OPINION

The Queen takes Manhattan

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Queen Elizabeth II went to New York last week—amid triple digit temperatures. Her visit was described everywhere as “low key.” One diplomat, Sir Brian Urquart, churlishly said: “I suppose the British monarchy was a bigger deal in 1957 [when she last addressed the UN] than it is now.” Sir Brian is a former top-ranking official at the UN, which was also a bigger deal then.

The Queen bypassed the UN when she visited New York City in 1976. Then, she came to help us celebrate our Bicentennial. She did not apologize at that time for the thousands of American soldiers who died in rotting prison hulks during the American War of Independence. Those British ships were tied up in Manhattan when the redcoat army occupied the city. Americans were happy to see her in 1976 and more than willing to let bygones be bygones.

In the seventies, the Queen was popular not just with happy natives here, but she was also toasted by the “Fab Four,” the Beatles, at home. British songsters John Lennon and Paul McCartney treated their sovereign to these cheeky lyrics: “Her Majesty's a pretty nice girl / But she doesn't have a lot to say / Her Majesty's a pretty nice girl / But she changes from day to day.”

One reason she changes from day to day is that Britain’s elected governments change from day to day. Her address to the UN General Assembly this week, therefore, was doubtless written for her by the new Conservative-Liberal coalition government of Prime Minister David Cameron.

If that “Conservative-Liberal” bit sounds like a political pushme-pullyou, it is. The legendary pushme-pullyou was a hybrid llama-like animal that had its heads going in opposite directions. That would explain the Queen’s praising the UN for adapting to changing times. Like Her Majesty, the UN also changes from day to day.

Glenn Beck

She did not mention, of course, that part of the UN record that has not changed: Its 65-year history of ignoring and covering up mass murders around the world. The UN symbol shows the earth wreathed in olive branches. Nice. But the earth could be wreathed in flames for all the UN General Assembly might notice.

For example, those parts of the UN’s record Her Majesty neglected to mention include:

· UN complicity in silence about slave labor and death of millions in the Gulag Archipelago of the old USSR.

· UN never exploring the horrors of Chinese Communist famines and death for millions under the Great Leap Forward and the Proletarian Cultural Revolution.

· UN ignoring genocide in Rwanda.

· UN passing anti-Israel resolutions charging that “Zionism is Racism.”

· UN agencies and officials pushing abortion worldwide under the guise of “reproductive health.”

· UN involvement in China’s forced abortion practices that stem directly from its infamous “one child” policy.

· UN failure ever to mention, much less take action, when most of its Muslim member states ignore Article 18 of the UN’s own Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948). That’s the one that recognizes the right of all to practice, and even to change, their religion.

The Queen hurried from the UN to Ground Zero. There, in the shadow of what will be the largest mosque in Manhattan (recently okayed by a local Zoning Board), she visited a memorial garden honoring the 67 British subjects who were murdered in the September 11 attacks on the World Trade Center. Did she see any connections?

Just last month, her son and heir, His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, spoke to the Islamic Studies Center at Oxford. For those who stayed awake during his speech (irreverent British tabloids showed many nodding off), Prince Charles urged yet more bowing to Muslim spirituality as a way to “save the planet.” Might we call his speech a fatwa?

One wonders if Her Majesty has actually listened to the kinds of hate-filled speeches that gush regularly from the UN General Assembly podium. They spew more pollution than a BP oil rig. Has she seen the thunderous receptions given to the likes of Iran’s Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Libya’s Muammar Khaddafi? Does she remember Yasser Arafat, who addressed the UN General Assembly with a gun strapped to his expansive middle? He got a Nobel Peace Prize, but presumably not for inventing airline hijacking for terror purposes.

One of the reasons the British monarchy’s standing in the world has fallen could well be that what the royals have to say about world affairs is rubbish. It’s been too long since the English-Speaking world thrilled to the words of Winston Churchill. He referred to London during the Blitz as “holding the title deeds of Western Civilization.” He showed courage in fighting for Britain’s altars and her homes.

Instead, we have these meaningless “walkabouts” by a well-dressed elderly lady who lowers her own moral standing in a futile attempt to lift that of the irredeemable UN. Lèse Majesté used to be a capital crime in England; it was defined as “insulting the dignity of the sovereign.” Who would have thought these royals would do it to themselves?