This is baffling. I was responding to a post that Charles would make a good president. I did not agree. You apparently did agree, yet you expend a great deal of ire and verbiage to ultimately agree with my conclusion ("because he would prefer to be a farmer and thus not be involved in politics at all") [/qutoe]
The Queen is the same - would prefer to be a countrywoman but due to her birth realises that she as to be a leader and she has done that fabulously well for nearly 60 years but that doesn't mean it is what she wanted to do all her life.
Charles is the same - not choosing to be a leader but accepting that that is his role in life and done the best he can to prepare for that role.
The most important quality of a leader is that she LEADS, and if she has no desire to lead, then she is not suited to lead and she therefore lacks the qualities necessary to lead a nation. So, apart from the blustering indignation, doesn't your post just affirm what I originally said?
You are looking at the situation from the point of view of people like you and I who can make that choice but not from the point of view of people who were born to lead - and the upper classes in Britain for generations have been raised to believe that that is their role - that being a leader is the responsiblity of those born to great privilege - so for the Queen and Charles being a leader wasn't something they chose but something they were raised to do and something they have accepted as their role in life
- I wasn't comparing Cambridge to Harvard. My point was that Obama gained admission to schools based on merit. You know quite a bit about Prince Charles, so you can compare and contrast this as you wish and come to your own conclusions.
You stated you would prefer to have a Harvard educated leader and I simply pointed out that Charles is Cambridge educated (and yes his results wouldn't have guaranteed anyone else a place there but his degree was earned on merit and to suggest otherwise is to further your insults heaped on Charles)
- I did read Prince Charles's memo. Quite a number of people agree with my reading of it, though there are differing views: Has Prince Charles got ideas above his station? - Education News, Education - The Independent While the views he expressed are open to interpretation, it would be unreasonable to say that my summary of his statements did not closely correspond to the logical and prevailing interpretation of what he wrote in the memo. I would allow that his intended meaning may have been different.
What he actually said
“What is wrong with people nowadays? Why do they all seem to think they are qualified to do things far above their capabilities? - clearly expressing the idea that people need to realise their limitations. I see kids every year thinking that they are going to be doctors and lawyers and then they are devastated when they don't get into that course because they haven't believed their teachers who tell them they won't get the marks - that is all that he is saying - not that people shoudn't strive to reach the top but that people should be able to realise that they aren't all capable - unfortunately a lot of people - many in the link you quoted - didn't read the actual words and took the word 'capablities' to mean 'station' - two very different words. He went on to blame the fact that children aren't tested and told what those academic limits are - or what other limits they have e.g. we had a student at my school a number of years ago who went through the entire 'leadership course' we run but when the crunch came none of the teachers or his peers elected him to a prefects position because he simply wasn't cut out to be a leader for a lot of personal reasons - his parents protested to the school and tried to sue the school for not electing him to a prefect position - Charles would say that that was a person not realising their capablitilites - not saying he shouldn't have tried out to be a leader but should have accepted the fact that he wasn't one and simply moved on with life.
- I don't believe Prince Charles had the option of sitting back and doing nothing all of these years. It is not the example his mother set for him, not what the BP would have stood for and finally, dare I say, not in his nature.
The last sentence is the crucial one - it isn't in his nature to do nothing - his education and upbringing had been about service and so he has served but had his nature been different then there wouldn't have been a lot that anyone could have done about it e.g. William has already gone against the plans for his life with his extension of his military career - he was supposed to have already been doing full-time royal duties for about two to three years but he said 'no thanks' and I do suspect that he might even do another extension in 2013 (which he has already intimated) - Charles could have done the same thing in the 70s and fought to remain in the navy or have simply stayed at Highgrove and done little and what could anyone really have done - with the system of inheritance if he hadn't appeared in public since say 1975 but had remained at Highgrove talking to his trees he would still be the heir to the throne.
His get up and go is absolute proof of leadership - he set up the Prince's Trust and has overseen its operations for years - evidence of leadership abilities of course - but let's not let the truth get in the way of a false belief.