Interview With Princess Anne
Worth a look for those interested :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_HP22_zVN8
Worth a look for those interested :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_HP22_zVN8
Fun fact - Princess Royal is
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princess_Royal
Always had massive respect for Anne. No-nonsense attitude, known as arguably the hardest-working Royal.
Also, she was absolutely stunning when she was young
https://media.vanityfair.com/photos/5e949fb7f9569e0008820eb1/4:3/w_1775,h_1331,c_limit/VF0520_Princess-Anne_Cover_Tout.jpg
https://media.tatler.com/photos/6141e462e06e8bde602a5620/4:3/w_1920,h_1440,c_limit/np_ry016.jpg
https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/princess-anne-in-the-grounds-of-sandringham-before-the-1969-news-photo-1574178672.jpg
nice.
shareI've liked her for a long time. Partly because she got to the Olympics instead of sitting on her tiaras, but because of something she said in an interview I saw decades ago.
She was talking about some children's charity she supported, and she said something like this: "I don't particularly like children, that's not why I do this, I just think everyone deserves the best possible start in life". That's a very sensible, non-sentimental attitude, and it really appeals to me because I don't like children either.
She was President of 'Save The Children' for many decades, starting, I think, in the 70s.
shareWhy can't Andrew be more like his big sister! Royals don't HAVE to turn out sleazy!
shareEdward & Charles are good eggs.
Prince Albert/King Edward VII was a legendary horndog.
The treasonous Edward VIII was a pitiful sub for his ugly cunt of a wife. She'd make him do tricks, like a trained dog. He loved it.
Well, lucky him that Edward VIII found someone willing to dominate him the way he liked! Too bad he was otherwise a complete failure in life, never did a damn useful thing as long as he lived.
And I've heard both good and bad things about Charles, we'll see how he does. He's got some pretty damn big low-heeled pumps to fill!
Throughout his life, Hitchens railed against the principle of a hereditary head of state and the suitability of any of the House of Windsor for the job. "The British royal family is a rather uninspiring and dowdy crew of people," he wrote in New Statesman in 1979. Twenty years later, in the pages of The Guardian, his tune was unchanged. "There is not limitless room for democracy in a monarchy, and the sooner we appreciate this, and demand the extra space that an adult and constitutional settlement would require, the better off all of us ... will be."
Hitchens never minced words, and he rarely eased up on public targets once he'd set his sights on them. But he could pay compliments to his foes — though not always with grace, and not always without making a critical point about someone else. When Princess Diana died, Hitchens wasn't shy in saying that he felt the public reaction was ridiculous and that Diana herself did little to deserve such emotion. Speaking on C-SPAN, he compared Diana's photogenic patronage of charities with Princess Anne, "her dowdy, boring former sister-in-law." Said Hitchens: "[She] goes trudging around Africa, looking like a fright ... but she really is a spade-work charity worker."
Read More: https://www.grunge.com/950421/the-untold-truth-of-princess-anne-queen-elizabeth-iis-only-daughter/?utm_campaign=clip
He had a soft spot for Margaret Thatcher.
Not that there is anything wrong with that.
They were training a pony to pull a Wheelchair
share