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To: marktwain
It is not for an American to offer unsolicited advice to the British Crown. But were anyone to ask this Ohioan for his thoughts on what should have been done: The Royal Pardon & Letter of commendation to the Sgt. would have been on its way by special courier, before the media was even able to report the above.

Britain is no longer in touch with her roots, history or ideals. But then neither is ancient Rome, Greece, Egypt or China. The death of a civilization is terribly poignant.

William Flax

4 posted on 11/12/2012 11:22:40 AM PST by Ohioan
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To: Ohioan

The UK hasn’t changed, same as is been for 100 years. Example; during WWII the NRA here in the U.S. asked its members to donate rifles to the UK so that their homeland defense would be able to make a stand should the Germans invade. Did the Brits learn from this and after the war relax its guns laws? Answer is no, got stricter in fact.


25 posted on 11/12/2012 1:45:59 PM PST by snoringbear (Government is the Pimp,)
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To: Ohioan; All

Here is some history from Churchill in 1897. Note how the Crown handled the “theft of crown jewels”.
How times have changed.

Sir Bindon Blood was a striking figure in these savage mountains and among these wild rifle-armed clansmen. He looked very much more formidable in his uniform, mounted, with his standard-bearer and cavalcade, than he had done when I had seen him in safe and comfortable England. He had seen a great deal of the British and Indian armies in war and peace, and he had no illusions on any point. He was very proud to be the direct descendant of the notorious Colonel Blood, who in the reign of King Charles II had attempted to steal by armed force the Crown jewels from the Tower of London. The episode is in the history books. The Colonel was arrested as he quitted the Tower gates with important parts of the regalia in his hands. Brought to trial for high treason and several other capital offences, he was acquitted and immediately appointed to command the King’s bodyguard. This strange sequence of events gave rise to scurrilous suggestions that his attempt to abstract the Crown jewels from the Tower had the connivance of the Sovereign himself. It is certainly true that the King was very short of money in those hard times, and that the predecessors of Mr. Attenborough were already in existence in various parts of Europe. However this may be, Sir Bindon Blood regarded the attempted stealing of the Crown Jewels by his ancestor as the most glorious event in his family history, and in consequence he had warm sympathy with the Pathan tribes on the Indian frontier, all of whom would have completely understood the incident in all its bearings, and would have bestowed unstinted and discriminating applause upon all parties. If the General could have got them all together and told them the story at length by broadcast, it would never have been necessary for three brigades with endless tails of mule and camel transport to toil through the mountains and sparsely populated highlands in which my next few weeks were to be passed. The General, then already a veteran, is alive and hale to-day (written in 1930). He had one personal ordeal in this campaign. A fanatic approaching in a deputation (called a jirga) whipped out a knife, and rushed upon him from about eight yards. Sir Bindon Blood, mounted upon his horse, drew his revolver, which most of us thought on a General of Division was merely a token weapon, and shot his assailant dead at two yards. It is easy to imagine how delighted everyone in the Field Force, down to the most untouchable sweeper, was at such an event.


32 posted on 11/12/2012 8:14:59 PM PST by marktwain
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