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Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 7:44 pm
by Lord Jim
Queen Elizabeth II Celebrates 60-Year Anniversary

In 1952 the woman known today as Queen Elizabeth II was just Elizabeth, a 25-year-old member of England's royal family visiting a remote village in Kenya.

When word came on Feb. 6 of that year that her father, George VI, had died, Elizabeth cut her trip short and flew home to London. She was greeted at the airport by her country's then-Prime Minister Winston Churchill and she was crowned Queen Elizabeth II.

Today, 60 years later, the 85-year-old Queen marked her Diamond Jubilee anniversary with a message thanking the British people for their support, and pledging to continue her dedication to serving them and people around the world.

"I am writing to thank you for the wonderful support and encouragement that you have given to me and Prince Philip over these years," she wrote today in a message to the nation, which was released by Buckingham Palace. "In this special year, as I dedicate myself anew to your service, I hope that we will all be reminded of the power of togetherness and the convening strength of family, friendship and good neighborliness, examples of which I have been fortunate to see throughout my reign."

The Queen and her husband Prince Philip, whom she wed in 1947, marked the anniversary Sunday by attending a church service on her private Sandringham estate in Norfolk, outside London.

The anniversary makes Queen Elizabeth, already Britain's oldest serving monarch, the country's longest-serving monarch after Queen Victoria, who reigned for more than 63 years. The queen, mother to four and grandmother to eight, has now outlasted 11 U.S. presidents.

"Queen Elizabeth II rates among the best, in fact, better than the best," Dickie Arbiter, former press secretary to the Queen, told ABC News.

"The queen doesn't change. The queen adapts, and that's why it survives," he said of the monarch.

Celebrations of her Diamond Jubilee officially begin today when the queen and Philip, 90, visit a nursery school and the town hall in the town of King's Lynn.

The celebrations will continue throughout the year as members of the royal family - from Prince Charles to Prince William and Kate Middleton - travel around the world to take part in ceremonies and events honoring the queen. The queen herself and Philip, also known as the Duke of Edinburgh, will embark on a tour of England in March.

The main event, the 2012 Diamond Jubilee weekend, will be held in June and feature a star-studded concert and boat pageant on the Thames river with a 1,000-strong flotilla.

The Palace also today released a special set of portraits of the queen and Philip, taken by John Swannell in the Centre Room at Buckingham Palace last December, to mark the Jubilee. Two new photographs of the queen, wearing the same necklace Queen Victoria wore in her own Diamond Jubilee portrait in 1897, were also released.
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/abc-blogs/q ... -news.html

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 9:09 pm
by Sean
"In this special year, as I dedicate myself anew to your service..."
It was at this point that Prince Charles was heard to mutter, "Oh for fuck's sake Mam!" under his breath. :lol:

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:29 pm
by Gob
Something good has come of it..
Only 60 bottles of the Diamond Jubilee scotch, made by Johnnie Walker distiller Diageo, have been produced for sale, and are being offered to known collectors of rare and expensive whiskies.

Another single bottle will be given to the Queen.

The whisky is a blend of grain and malt whiskies all dating from 1952, and finished in casks made of oak from the Queen's Sandringham estate.

In case you don't have £100,000 to spare and are wondering what it tastes like, the master blender for all Johnnie Walker whiskies, Jim Beveridge, said he is "surprised and delighted" by the way the Jubilee whisky has turned out.

"With as whisky as old as 60 years, sometimes it can be a bit crusty and the flavours can be a bit subdued. But this one is very vibrant," he said. "It has a fresh fruity flavour, and a finish which is smoky and also has an exotic fruit taste."

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:43 pm
by Andrew D
Born rich.

Nothing more.

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:54 pm
by Guinevere
In-bred, too. How else does one get ears like Chuck?

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 10:57 pm
by Andrew D
Keeping the bloodlines pure ....

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:07 pm
by Guinevere
Does no one else see the irony of our self-avowed monarchist trying to explain the imperious Mittens as a regular guy, in touch with the common man. :mrgreen:

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:18 pm
by Andrew D
But Mitt is in touch with the common man -- the touch that comes with the aristocratic riding crop.

He understands that the common man must be kept in his place.

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:24 pm
by Lord Jim
Image

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:27 pm
by Andrew D
Invitation to an ftf at Jim's place?

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Mon Feb 06, 2012 11:28 pm
by Sean
...the master blender for all Johnnie Walker whiskies, Jim Beveridge...
That must have been the shortest job interview ever...

"Name?"
"Jim Beveridge"
"When can you start?"
:lol:

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 8:33 pm
by Gob
Image

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 8:40 pm
by Scooter
I think Charles would be perfectly content if his mother outlived him. No sane person would want the job, which is why the Queen's father was horrified at the prospect, even if he ended up doing a superb job, as did his daughter.

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 8:51 pm
by dales
I don't get America's fascination with this British Monarchy thing.

We Americans fought and died for our independence, after all.

At least we have The Bill of Rights. :ok

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 9:31 pm
by Scooter
You have a Bill of Rights that was in large part copied word for word from the British one. Do you imagine that you would have cultivated the same concept of liberty if your part of the Americas had originally been colonized by Russians or Spaniards of that era?

Many of the most free nations on earth are monarchies. And most republics have, at one time or another, descended into dictatorship. Even ask yourself why?

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 9:45 pm
by Andrew D
Scooter wrote:Many of the most free nations on earth are monarchies.
"Monarchies" whose monarchs do not actually rule.

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:06 pm
by Scooter
Yes, that is correct, monarchies whose monarchs reign and do not rule. Monarchies that have democratic traditions going back hundreds of years. Monarchies whose armed forces and police and other publc servants owe their allegiance to the state, in the person of the monarch, and not to the puny partisan interests of the government of the day. Monarchies whose heads of state are free of any political taint, and who can therefore be a symbol of national unity rather than divisiveness.

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:52 pm
by Beer Sponge
Well said Scooter! :clap:

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 11:04 pm
by Rick
Monarchies whose heads of state are free of any political taint, and who can therefore be a symbol of national unity rather than divisiveness.
Paaaaleeeease...

Re: Congratulations Your Majesty

Posted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 11:07 pm
by Scooter
Can you name the last time a monarch of a Commonwealth realm or of any western or northern European country involved him/herself in partisan politics?