She could at least have voiced some support for those who tried to sound the alarm, but nope, the soup was too good and it's cold outside, as usual
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enoch_Powell
https://www.britishfuture.org/how-enoch-took-on-the-queen-and-lost/
>Yet how badly Powell could misread the British public too. Take Enoch’s extraordinary, yet now almost entirely forgotten, public attack on the Queen, accusing her of divided loyalties, because her 1983 Christmas broadcast featured images of her trip to India for the Commonwealth heads of government meeting. Powell felt this would “suggest she has the affairs and interests in other continents as much, or more, at heart than those of her own people,” especially when “even here, in the UK, she is more concerned for the susceptibilities & prejudices of a vociferous minority of newcomers than for the great mass of her subjects.”
She could have potentially, yes. That's where I'm not every going to say anyone should support her choices (or lack of) now (prior to today) or at any time frame in the past. What I'm talking about is people being unable to understand how this is a loss for White culture and heritage, despite who she actually was or wasn't.
She represents nothing to me
(post is archived)