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Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Chris Reed: Queen Elizabeth II & King Charles III

 

Chris Reed:  Queen Elizabeth II (51:30) & King Charles III (58:40)

Proverbs 8:15:  "By me kings reign, and princes decree justice."

Johnny Enlow:  Queen Elizabeth II & King Charles III (132:00)

Message from Jesus to Queen Elizabeth from Prophet Neville Johnson (about Prince Charles)

Neville Johnson - Charles is NOT to be Coronated as King

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The Deathbed Prophecy of King Edward the Confessor, 1066

Charles I of England

Charles II of England

John Milton:  Writer and Revolutionary

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“The civil war of the seventeenth century, in which Milton is a symbolic figure, has never been concluded. . . . Of no other poet is it so difficult to consider the poetry simply as poetry, without our theological and political dispositions, conscious and unconscious, inherited or acquired, making an unlawful entry.”

–T.S. Eliot, Milton (1947)

"He who reigns within himself and rules passions, desires and fears is more than a king."

- John Milton

“To be free is the same thing as to be pious, to be wise, to be temperate and just, to be frugal and abstinent, and lastly, to be magnanimous and brave; so to be the opposite of all these is the same as to be a slave; and it usually happens to the appointment, and as it were retributive justice, of the Deity, that that people which cannot govern themselves, and moderate their passions, but crouch under the slavery of their lusts, should be delivered up to the sway of those whom they abhor, and made to submit to an involuntary servitude.”

–John Milton, Second Defense of the English People

1 comment:

  1. "The Americans who protested against British encroachments on colonial liberties wanted to preserve their traditional rights. They were not revolutionaries seeking the radical restructuring of society… They used the word ‘innovation’ pejoratively… 'no freeman should be subject to any tax to which he has not given his own consent' [-John Adams]… From the American point of view, such taxation without consent was an intolerable novelty… They protested that their ancient chartered rights were being violated… The Americans defended their traditional rights. The French revolutionaries despised French traditions and sought to make everything anew: new governing structures, new provincial boundaries, a new 'religion,' a new calendar—and the guillotine awaited those who objected…

    "In a certain sense, there was no American Revolution at all. There was, instead, an American War for Independence in which Americans threw off British authority in order to retain their liberties and self-government. In the 1760s, the colonies had, for the most part, been left alone in their internal affairs… [The] colonists did not seek the total transformation of society that we associate with other revolutions, such as the Industrial Revolution, the French Revolution, or the Russian Revolution. They simply wished to go on enjoying self-rule when it came to their internal matters and living as they always had for so many decades before British encroachments began. The American 'revolutionaries' were conservative, in the very best sense of that word…

    "When modern-day liberals justify extremely broad readings of the Constitution on the grounds that we need a 'living, breathing Constitution' that 'changes with the times', they are actually recommending the very system the colonists sought to escape. The British constitution was very flexible indeed — too flexible for the colonists, who were inflexibly committed to upholding their traditional rights. The 'living, breathing' British constitution was no safeguard of American liberties."

    — THE POLITICALLY INCORRECT
    GUIDE TO AMERICAN HISTORY
    by Thomas E. Woods, Jr., Ph.d.

    from Chapter 2:
    “America’s Conservative Revolution”

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