That’s what I thought: a possible near-simultaneous shift of power in "Europe's two largest monarchies."
I do hope they can find a way to reconcile. Harry and his wife Meghan have made some poor choices since breaking with the RF. I think it is good of Prince William to reach out to his brother, but no doubt it will be difficult for him to bring Harry back into the fold, so much trust was lost.
Could it be the result of the jab? So many people are suffering now. My friends included who took the jab. QUOTE="garabandal, post: 468702, member: 41"]It's all happening the pope is dying, the king is dying and Europe is falling apart.[/QUOTE]
[/QUOTE] Pope Francis is 88, with half a lung missing for most of his life and he's still hanging in there. I'd say he's doing alright. The Windsor fellow is rumoured to have pancreatic cancer, a nasty condition that was always there.
King Charles had to go to hospital … back home now. https://www.the-sun.com/royals/13886893/king-charles-hospital-cancer-treatment/
I pray this close encounter with death will promote a willingness to reconsider his connections with freemasonry!
Imagine waiting all those years to be King and then getting cancer. There is a great lesson in this , so passes the glory of this World.
"As the quran says, god does not burden any soul with more than it can bear..." (King Charles) https://x.com/calvinrobinson/status/1905067026948719099
I find that the closer you look at the people who really run things the more disquieting it becomes. The Royal Family are a case in point. Another Pillar of Britain is their State Church. Their ex Archbishop Welby gave an interview recently in which he said that there were so many abuse claims he could no longer cope. That says it all really. But what hit home with me was looking at his face, it just seems, well, evil> https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c89y9g83e92o Justin Welby: I failed to act on abuse scandal as scale was 'overwhelming' The former Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby has told the BBC he failed to follow up abuse allegations within the Church of England because the scale of the problem was "absolutely overwhelming". In November he became the first Archbishop in more than 1,000 years to quit, after a damning independent review found he did not follow up rigorously enough on reports of John Smyth, a serial abuser of children and young men who was associated with the Church. In his first interview since resigning, Welby, 68, told the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg that the sheer scale of the problem was "a reason – not an excuse" for his failure to act after taking the job in 2013. "Every day more cases were coming across the desk that had been in the past, hadn't been dealt with adequately, and this was just, it was another case - and yes I knew Smyth but it was an absolutely overwhelming few weeks," he said. "It was overwhelming, one was trying to prioritise - but I think it's easy to sound defensive over this. "The reality is I got it wrong. As Archbishop, there are no excuses." One of Smyth's victims, known as Graham, who reported the abuse allegation in 2013, told the BBC: "The Archbishop suggests he was just too busy. No one should be too busy to deal with a safeguarding disclosure. The Archbishop has never answered why there were not enormous red flags when told about horrific abuse." The Makin Review - an independent probe led by safeguarding expert Keith Makin - found that Smyth's "horrific" and violent abuse of more than 100 children and young men in England and Africa was covered up within the Church of England for decades. Smyth, a barrister and senior member of a Christian charity, was accused of attacking dozens of boys at his home in Winchester, Hampshire and at Christian camps in the 1970s and 1980s.
I read a report from someone who went to interview King Charles when he was Prince. He happened to mention by the way how horribly he was treating the servants around him. The Royals perfer to employ homosexuals as servants as they are more inclined to put up with this kind of thing. I think insights like this teach us all we need to know.