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A great deal of British ceremony was developed to portray the balance of power between crown and nobles, between crown and church, and between crown and Parliament, plus between the different ranks of nobles and between the Lords and the Commons in Parliament. When you use ceremony to act out the relationships between all facets of government, so that ceremony essentially serves to describe those relationships, and also provides continuity because it changes only a little, you get very good at it.A very moving ceremony today as the Queen's coffin was moved from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Hall. Very regal and polished. The British are excellent at such things.
It would be interesting to compare this procession with the one when the last reigning royal died.


... or when they now still say that they are better off after having been civilized [and Christianized]... just consider how prosperous are ALL the Spanish-speaking lands: the ones that are not rottenly miserable, at least look more shabby than "developed" (like Uruguay), or enjoy some sort of happy limbo, like Costa Rica, where "civilization" as we enjoy elsewhere (from militarization and runaway capitalism down) is more receding than flourishing.