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QUEEN VICTORIA'S 200TH BIRTHDAY: Five Weird Facts about the British Monarch
Newsweek ^ | 5/24/2019 | KATHERINE HIGNETT

Posted on 05/24/2019 11:51:25 AM PDT by Borges

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To: Borges

That still makes her a whippersnapper to Nanzi Pelosi.


21 posted on 05/24/2019 1:14:52 PM PDT by Texas Eagle (If it wasn't for double-standards, Liberals would have no standaurds at all -- Texas Eagle)
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To: keat
1. Removed the Churchill bust from the WH.

There were two Churchill busts at the WH. One was only on loan to George W. Bush, so was returned in 2009.

2. Didn’t use the Resolute Desk.

Wikipedia says that he did and therefore there are many pictures of this.

3. Gifted the Queen an iPod loaded with his speeches.

Sounds like this is true, but apparently there was a lot more on the ipod including videos of historic trips by the Queen to the US. Also she gifted him a photo of herself, so that's kind of even.

4. Pushed Brexit over the top with his national lecture on the eve of the vote.

He came out against Brexit and said exactly what the Prime Minister asked him to say. Maybe that did cause some people to obstinately vote the other way.

22 posted on 05/24/2019 2:58:30 PM PDT by wideminded
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To: Jamestown1630

I learned that from Dr. Who.


23 posted on 05/24/2019 3:04:43 PM PDT by wally_bert (Disc jockeys are as intwerchangeable as spark plugs.)
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To: Borges

History books

Hunger strike

Sukhdev Sandhu on Late Victorian Holocausts — the famines that fed the empire — by Mike Davis

Sukhdev Sandhu
The Guardian
Sat 20 Jan 2001 06.06 EST First published on Sat 20 Jan 2001 06.06 EST

Late Victorian Holocausts: El Nino Famines and the Making of the Third World

Mike Davis

464pp, Verso, £20 . . .

Recording the past can be a tricky business for historians. Prophesying the future is even more hazardous. In 1901, shortly before the death of Queen Victoria, the radical writer William Digby looked back to the 1876 Madras famine and confidently asserted: “When the part played by the British Empire in the 19th century is regarded by the historian 50 years hence, the unnecessary deaths of millions of Indians would be its principal and most notorious monument.” Who now remembers the Madrasis?

In Late Victorian Holocausts, Mike Davis charts the unprecedented human suffering caused by a series of extreme climactic conditions in the final quarter of the 19th century. Drought and monsoons afflicted much of China, southern Africa, Brazil, Egypt and India. The death tolls were staggering: around 12m Chinese and over 6m Indians in 1876-1878 alone. The chief culprit, according to Davis, was not the weather, but European empires, with Japan and the US. Their imposition of free-market economics on the colonial world was tantamount to a “cultural genocide”.

These are strong words. Yet it’s hard to disagree with them after reading Davis’s harrowing book. Development economists have long argued that drought need not lead to famine; well-stocked inventories and effective distribution can limit the damage. In the 19th century, however, drought was treated, particularly by the English in India, as an opportunity for reasserting sovereignty.

A particular villain was Lord Lytton, son of the Victorian novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton (”It was a dark and stormy night...”) after whom, today, a well-known bad writing prize is named. During 1876 Lytton, widely suspected to be insane, ignored all efforts to alleviate the suffering of millions of peasants in the Madras region and concentrated on preparing for Queen Victoria’s investiture as Empress of India. The highlight of the celebrations was a week-long feast of lucullan excess at which 68,000 dignitaries heard her promise the nation “happiness, prosperity and welfare”.

Lytton believed in free trade. He did nothing to check the huge hikes in grain prices, Economic “modernization” led household and village reserves to be transferred to central depots using recently built railroads. Much was exported to England, where there had been poor harvests. Telegraph technology allowed prices to be centrally co-ordinated and, inevitably, raised in thousands of small towns. Relief funds were scanty because Lytton was eager to finance military campaigns in Afghanistan. Conditions in emergency camps were so terrible that some peasants preferred to go to jail. A few, starved and senseless, resorted to cannibalism. This was all of little consequence to many English administrators who, as believers in Malthusianism, thought that famine was nature’s response to Indian over-breeding.

It used to be that the late 19th century was celebrated in every school as the golden period of imperialism. While few of us today would defend empire in moral terms, we’ve long been encouraged to acknowledge its economic benefits. Yet, as Davis points out, “there was no increase in India’s per capita income from 1757 to 1947”. In Egypt, too, the financial difficulties caused to peasants by famine encouraged European creditors to override the millennia-old tradition that tenancy was guaranteed for life. What little relief aid reached Brazil, meanwhile, ended up profiting British merchant houses and the reactionary sugar-planter classes.

The European “locusts” did not go unchallenged. Rioting became common. Banditry increased. In China, drought-famine helped to spark the Boxer uprising. In Europe, the fin de siècle was largely an opportunity for pale-faced men to wear purple cummerbunds and spout rotten symbolist poetry; for colonized peoples it genuinely seemed to presage mass extinction. It was, says Davis, “a new dark age of colonial war, indentured labour, concentration camps, genocide, forced migration, famine and disease.”

Davis’s attention to the importance of environment may recall the work of the Annales school of historians, but he is far more radical than any of them. His writing, both here and in such classic books as City of Quartz and Ecology of Fear, is closer to that of Latin American intellectuals such as Ariel Dorfman and the Urguayan, Eduardo Galaeno, who for decades have spotlighted capitalism’s casual abuse of the third world and who have sought to champion the poor and dispossessed. Such commitment, forcefully and lucidly expressed, is unfashionable these days.

“Class” may be passé in academic circles, yet the catalogue of cruelty Davis has unearthed is jaw-dropping. A friend to whom I lent the book was reduced to tears by it. Late Victorian Holocausts is as ugly as it is compelling. But, as Conrad’s Marlow said in Heart of Darkness : “The conquest of the earth, which means the taking away from those who have a different complexion and slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing when you look at it too much.”

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2001/jan/20/historybooks.famine


24 posted on 05/24/2019 3:29:29 PM PDT by Jyotishi (Seeking the truth, a fact at a time.)
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To: All

9. Must factcheck this of course, but Madcow at CNN claimed in a bombshell that while at college Princess Victoria was stalked by her admirer for months. Ruth Bader-Ginsburg had a mad crush on Vic but at length was successfully diverted by the Princess’ Lady-in-waiting.


25 posted on 05/24/2019 3:59:43 PM PDT by rocknotsand (Rock. Not sand.)
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To: Borges

Wasn’t her most important accomplishment the creation of Torchwood?? All because she distrusted a doctor...


26 posted on 05/24/2019 4:13:26 PM PDT by SuperLuminal (Where is Sam Adams now that we desperately need him)
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To: gibsonguy
Not about to give Newsweak a click.

Same here.

FMCDH(BITS)

27 posted on 05/24/2019 7:12:30 PM PDT by nothingnew
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To: Borges
Obama and Caroline Kennedy. Obama probably just saw the National Treasure movie and is checking it out.


28 posted on 05/24/2019 7:52:58 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: Borges

When WWI broke out, the kings or queens of seven European countries were grandchildren to Old Queen Vic. Even at the time it sometimes was referred to as “The Cousin’s War.” Her matchmaking was directly responsible for creating some of the tensions that led to war.


29 posted on 05/25/2019 12:54:51 PM PDT by Paal Gulli
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