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Diana, Princess of Wales (1961-1997)

Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

She was a bit of a media whore and that's exactly why the queen couldn't stand the woman. I still don't get why people like to paint her as the patron saint of all things good and fluffy. She wouldn't do any good or show up to any charity event unless there were a menagerie of press there to catch every sideways glance of empathy on camera. Still at least towards the end she finally got to be with the man she wanted to be with and Charles got to be with the horse he wanted to be with.

You hold Leona Helmsley in such high regard.....
and then show such blatent dis-respect for Diana...

Your an interesting person!!!

:confused::confused::confused:
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

She is dead. The whole truth will never be known. Let's move on.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

She looked uncannly like Myra Hindley. Much nicer person tho!
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

I think the closed remembrance service is at just the right tone, for her family, friends and representatives of the charities she worked for. No public spectacle, but a behind the doors service.

Why can't we nail the coffin shut and keep it that way? I'm kinda tired of seeing her pop up puppet like on the telly, she's still news even though she's been dead for a decade. Just let her rest in peace.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

Blah, Blah, Blah, Blah.

I think it is well past time to move on!

Blah, Blah!!
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

The service is being televised internationally. In Canada, on CTV Newsnet in the wee hours.

As far as the meetings with the downtrodden, the stories have come out that Diana would do so, unannounced, when the media was NOT around, as well.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

You hold Leona Helmsley in such high regard.....
and then show such blatent dis-respect for Diana...

Your an interesting person!!!

:confused::confused::confused:

I hold Leona Helmsley in high regard do I? No I was trying to look at her life from her perspective in that thread bashing her for giving her fortune to her dog. She's hardly an evil person for having a sense of humour when it came to her money and who it went to is she? Or maybe I, like Helmsley can be quite eccentric at times.

I don't dis-respect Diana either, I simply don't see why every anniversary of her death there's this outpour of saintly images of her in the press. Thousands die everyday, I fail to see why her tragic demise is any more news worthy than theirs.

Now shall I make some public assumptions about you too? :rolleyes:
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

The World has moved on, let us move with it and leave Diana in 1997.

She was a very beautiful woman who courted controversy and yes, her death was tragic, but trawling up her memory every year does not bring her back.

We don't hear anything about the late Queen Mother or the late Princess Margaret or the late Mother Theresa of Calcutta: they are at rest, why should Diana be any different?

Because of the conspiracy. Any high profile figure who dies in an accident, it's always murder, according to the press.

She was a sweet woman - compared to the mostly stuck up prigs in the royal family, she was a breath of fresh air. Pretty much the only royal I could ever stand.

And then she died on my ninth birthday. Considering how much my eighteenth also sucked, I'm not looking forward to my twenty-seventh.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

I'm actually tired of hearing about her, enough...she is dead- you don't celebrate a death.. omg is right up there with celebrating the death of Elvis--

once a person is gone, leave them the hell alone...you don't get anymore birthdays, so don't celebrate one, and you don't celebrate the anniversary of when someone dies....
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

its so sad to think that even now people are still bashing this wonderful women!

Did she REALLY MAKE the press SO interested in her that they literally " killed her " , she was hounded and followed like a piece of meat ... with large amounts of money for pics of her, hence the paps totally taking it WAY to far!!!

The world is a sad place without her, she was an inspiration to us all , and if anyone can look in the mirror and say you could give so much , as she did, to the less fortunate of us , then fair play to you , i think she went beyond the call of her duties to be a sign of happiness and hope for so many!

WE MISS YOU DIANA!!

May you always be remembered for the gorgeous way you where able to make people feel on top of the world just by being around them.

She was "taken" from us by evil people who could not handle having her around !
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

Princess Diana was a person , with good and bad qualities, her family and friends have the right to remember her, but the media will not let her rest in peace. We seem to forget that had she not married Charles, she may not have had time to do charitable work or attract the media attention.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

Wah-wah-wah.

It didn't matter 10 years ago, and it sure as fuck does not matter now.

The reaction to her death was a hysteria, fuelled by a media-savvy Blair government and a particularly quiet newsfront.

The Royal grief should be kept private. Any mourning should be done quietly. There are far more important things in the world nowadays than somebody killed by a drunk-driver who wasn't wearing a seatbelt (NB: I note she has not featured in any Government adverts yet).

This mawkish sentimentality showed by the chattering classes and foreigners is nauseating.

Now hang on whilst I show how much I care by joining a Facebook group, posting somebody elses YouTube video or pasting something that GoogleImages randomly throws up.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

We seem to forget that had she not married Charles, she may not have had time to do charitable work or attract the media attention.

Is that honestly relevant? I mean, it's all very well looking at could-have-beens. If Boomtown Rats hadn't written I Don't Like Mondays, then Live Aid wouldn't have happened - Bob Geldof was made famous almost exclusively by that song.

What puts someone into a position to do good things is irrelevant. What's relevant is that you take your position and use it to do those good things.
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

I liked Prince Harry's remarks at the service. She truly was "a geniune person." It's hard to believe it's been 10 years already... I can still recall the shock at the first news reports that she had died...

:cry::cry::cry:

It's also been ten years since Mother Teresa of Calcutta died, Sept. 5, 1997...

:cry::cry::cry:
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

It seems like yesterday when I heard the news on the radio late that Sunday afternoon. How time flies!
 
Re: 10th Anniversary Of Diana's Death

](*,)](*,)

The New York Times

August 31, 2007

Diana Remembered at Service

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 2:51 p.m. ET

LONDON (AP) -- Princess Diana's family solemnly marked the 10th anniversary of her death Friday, with her younger son eulogizing her as ''the best mother in the world.''

The bishop of London used his sermon at a memorial service to call for an end to the sniping between Diana's fans and detractors, and a priest who has led an annual remembrance said it may now be time to let go.

''To lose a parent so suddenly at such a young age, as others have experienced, is indescribably shocking and sad,'' Prince Harry said at the memorial service at the Guards' Chapel near Buckingham Palace.

''It was an event which changed our lives forever, as it must have done for everyone who lost someone that night,'' said Harry, who was 12 when Diana died.

''But what is far more important to us now and into the future is that we remember our mother as she would wish to be remembered, as she was: fun-loving, generous, down to earth and entirely genuine,'' he said.

Diana's admirers, many of them suspicious of the cause of her death and resentful of Prince Charles, tied bouquets, poems and portraits to the gates of her former home.

Friday was a day for broadcasting video snippets of her wedding and funeral, for rehashing the rights and wrongs of her failed marriage.

It was one more day for dredging up questions about how Diana came to die in a car crash in Paris with her boyfriend, Dodi Fayed, and for the Daily Telegraph to publish an essay explaining ''why we were right to weep for Diana.''

For Harry and his older brother, Prince William, it was a simple tribute to an adored mother.

''To us, just two loving children, she was quite simply the best mother in the world,'' Harry said. ''When she was alive, we completely took for granted her unrivaled love of life, laughter, fun and folly.

''She was our guardian, friend and protector,'' Harry said. ''She never once allowed her unfaltering love for us to go unspoken or undemonstrated.''

Harry and William were credited with organizing the noontime service, but Charles was blamed by many for the furor over an invitation to his current wife.

Camilla, whom Diana blamed for breaking up her marriage, decided to stay home. That decision followed quickly after the Mail on Sunday published a commentary by Diana's friend, Rosa Monckton, saying the princess would have been ''astonished'' that Camilla was invited.

''Actually, she would have been astonished to learn that her former husband had married his longtime mistress,'' Monckton wrote.

Bishop Chartres, who was also a target of Monckton's attack, called for an end to the sniping.

''Still 10 years after her tragic death, there are regular reports of 'fury' at this or that incident and the princess' memory is used for scoring points. Let it end here,'' Chartres said. ''Let this service mark the point at which we let her rest in peace and dwell on her memory with thanksgiving and compassion.''

A few hundred people gathered outside -- a smaller crowd than the masses that lined the route of Diana's funeral procession to Westminster Abbey.

''She reached our lives deeply, even in America. She brought life to the palace and warmth, and that's what the monarchy needed,'' said Arlene Fitch, 54, of Boston.

Diana ''got married the same year as me, she had children the same year as me and, as her boys have grown up, they have done just the same kind of things as our boys would do,'' said Fitch's sister, Marie Schofield, 46, from Florida.

The Rev. Frank Gelli, who has led an informal service outside Kensington Palace every year, said this probably would be the last.

''It would be good if the princess was allowed to rest,'' he told a reporter.

Eileen Neathey, 56, of London, recalled a chance encounter with Diana at a hospital, where Neathey's mother was a patient.

''I had been up all night and was very upset, and when I bumped into Diana, I burst into tears,'' said Neathey, outside Kensington Palace. ''She put her arm round me and comforted me -- that's the way she was.''

John Loughrey, 52, had painted ''Diana'' on his forehead and ''the truth?'' on his cheek. ''We must get to the bottom of how she died,'' he said.

Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip were among the 500 people in the chapel. Prince Edward, Charles' younger brother, and his sister, Princess Anne, also were there, as were Prime Minister Gordon Brown, former prime minister John Major and Tony Blair, and representatives of 110 charities Diana supported.

Sir Elton John came, but did not perform. His reworking of ''Candle in the Wind,'' was a poignant moment for many at Diana's funeral.

Mohamed al Fayed, who accused Prince Philip of masterminding a plot to kill Diana and Dodi Fayed, was not on the guest list. He observed his own two minutes of silence at Harrods, his department store, an hour before the memorial service. However, his daughter, Camilla al Fayed, did attend the official service.

''There's definitely something more to it than meets the eye, and I think Mr. al Fayed is probably right that the government were involved,'' said Alison Wormall, 46, who traveled from central England to join the observance at Harrods.

In Paris, dozens of emotional visitors came stopped by a gold-colored statue of a flame over the bustling roadway tunnel where Diana died.

''I came to pray for her,'' said artist Francine Reulier, 56, who knelt quietly for several minutes at the base of the statue, which has become a makeshift shrine.

''Many of us in France feel a bit guilty for not having protected her,'' she said, remembering how she awoke to the news of Diana's death on her alarm-clock radio a decade ago. ''I still get chills, I still cry about it -- the raw horror of it all.''

A poll commissioned by Channel 4 television in Britain found that 25 percent of the public believes Diana was murdered, but 59 percent thought it was an accident. The telephone poll of 1,016 adults conducted this week had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

The royal family, which clearly was caught by surprise by a national tidal wave of grief 10 years ago, had refrained from any public remembrance of the anniversary of the princess' death.

This year, however, William and Harry took the lead in organizing the memorial service, as well as a rock concert on Diana's birthday, July 1, which drew 70,000 paying fans.

:cry:------​
 
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