creating slavery in North America and the Carribean."

Slavery existed in North America and the Carribean for thousands of years before 1492.

Lazarus said...

It sounds like isolationism is growing. I think it has more to do with what we've been doing since the 1990s than what we were doing in the 1940s.

John henry said...

Steyn says legitimate sources counted the crowd at one million, while the BBC said 110,000.

I saw a couple of newspaper reports of 100-150m and, on Saturday London police reports of 1mm. Monday I saw police reports of 3mm.

No idea how to tell who is right but it was one Hell of a lot of people. 2 days before PDJTs visit. I suspect that most of the marchers are sympathetic to MAGA ideas.

John Henry

RideSpaceMountain said...

narciso said, "the tariff grapeshot should be stronger"

Whoa whoa! We don't want those uppity Britons to dress up as druids and start throwing American Defense products off the container ship into the Thames! It might start some kind of London Reeeee Party!

Narr said...

I like the way Archie Bunker explained it: the Brits got a political system called a Fagocracy.

narciso said...

I don't see that happening, I mean use the tariff as cannons,

narciso said...

what happened is the EU effectively took over the UK, despite technical Brexit, they have surrendered what they had fought for a 1000 years, at least since Hastings,

John henry said...

Oh, MAMA!

OT but speaking of munitions, at former USNS Roosevelt Roads right now we have a bunch of F-35s, a dozen ships including a helicopter carrier group, a bunch of Marines on amphips, Seabees(?) rebuilding the control tower, C-5s, c-130s and other cargo planes flying in.

To tie it to the Royal visit, in the late 1930s the base was built up to be the "Gibraltar of the the Caribbean" Lots of MASSIVE fortifications. A powerhouse, for example, that makes the sub pens of St Nazaire look like Costco gazebos.

One of the reasons was that if the Germans invaded Britain, the royals, govt and fleet would boogie on over to Roosey and set up a govt in exile.

The throne room is still there. Used to be used as a AF TV studio but could be repurposed back to its original use.

Is fleeing Britain what PDJT is talking to Chuck about?

John Henry

John henry said...

In 1952 (or so) British aviation engineer Nevil Shute wrote a best seller called "In the Wet". One of the plot points was the deterioration of England to the point where the King and royals fled to Australia and set up the Crown there.

Shute had a pretty good imagination but Even he could not imagine how bad things could get.

I think it may be time to reread the book again.

John Henry

narciso said...

Charles is not smart enough to realize this, hes much like the prince in 'to play the king' by michael kitchen, before he was in foyles war,

narciso said...

well Australia's out too, mutant kangaroos, maybe New Zealand,

John henry said...

The British Matelots that we operated with the late 60s used to make fun of the fact that they got rum on their ships, we got ice cream. They even had a song about it:

There's a buzz going round the harbour,
That the Yanks are going to sea,
With a bottle of Coca-Cola,
And a fing great tub of ice cream,
Oh, they're fing good kids in harbour,
But oh my Christ at sea.


On the other hand, we would tell them, our ships didn't generally sink.

John Henry

TeaBagHag said...

Do you think the royals arranged a secret meeting between Donnie and Prince Andrew?
Pedo Cheeto and Randy Andy have much to discuss about their mutual close friend Jeff Epstein.

narciso said...

prince andrew was easily compromised lesuo, with the Dragon, the Kazakhs et al,

Iman said...

“I wonder why Prince Andrew couldn’t make it?”

Don’t bite off more than you can chew, hag.

narciso said...

an older fatter Hunter Biden,

Iman said...

“Pedo Cheeto and Randy Andy have much to discuss about their mutual close friend Jeff Epstein.”

You’ve said a mouthful, hag.

Kakistocracy said...

Do not mock Supreme Leader Trump.

Supreme Leader Trump is a delicate snowflake.

He must be worshipped, revered, and shown utmost respect.

We will pursue you if you fail to comply.

Thank you for your attention.

Regime of the Golden Age & Fragile Blossoms

narciso said...

it is really sad, for someone who appreciates the best of the british culture, how they let themselves surrender

I think Pink Floyd was wrong, in so many respects, Roger Waters shows it every day

they disdained the sacrifices their parents had to go through because of rationing 'when you couldn't have any meat' nor pudding, they craved thought control,

narciso said...

yes his parents died in the war, but he arrogated his view to a whole generation

narciso said...

all these people who kissed obamas...ring, have no where to stand on,

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