views of Charles III

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In interviews on radio and television these days, II. Dozens of British citizens grieving Elizabeth’s death seemed to agree that the talent was not inherited. The Head of State does so to the amazement of anyone who wishes to explore the risks of such an inconsistency. People predicted with complete certainty that Carlos would not be as good a ruler as his mother: there are those who collect (the deceased) and those who remain (the firstborn). “We’ll see if he can screw everything up and stay quiet,” said a retired English gentleman on the coast of Spain gracefully. Others and others noted that the bread was rising every time the Prince of Wales spoke, and not knowing how to find himself in the corporate role was a nuisance as an applicant, but a real threat as his bearer. crown. Curiously, reading twenty articles and profiles about the new king signed by prestigious analysts and experts in the royal house pointed in the same direction. Carlos III’s views are playing against him and he will have to keep them to himself from now on in favor of the impartiality required by his new post. The monarch himself seemed to have accepted the babble label given from lords to commons, and had already suggested in his last talks months ago that he planned to put aside his current concerns and act as expected. The purpose of the recurring change in their first speech on ascension to the throne. Unfortunately, it didn’t take long for the machinations of knowing if a quiet Carlos turned something into a light-tongued one. The silent scene, in which, with gestures, he orders the contractor to remove an inkwell that is uncomfortable signing him, needs no subtitles. It shows the smug, manic and domineering type who irons his shoelaces and doesn’t sit on the toilet until one of his assistants opens the lid.

Word of mouth gets worse, perhaps even when long-lived Isabel’s successor takes action. By criticizing them, they mentioned the need to recycle garbage and protect the environment when the concept of “climate crisis” had not yet emerged; respecting traditional architecture and not bringing clutter to historical centers; not allowing the impoverishment of basic educational content in schools or promoting sustainable agriculture and food. A little objection. It’s true that he’s been an advocate of alternative medicine to such an extent that his eccentric health advice has angered the scientific community in his country, but in June Boris Johnson spoke loudly and clearly about his government’s “terrible plans” for deportation. To refugees from Rwanda. Even his concerns are acceptable if we compare it to some of the actions attributed to him: accepting bags of money sent for his charitable foundations from a former Qatari prime minister, a Saudi monarch, and even the families of Osama. Bin Laden. Regarding this latest gift from their office, it was announced that the epic in question fired the intellectual writer of 9/11 from his breasts to stop the scandal. It seems that crowned heads tend to put themselves in the generosity of oil kings, whether they need dough or find a rough change. The distant relative knows something about the millionaire gifts, and if the official announcement is fulfilled, he will be seated a few rows back at cousin Lilibeth’s funeral. Juan Carlos I. A desperate prince and king whose ideas are little known, but who was forced to abdicate because of the seriousness of his actions.

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