MeisterEckhart
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Australians who howl down Lidia Thorpe would do well to sit back and drink a big-arse cup of chill-out and introspection.
What did Thorpe do?
She spoke directly to Australia’s head of state (yes, in crass terms), about grievances of wrongs done by the sovereign’s successive governments, particularly between 1788 and the mid-20th century.
She was raw and undignified in her delivery, wearing her possum suit that made her look more like an Aboriginal-descent Dame Edna than an Australian senator.
She then betrayed her cause by her infantile disavowing of her oath by claiming she swore allegiance to the hairs of Elizabeth II, not to Charles III – leaving out the bit where she signed the oath of allegiance. When she sobered up from her young-teen regression, she tried to deflect her responsibility for it as a result of her not having a strong grasp of English due to the poor quality of Australian public education.
Her back-tacking was the act of a coward.
In summary, her performance was that of a narcissistic woman-child leveraging grievance culture to grab a headline, likely embarrassing all those who fight for the cause of justice for past wrongs committed in the name of the sovereign (the Crown), rather than elevating them or advancing the cause.
However, what does the monarchy-grovelling Australian machine do in response? Knee-jerk overreaction.
‘Ooo, whatever will Their Majesties think of us all, if we don’t bash this bitch?’.
‘She needs to be strung up. We need to toss her out of political life. Banish her to the shitheap with all the rest who use freedom of speech to address the sovereign so crassly.
That’ll teach the c~nt and anyone else thinking of pulling the same stunt.
What Australian grovellers to monarchy overlook is that NOT being overawed by the ‘majesty’ of monarchy – to not hold one’s tongue in the presence of our undemocratic head of state, is a grand affirmation of democracy’s most sacred ideal – that we are all inherently equal under our system of governance; that inherited sovereignty is an unreformable anathema to, and a slur on, that sacred ideal.
Nevertheless, the sovereign - the Crown - must be held accountable for acts committed in its name, as even a CEO of an errant company would be.
And, finally, to all Australian grovellers, who worry what our neighbours are thinking of this unruly cow in our midst? Well, Americans, for example, still bitch about King George III… 250+ years after he ceased to be their forebears’ head of state.
What would they likely think of this grovelling, (if they give a f~ck at all), I wonder – Arse-licking wankers, (or similar within an American vernacular) – given what they say about their own heads of state, I reckon.
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