 India 1912 King George & Queen Mary King George 5th & Queen Mary were crowned Emperor and Empress of Indian. At their coronation in Delhi, 120 Princes, Maharajas, and Nawabs presented the pair with a ‘Treasure Island fortune of magnificent jewellery.’  India 1912 King George appalled his Indian Civil Service. He refused to show his appreciation of the civil servants running his Empire. Instead of visiting officials. He grabbed the jewels, went hunting and went home.’ King George 5, Queen Lizzy's grandfather, gloating over his "bag" of 39 Tigers, 18 Rhino and 4 Himalayan Bears. Kaiser Wilhelm 2 & King George 5 
1913. Queen Victoria’s look-a-like grandson’s. Kaiser Wilhelm 2nd left, & King George 5th Largeing-it. The Cousins War June 11, 1914. King George & Queen Mary attended a sumptuous Summer Ball at Cean Wood House, North London. Their host, Grand Duke Michael of Russia, had summoned his favourite orchestra from Vienna. Waltzing the night away were the richest of the rich. King George 5, Grand Duke Michael and Zsar Nicholas 2 were cousins. June 12, another cousin, Kaiser Wilhelm 2, arrived in Konopischt near Prague for a few days hunting. His host, another cousin, Grand Archduke Franz Ferdinand was heir apparent to the dual realm of Austro-Hungary. Ruled-over by yet another cousin, Emperor Franz Joseph. From Konopischt the Kaiser travelled to his favourite regatta. Kiel Week. June 28, 1914 the Kaiser was racing one of his yachts, Meteor V, when a motor launch brought bad news. Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife had been shot dead, in Sarajevo, by 19 yr-old Gavrilo Princip, a Bosnian Serb. As the news spread, anti-Serb riots broke-out in Germany. The Kaiser hated the Serbs - who he called ‘gypsies.’ He encouraged Franz Joseph to take military action against Serbia. His cousin's Zsar Nicholas and King George disagreed with the Kaiser. The argument started WW1. The Kaiser had long believed he could rule Europe. His growing industrial base had enabled him to build the strongest army and navy Germany had ever seen. He wasted no time in declaring war on Russia, Britain and France. He intended to use France as a spring-board to invade Britain. By the end of August 1914 his ‘Bloody Huns’ had marched through Belgium into northern France. On the way they were falsely accused of bayoneting mothers and babies. In London angry mobs smashed-up shops and market stalls with German names. Alsatian dog owners had their windows smashed. London hotels made pavement bonfires of German food. German wines went down the drain. Liberal & Labour MP’s asked why George 5 hadn’t renounced his German titles or even denounced his ‘Bloodthirsty Cousin The Kaiser?’ The Palace refused to comment. The Civil List provides lavish expenditure for the monarch to spend on Palace entertaining, civic and ceremonial occasions. All of which are cancelled in the time of war. As the war dragged on, people were asking why the King needed so much money. The popular press wanted the Civil List, of £817,000 per year, suspended (Men fighting for King & Country were paid an average of £45 per year). As usual the Palace refused to comment. May. 1916. Munitions Minister David Lloyd George insisted the King consider his critics. In June the Times announced the King was returning £100,000 to the Treasury. George would later use the Times to announce ‘donations’ to war-time charities. £77,000 was given to soup-kitchens ect.. Royalist reporters made all these contrived acts of ‘charity’ sound as if the King was giving his own money away! Then as now most members of the public had no idea what parasites the “royals” really are. They had no way of knowing the Civil List is taken from the taxpayers pocket. War or no War. State Papers released in 1978 reveal, between 1914 - 18, while millions were dying for King & Country, the King was busy diverting £220,000 from the Civil List into his pocket. He was also committing Treason by employing Swiss banking agents in secret negotiations with the Enemy. It took two years for the King and the Kaiser to agree a settlement on their German assets. 
The Kaiser & The King Kaiser Wilhelm 2 & King George 5 attending a family wedding in Germany. 1913. To demonstrate their friendship George wears a German uniform and Wilhelm wears a British uniform. Fifteen months later they were at war. George saw no reason to strip his cousin of his honorary colonelship! Two years into the bloodiest war ever, George dropped the family's German titles and create the phony House of Windsor. The phony House of Windsor  To fool the ignorant King George 5 bribed newspaper owners to forget the royals real name, Saxe-Coburg-Gotha. The family’s roots and the history of their obscene offshore fortune, made from stolen land, slaves & slavery, arm's & ammo have been studiously ignored by the media ever since. ___________________________________________________  
Lord Kitchener's Recruiting Posters King & Country - 1914 - 1918 Empty bellies, unemployment, pitiful wages and slum housing meant there was no shortage of volunteers to join the army when Lord Kitchener started his recruiting campaign. Signing on to fight for KING & COUNTRY 'The Flower Of British Youth' were promised they would return to 'A Land Fit For Hero's.' While the war was on. The King's Establishment couldn't stop singing Tommy's praises. "It was Tommy this and Tommy that. After Tommy won the bloody war. Tommy was forgotten. Tommy was left to rot." Volunteer’s were promised “A Land Fit For Hero’s.” In reality they had fought to preserve the royals extravagant lifestyle. Their own appalling wages and insulting living conditions continued for decades after the war. Royal hypocrisy was spelt out in the following Royal Warrant sent to legions of grieving war widows, signed by King George 5. By Royal Warrant: A pension or gratuity for the dependants of a deceased soldier shall not be granted as a right. It shall not be continued when the applicant is proved to be unworthy of the award in the opinion of the Army Council. (i.e. if the widow found herself a boyfriend!) By Royal Warrant: A pension or gratuity shall not be granted unless the soldiers services were worthy of the award. (i.e. pensions were not granted if the dead soldier had previously been in the glasshouse for fighting!) 1914-1918 by a British Officer what's all this hubbub and yelling hurrahing and scamper of feet with a marvellous clatter of kettles and cans wild laughter down Mafeking Street oh those are the kids that we fought for you may think they'd been scoffing our rum with the flags that we waved when we marched off to France in the glory of bugle and drum now there's flappers gone drunk and indecent with skirts kilted-up to their thighs the constable lifting no hand in reproof the chaplin averting his eye now we'll hang Kaiser Bill from a lamppost Von Tripetz we'll hang from a tree we've been promised a land fit for hero's what hero's we hero's must be for there's old men and women in corners the tears falling fast on their cheeks there's the armless the legless the sightless its seldom that one of them speaks when the days of rejoicing are over and the flags are stored safely away will we dream of another wild war to end wars and another wild Armistice Day for the boys who were killed in the trenches who fought with no rage and no rant we left them stretched out on their pallets of mud low down with the worm and the ant |