It is no secret that a substantial part of the British Establishment cringes at the thought that Prince Charles will some day be the Sovereign of Great Britain and head of the Church of England. Charles's left-radical sympathies, his "green" environmentalist views, and his proclivities for talking to plants and engaging in other kooky activities, have all been condemned in one form or another. This has been particularly the case, in the national mood in Britain defined by the July-August 1986 "Palacegate" controversy between the House of Windsor and Mrs. Thatcher, and, more recently, by the reports that the Prince of Wales's private valet, Stephen Barry, died of AIDS, and that the Palace is rampant with homosexual perversity.
On Nov. 2 of this year, the West German daily Bild am Sonntag even suggested that Charles renounce his claim to the throne, because of his weird practices and beliefs.
What occurs to the outsider looking at the United Kingdom, is the question: Why have things reached the point that a gnostic kook such as Prince Charles could become Sovereign? One suspects, first, that the actual moral criminality of the views of Charles and his favorite gurus, has never been presented in a form that would outrage moral and patriotic layers in Britain to a sufficient degree. Specifically, the fact that Charles, by his endorsement of the ideas of the late C. G. Jung in particular, has endorsed the same brand of mystical gnosticism which characterized the Nazi regime and the inner core of the Bolsheviks, has never, to our knowledge, been clearly stated or proved.
One suspects, second, that after decades of gnostic kookery being openly espoused by influentials such as former Royal Institute of International Affairs director Arnold Toynbee, an advocate of the cults of Mithra and Isis, and of others in the ambience of the House of Windsor, too many people have been inured to, or tolerant of, figures in the British Establishment espousing the same views as' those against which the British population Was mobilized to fight a world war in the 1939-45 period.
Although limited in its historical and epistemological depth, The Prince and the Paranormal: The Psychic Bloodline of the Royal Family. by British writer John Dale, begins to point in the right directioni if the political, cultural, and constitutional crisis erupting around the House of Windsor, is ever to be efficiently resolved. (more...)
Book points to gnostic satanism of Britain's Prince Charles
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