Blogger’s Note: The British royal family is purely constitutional (that is – appointed by a democratically elected government to serve the people) – and has not been an absolute monarch (a royal family which appoints a Parliament to serve its will) since the axe fell on the neck of King Charles I (1648-49) – and the absolute monarchy was permanently abolished by Oliver Cromwell. During the English Civil Wars – the bourgeoisie seized political power from the aristocracy – and have never relinquished it. When Cromwell died – and his son overthrown – a left-leaning bourgeoisie was replaced with a right-leaning bourgeoisie – which has retained power to this day. When it appointed Charles II as the first constitutional monarch – the right-leaning bourgeoisie propagated the falsehood amongst the illiterate masses that the absolute monarchy had been re-instated and would take revenge against anyone who opposed it (this was supported by the fact that supporters of Charles II were permitted by Parliament to hunt down and murder around 200 former supporters of Cromwell). Part of this fiction was to give the English Navy the designation “Royal” (when it takes orders only from Parliament) – whilst the Prison Service was allowed to use the empty royal term “His Majesty” or “Her Majesty”. The royal family cannot – and does – not imprison anyone and has not possessed this power since 1648-49. This is how the bourgeoise stole political power from the aristocracy by recruiting Parliament Armies of hundreds of thousands of illiterate peasants – who fought and died for what they believed to be “their freedom”. Only Cromwell granted this freedom – but it was soon taken away by the nefarious forces that now control UK society today. ACW (29.1.2026)
The Cradle Media:
UK police arrest eighty-six after pro-Palestine protest breaches London prison
UK police arrested 86 people after demonstrators breached restricted areas at HMP Wormwood Scrubs in west London during a protest supporting a pro-Palestine detainee on hunger strike.
London’s Metropolitan Police said the arrests were made on suspicion of aggravated trespass after protesters entered prison grounds, blocked staff access, and refused orders to disperse. Police also alleged that threats were made against officers at the scene.
The protest was held in support of Umer Khalid, whom campaigners describe as the last remaining participant in the ‘Prisoners for Palestine’ hunger strike.
The UK Ministry of Justice called the incident “deeply concerning,” while insisting that prison security was not compromised and that the detainee is being monitored “in line with standard policy.”
