They parade through the streets chanting “no kings,” pretending to stand against authority and concentrated power, yet the moment a real monarch steps into the room, they rise to their feet applauding as if royalty itself suddenly became fashionable again. This is not merely hypocrisy, it is a revealing window into how politics operates beneath the surface.
The spectacle surrounding King Charles III being welcomed with cheers and a standing ovation by the very same political faction that markets itself as anti-establishment exposes the contradiction in plain sight. They rail against what they call authoritarianism at home, yet they celebrate it abroad when it suits the narrative. It reflects a deeper pattern I have warned about repeatedly, where ideology is merely a tool and consistency is abandoned the moment it becomes inconvenient.
If you strip away the slogans, what you find is that these movements are not opposed to centralized authority. Quite the opposite. They are deeply in favor of it, provided they are the ones holding the reins. The idea of “no kings” is simply branding. It resonates emotionally, particularly with younger audiences who have been taught to distrust institutions, but in practice, the same people will support unelected bodies, international organizations, and even hereditary monarchies when those entities align with their broader political agenda.
Governments and political movements always gravitate toward structures that consolidate authority. Whether it is a monarchy, a bureaucracy, or a supranational institution, the form does not matter nearly as much as the control it provides. That is why you see politicians condemning “elite power” one day and then celebrating it the next when it comes wrapped in the right symbolism.
The public is told one story while a completely different set of actions unfolds behind the curtain. They are encouraged to oppose “kings” in theory, yet applaud them in practice, because the real objective is not to dismantle hierarchy, but to reshape it.