Who is Prince (Now King) Charles III?

Who is Prince (Now King) Charles III?

Tim O’Connor – Center for the Preservation of Humanity – 9/9/2022

I’m not super well versed in British Parliamentary procedures. I really don’t pay attention to British politics all that much. I know enough to understand that Boris Johnson, the former UK Prime Minister, absolutely stabbed the Brexiteers in the back and could not swallow enough medical tyranny bull to suit him. He left the borders open and allowed people to be arrested for exercising free speech. As for the monarchy; however, I know even less. I know that they can play a role in government but generally stay out of it. It seems; however, that if a lunatic ends up upon the throne, the UK, and the world, would be in for some problems. So, who is Prince Charles?

He was born Charles Philip Arthur George on November 14, 1948 meaning he will be 74 years old this year. Between 1967 and 1970 he studied archaeology, anthropology, and history. After earning his degree he entered the military. In 1981 he married Princess Diana and they divorced in 1996 after having two children together. In 2005 he married Parker Bowles. On the 8th of September, 2022 he became King of England with the passing of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II.

Here is the reason this is important. The United Kingdom’s Head of State, the King or Queen, while thought to be a ceremonial, doesn’t have to be ceremonial at all. The King is able to appoint a government, sets the direction he wants to see the government go in, and gets the final say on every piece of legislation because in order for it to become law, he must sign it. He could, if he chose to, refuse elections of any kind and seat who he wants in the parliament according to this. If that were to occur, there would be no legislation he refused to sign. If he allowed elections he could still just nix any piece of legislation he disagreed with.

In addition to these powers, the King is also the Head of the Commonwealth – a collection of 56 nations, 14 of which he is actually the Head of State. 2.4 billion people are within the UK’s Commonwealth. Those nations are Antigua and Barbuda, Australia, Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belize, Botswana, Brunei Darussalam, Cameroon, Canada, Cyprus, Dominica, Fiji, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Grenada, Guyana, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Kingdom of Eswatini, Kiribati, Lesotho, Malaysia, Malawi, Maldives, Malta, Mauritius, Mozambique, Nambia, Nauru, New Zealand, Nigeria, Pakistan, Paupa New Guinea, Rwanda, Saint Lucia, Samoa, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Africa, Sri Lanka, St Kitts and Nevis, St Vincent and the Grenadines, Tonga, Togo, Trinidad and Tobago, Tuvalu, Uganda, United Kingdom, United Republic of Tanzania, Vanuatu, and Zambia (those in bold recognize the monarch as the head of their state). The Commonwealth sets certain standards to be followed by all of the members of the Commonwealth. One of the topics is sustainable development. Basically, the Commonwealth serves as a bare bones United Nations. The difference is that the UK has a military they are capable of funding and training on their own. What is really interesting is that those bolded states featured some of the most draconian lockdowns in the world (outside of China) during the height of the Covid ridiculousness.

Charles is all in on sustainable development, a devout member of the zero-carbon cult, and all about locking people into their homes. He wrote a book in 2012 titled On the Future of Food in which he demanded that sustainable practices be implemented immediately in order to ‘fix’ the ‘food shortage.’ Here we are in 2022 and now he can force that down everyone’s throats even more – sustainable development initiatives (Agenda 21, Agenda 2030, SDGs) and the lockdowns have caused the food shortage. He will only help to make it worse.

In addition to his book, in 2007 he started an environmental organization called Prince’s Rainforest Project. The charitable organization he has set up, The Prince of Wales Charities, donates to over 500 organizations. Many of them are linked to sustainable development initiatives. According to the website, “The Prince uses his position to help raise public awareness about sustainability challenges and solutions through his speeches, articles, books and films. He is also Patron of a wide range of organizations working for sustainability, offering support and encouragement for their work.”

Some of his other quotes about climate change include:

“It is baffling, I must say, that in our modern world we have such blind trust in science and technology that we all accept what science tells us about everything - until, that is, it comes to climate science.”

“We might be more inclined to think about the longer term if we were more aware of what is happening around us. Perhaps daily weather forecasts could include a few basic facts about the Earth's vital signs or details of where climate change is increasing the likelihood of damaging weather?”

“We need to be realistic. There is very little we can do now to stop the ice from disappearing from the North Pole in the summer. And we probably cannot prevent the melting of the permafrost and the resulting release of methane. In addition, I fear that we may be too late to help the oceans maintain their ability to absorb carbon dioxide.”

“We can halt the destruction of the world's rainforests - and even restore parts of them - in order to ensure that the forests do what they are so good at - in other words, storing carbon naturally.”

“The whole of nature cries out at our mistreatment of her. If the planet were a patient, we would have treated her long ago.”

“The whole of the 20th century has always put the car at the center. So by putting the pedestrian first, you create these livable places, I think, with more attraction and interest and character.”

“We're busily wrecking the chances for future generations at a rapid rate of knots by not recognizing the damage we're doing to the natural environment, bearing in mind that this is the only planet that we know has any life on it.”

“We need to be realistic. There is very little we can do now to stop the ice from disappearing from the North Pole in the summer. And we probably cannot prevent the melting of the permafrost and the resulting release of methane. In addition, I fear that we may be too late to help the oceans maintain their ability to absorb carbon dioxide.”

He has been a huge proponent of shutting everything down for all of the rest of us. These qutes indicate his Malthusianism, his desire to destroy personal transportation, and his belief in Gaia theory. Meanwhile, Highgrove House sits on 900 acres of land and the three story structure contains nine bedrooms, four reception rooms, eight bathrooms, and a nursery wing. With at least three other homes, and now Buckingham Palace (which he has determined isn’t sustainable enough for his presence) King Charles has had hundreds of rooms between the four homes. You are supposed to live in a coffin apartment with no chance to get out the situation and he plans on flying in his private jet and living in a multitude of mansions.

When he spoke at COP 26 (The UN’s meeting to discuss climate change mitigation strategies in November 2021), then Prince Charles said:

“Your excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, the COVID-19 pandemic has shown us just how devastating a global cross border threat can be. Climate change and biodiversity loss are no different. In fact, they pose an even greater existential threat to the extent that we have to put ourselves on what might be called a war like footing. …

“So ladies and gentleman, my plea today is for countries to come together to create the environment that enables every sector of industry to take the action required. We know this will take trillions, not billions of dollars. …

“We also know that countries, many of whom are burdened by growing levels of debt, simply cannot afford to go green. Here we need a vast military style campaign to marsh the strength of the global private sector, with trillions at his disposal far beyond global GDP, and with the greatest respect, beyond even the governments of the world’s leaders. It offers the only real prospect of achieving fundamental economic transition. So how do we do it? First, how do we get the private sector all pulling in the same direction? After nearly two years now of consultation, CEOs have told me that we need to bring together global industries to map out in very practical terms what it will take to make the transition. We know from the pandemic that the private sector can speed up timelines dramatically when everyone agrees on the urgency and the direction. So each sector needs a clear strategy to speed up the process of getting innovations to market.

“Second, who pays and how? We need to align private investment behind these industry strategies to help finance the transition efforts, which means building the confidence of investors so that the financial risk is reduced. Crucially, investment is needed to help transition from coal to clean energy. If we can develop a pipeline of many more sustainable and bankable projects at a sufficient scale, it will attract greater investment. Third, which switches do we flick to enable these objectives? More than 300 of the world’s leading CEOs and institutional investors have told me that alongside the promises countries have made, their nationally determined contributions, they need clear market signals, agree globally so that they have the confidence to invest without the goal posts suddenly moving. This is the framework I’ve offered in the Terra Carta Roadmap, created by my Sustainable Markets Initiative, with nearly 100 specific actions for acceleration.”

Charles here is noting that he wants more money than what exists on the planet directed towards climate change mitigation. This money is to be used to wage a war against carbon and anything and everything that produces it. That includes “energy, agriculture, transportation, health systems, and fashion,” according to the same speech. So, now, with increased power and control, this absolute monster will be positively demanding everyone but him will have far less access to energy, food, mobility, healthcare, and fashionable clothing. This guy is literally telling the UK, and the rest of the world, that he will make the social arrangement in Hunger Games a reality.

Prince Charles spoke at the World Economic Forum in early 2020 at the request of Klaus Schwab. Charles promised to break the economic and financial systems of the world as described, later, in Schwab’s book, The Great Reset:

“In order to secure our future and to prosper, we need to evolve our economic model. Having been engaged in these issues since I suppose 1968, when I made my first speech on the environment, and having talked to countless experts across the globe over those decades, I have come to realise that it is not a lack of capital that is holding us back, but rather the way in which we deploy it. Therefore, to move forward, we need nothing short of a paradigm shift, one that inspires action at revolutionary levels and pace. With this in mind, I am delighted to be launching a Sustainable Markets Initiative, with the generous support of the World Economic Forum.”

If anyone wants to do anything King Charles III decides isn’t sustainable – that person will not get a loan to do it. Not having capitol, other potential investors will be put off, and the person’s intentions will go unrealized. Sustainability compliance efforts will only become exponentially more intrusive into our lives as more and more nations adopt a digital currency and the social credit score which comes with it. As he gave this speech, the WHO was deciding that cordoning off China was not a recommendation despite China having locked down several major cities because of Covid.

His intentions are murderous. He applauds destroying traditional family units. He applauds family planning options (baby murder) in low-income nations. He said as much in a 2010 speech:

“I know it is a complicated issue. The experts suggest that, in theory, the Earth could support 9 billion people, but not if a vast proportion is consuming the world’s resources at present Western levels. So the changes have to be essentially two-fold. It would certainly help if the acceleration slowed down, but it would also help if the world reduced its desire to consume. 

“I have been following carefully the findings of my British Asian Trust in India which has been helping to run a women's education project in a drought-prone region of Maharashtra called Satara. They have noticed that a real difference can be made when women are able to become more involved in the running of the community. This is also the experience in Bangladesh. I have long been fascinated by Muhammad Yunus’s Grameen Bank of Bangladesh. It operates micro-credit schemes that offer loans to the poorest communities through a bank which is now ninety per cent owned by the rural poor. Interestingly, where the loans are managed by the women of the community, the birth rate has gone down. The impact of these sorts of schemes, of education and the provision of family planning services, has been widespread. Whereas in the 1980s, the average family in Bangladesh had six children, now the average figure is three. But with mega-cities growing as they are, I fear there is little chance these sorts of schemes can help the plight of many millions of people unless we all face up to the fact more honestly than we do that one of the biggest causes of high birth rates remains cultural. 

“It raises some very difficult moral questions, I know, but do we not each one of us carry the same responsibility towards the Earth? It is surely time to ask if we can come to a view that balances the traditional attitude to the sacred nature of life on the one hand with, on the other, those teachings within each of the sacred traditions that urge humankind to keep within the limits of Nature’s benevolence and bounty.”

While Charles is not as overt about his depopulation intentions as his father, Prince Philip, he nonetheless is assisting in climate change’s main goal – the annihilation of 95% of humanity. There is a reason the Georgia Guidestones were intentionally taken down. The monsters behind the ‘green’ curtain are demons who will do whatever they can to reduce human population from our present 8 billion down to half a billion or so. The monsters behind the curtain didn’t want this monument to depopulation left standing for all to see.

King Charles III’s father is quoted as saying, “If I were reincarnated I would wish to be returned to earth as a killer virus to lower human population levels.” Philip died at 99 years old on March 9, 2021. The delta variant of coronavirus was so named on March 31, 2021. Charles isn’t as brash as his father, but he has the same intentions. Instead of dying first, Charles is now a king wielding great power over many nations, and will use his power to destroy huge swaths of the people on earth in any way he is able.

So, who is King Charles III? He is a murderous, scientismist, Marxist, despot looking to push his ‘green’ agenda, and all of the objectives riding upon its coat tails (digital currency, austerity, technocracy, rationing, social credit scores, etc.), as rapidly and brutally as he deems humanity will suffer. He is a tyrant. He and his ideas will help murder billions of people. The world lost a more-or-less neutral queen and will suffer under the tyranny of yet another degenerate, globalist, psychopath in a position of power.

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