Don’t think any of those people knew her mate.
They probably thought it was the line to use the toilet.
Don’t think any of those people knew her mate.
that reminded e of when was on holiday and realised i had forgotten my radar key ( key for accessible toilets ) and joined a queue at the council office .I was surprised at size of the line and when i finally got in couldn't help but notice there seemed to be a bunch of staff sitting at booths doing nowr who i kept looking at and after a while one noticed and waved e over .They probably thought it was the line to use the toilet.
They probably thought it was the line to use the toilet.
Yep. i stand corrected.<COUGH> queued is what i think you were searching for .

Or the local food bank


Ooh that musta hurt
Queue is currently 5 miles long and it will take 9 hours from where it starts to get into Westminster Hall ...
... but it has absolutely nothing to do with the popularuty of the Royal family in this country / around the world ... the crowds would have been just as long for an elected president ... 100%
GSTK ... and bless the late Queen![]()
We do seem to have a strange British way of reacting to events, we saw the same out pouring when Princess Diana died. I honestly didn't know how people would react to this, to see 5 mile queues is quite astonishing. i wonder how much is driven by social media, but not sure we had social media around Di's death, certainly not to the same level it is today. Maybe people genuinely did love her or maybe it's just a symbol of Britishness. I'm not fussed, I just follow the line of respect, keep things simple. To continue to work until the age of 96 though is quite some achievement, I'd just want my coco and bed at that age and a fooking great big do not disturb sign.
Ooh that musta hurt
I've been struck by the numbers that have flown in from overseas ... quite remarkable
... can't imagine there being many, if any, would do that if a certain folically weird former US president were to pop his clogs, for instance...
I see Biden and his mob are coming over Monday, about 100 representatives from other countries I believe. Massive security risk that one, I think public best out of it that day, watch it at home on tv in safety.
Queue is currently 5 miles long and it will take 9 hours from where it starts to get into Westminster Hall ...
... but it has absolutely nothing to do with the popularuty of the Royal family in this country / around the world ... the crowds would have been just as long for an elected president ... 100%
GSTK ... and bless the late Queen![]()
We do seem to have a strange British way of reacting to events, we saw the same out pouring when Princess Diana died. I honestly didn't know how people would react to this, to see 5 mile queues is quite astonishing. i wonder how much is driven by social media, but not sure we had social media around Di's death, certainly not to the same level it is today. Maybe people genuinely did love her or maybe it's just a symbol of Britishness. I'm not fussed, I just follow the line of respect, keep things simple. To continue to work until the age of 96 though is quite some achievement, I'd just want my coco and bed at that age and a fooking great big do not disturb sign.
It is some part to do with the royal family. There'll be plenty in that queue who have zero interest in the royal family though, but will be feeling something meaningful towards the individual. It was the same for Diana even though she was no longer a royal.
You mentioned a president. Millions turned out for, and tuned in to, Kennedy's funeral. Because he as an individual meant something to so many and the position he held only elevated that.
Same with Gandhi when he died. A million turned out the following day alone.
I can like the individual, even have a deal of sympathy for them and even an attachment to them, without supporting the institution they represent in the slightest because it's archaic and wrong.
It is some part to do with the royal family. There'll be plenty in that queue who have zero interest in the royal family though, but will be feeling something meaningful towards the individual. It was the same for Diana even though she was no longer a royal.
You mentioned a president. Millions turned out for, and tuned in to, Kennedy's funeral. Because he as an individual meant something to so many and the position he held only elevated that.
Same with Gandhi when he died. A million turned out the following day alone.
I can like the individual, even have a deal of sympathy for them and even an attachment to them, without supporting the institution they represent in the slightest because it's archaic and wrong.

