Anon - not logged in Report This Comment Date: November 30, 2024 05:44AM
Lieutenant-General Lord Chelmsford was told seven times to not start a war with
the Zulu. He was soon to retire and decided to end his career in a blaze of
glorious victory, expending the lives of loyal British soldiers and the then
foreign Zulu. After being soundly outmanoeuvred and defeated at the Battle of
Isandlwana, he ran home to Britain and lied to Queen Victoria. This began the
decline of the nobility in law and society, a process that shows no sign of
stopping.
In the meantime these men had to fight for their lives at Rorke's Drift.
I think Britain's upper house should be hereditary, yes, but they must be
qualified in Constitutional Law, or have eight years work history as an
accountant, or eight years in the Armed Forces. Political appointees are not a
counter-balance, and we can't have the type of people who gave rise to Lord
Chelmsford. People who, for a long time, ran the Boer War so badly.