Well, round here we were informed that as a good Royal, she stayed away
from commenting on the situation. And she did have one little adventure;
on the way back from Charlottesville, her helicopter had mechanical problems
and was forced to make an emergency landing.
There was an interesting profile in the Washington Post, too. Sounds like
an interesting lady...
--
Laura Burchard lh...@virginia.edu lh...@virginia.bitnet #inc <std.disclaimer>
The fact is that one side thinks that the profits to be won outweigh the risks
to be incurred, and the other side is ready to face danger than accept an
immediate loss. --Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War
[ stuff deleted ]
This is probably what happened:
Margrethe: This imperialist war you are waging is completely
unacceptable.
George: What a nice hat, Your Majesty.
Margrethe: I think my husband is gay.
George: He certainly looks very cheerful to me.
--
Hans H\"{u}ttel, Office 1603 JANET: ha...@uk.ac.ed.lfcs
Lab. for Foundations of Comp. Sci. UUCP: ..!mcvax!ukc!lfcs!hans
JCMB, University of Edinburgh ARPA: hans%lfcs.e...@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk
Edinburgh EH9 3JZ, SCOTLAND Casualties ? Nothing casual about dying.
>In article <52...@cornell.UUCP> ko...@cs.cornell.edu (Dexter Kozen) writes:
[loadsa stuff deleted...yawn!]
>Well, round here we were informed that as a good Royal, she stayed away
>from commenting on the situation. And she did have one little adventure;
True. It is not considered good policy for any member of any royal
family to comment on any current affair. They are not supposed to
have public oppinions, they merely represent their country.
Of course, this does not apply to the swedish king, who says
whatever he want's whenever he wants to. Sod the etiquette, let the
people hear him speak his mind!
Also, he doesn't believe in supporting Swedish industry. When it
came to choosing a yacht for him to play around with, he didn't
bother buying a swedish one? Heck no, let the man get what he wants,
foreign plastic is called for here!
He is probably the only king that smokes in public, too. Well, sort
of. During some official dinner, a TV camera caught him, lighting up
a cigarette. The look on his face when it finally dawned on him that
he was on national TV, is that of a kid being caught with his hand
stuck in the cookie jar.
Just for the record:
No, I do NOT dislike the Swedish king, I have marely brought forward
interesting facts about him, none of which, as it happens, are too
flattering.
>--
>Laura Burchard lh...@virginia.edu lh...@virginia.bitnet #inc <std.disclaimer>
>The fact is that one side thinks that the profits to be won outweigh the risks
>to be incurred, and the other side is ready to face danger than accept an
>immediate loss. --Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War
--
========================================================================
Morten Lerskau Ronseth UUCP: mor...@qmw-cs.uucp
Dept. of Computer Science JANET: mor...@uk.ac.qmw.cs
Queen Mary and Westfield College ARPA: morten%cs.qmw...@nsf.ac.uk
Mile End Road Easylink: 19019285
London E1 4NS Tlf: 071 975 5220/53/47
England. Dept. fax: 081 980 6533
>No, I do NOT dislike the Swedish king, I have merely brought forward
>interesting facts about him, none of which, as it happens, are too
>flattering.
Really? I thought you were pretty flattering. You said,
>Of course, this does not apply to the Swedish king, who says
>whatever he wants whenever he wants to. Sod the etiquette, let the
>people hear him speak his mind!
giving the impression that the king speaks his mind at all times -
which would be pretty admirable. This is very far from being the
case. Very occasionally, he says something that is not dictated by
protocol, and a considerable ruckus ensues.
The present Swedish king, like the Bernadotte kings generally, does not
give the impression of being remarkably intelligent, or display any great
skill in public speaking. Still, even opponents of the monarchy have nothing
much against him. He does his job as best he can. He is not any great
embarrassment to the country, unlike his great-grandfather. He may well
become as popular as his grandfather was as he grows old.
For the first time, a female Bernadotte is the next one in line to take on
the job. However, the Bernadottes are noted for their longevity, so I don't
expect to be in a position to comment on her way of doing things on Usenet.
Well, actually, I didn't want to mention it for fear of bruising some
Danish feelings, but Queen Margrethe was criticized in the American press for
putting out a cigarette in a saucer that held her coffee cup. (It was mild
criticism; it's just a social etiquette no-no over here. One uses an ash tray
if one *must* smoke.)
> ... was criticized in the American press for
> putting out a cigarette in a saucer that held her coffee cup. (It was mild
> criticism; it's just a social etiquette no-no over here. One uses an ash tray
> if one *must* smoke.)
Funny, I had almost become convinced that the only acceptable protocol
was to open the car window and let the stub exit there, preferrably
while still burning.
Magnus
This is the Queen of Denmark; she's 50 years old.
Real diplomatic wouldn't you say?
She was 50 last year; a lot of money was spent/wasted on that account. I read
about the hype in Politiken; nice to have it all at a distance. OK, it was not
quite as bad as it often gets here in the UK... and it could have been worse:
if they had decided to throw a similar party for the Uffeman I would have renounced my Danish citizenship (I guess).
--
Hans H\"{u}ttel, Office 1603 JANET: ha...@uk.ac.ed.lfcs
Lab. for Foundations of Comp. Sci. UUCP: ..!mcvax!ukc!lfcs!hans
JCMB, University of Edinburgh ARPA: hans%lfcs.e...@nsfnet-relay.ac.uk
Edinburgh EH9 3JZ, SCOTLAND Peace sells - but who's buying ?
Inasmuch as you chose to paraphrase what Mr. Bush said it is hard to
tell whether it was diplomatic or not. I suspect you quoted Mr. Bush out of
context. He may have a few faults, but I have not found him to be an
undiplomatic person.
I did indeed paraphrase him drastically and totally out of context. As I
remember she was standing beside him, definitely not looking 50, and he
was recounting the fact that she was born as WWII was starting. Probably
didn't occur to him that he was "dating" her. As I also recall she
glanced quickly at him but her expression didn't change...I doubt that
she missed the implication, but she certainly looked regal; never
changed her smile.