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Celebrating the
wrong King
Every year, on November 15, Belgian civil servants celebrate King's Feast Day.
Belgian embassies around the
world host a celebration for local government leaders and other foreign diplomats to honor the King of the Belgians.
Since 1993, the King of the Belgians has been Albert II of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.
The vast number of Belgians never liked Albert. Without question, if a national referendum had been held upon the
death of his older brother, King Baudoin I, the great majority of Belgians would have confirmed their
dislike for Albert and their opposition to his enthronement.
Several years ago, a judge in Luxembourg obtained documentary evidence
that in the late 1980s, before becoming king, Albert, then a notorious playboy prince, sexually abused children at parties
at which they were provided for that purpose.
The documentary evidence also implicated the ex-playboy in an orgy of ritualized
murders of children who were procured by the notorious Belgian pedophile Michel Nihoul.
The king filed a civil suit against the French publisher that released details of the court documents
and he offered
to donate whatever awards for damages he might win to infamous so-called "non-governmental organizations" ("NGOs")
in Belgium that, together with the Belgian
police, front for and conspire with pedophiles and traffickers in children. But this was just for show.
Few Belgians were surprised by the revelations in the press that Albert was alleged
to be a pedophile and suspected in the murders of children.
For these reasons, there are civil servants who refuse invitations to celebrate and honor the
current King of the Belgians, Albert II. But many others do not hesitate to toast and salute this monster. The press should
know better than to publicize such parties in the society pages.
The above comment is by of Dick Fabius
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The King of the Belgians,
Albert II of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
About King's Feast Day in Belgium Since 1866, Belgium
has celebrated a "Royal Holiday".
The annual holiday is not an official or national holiday. It is a holiday for civil servants only. According
to the Christian calendar, November 15 is Saint Albert Day and Saint Leopold Day.
In Belgian history, three Kings of the Belgians have been named Leopold and two have been named Albert.
The first "Royal Holiday" was on November 15, 1866, in the first year of the reign of King Leopold II. It
was renamed "Dynasty Holiday" during the regency of Prince Karol (Charles), from 1944 to 1950. At the request
of the Belgian Prime Minister, Jean Van Houtte, in 1953, "Dynasty Day" was renamed "King's Day".
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