I watched both speeches and I've read a lot of reflections on them, but I think this is the best so far:-
There was a quiet gravity to his presence, a kind of composure that didn’t demand attention so much as earn it. His words were measured, deliberate, and carried with them the weight of history without ever feeling heavy-handed. It wasn’t just the content of the speech, but the cadence, the restraint, the sense that each phrase had been considered rather than performed. Before I knew it, I wasn’t skimming, I was listening. Fully. It’s rare, in this era of noise and urgency, to encounter a moment that feels both dignified and unhurried. Whatever one’s views, there was something undeniably compelling about witnessing a speaker who understands not only the power of language, but the responsibility that comes with it.
The Architecture of Language
What struck me most watching King Charles III stand before Congress wasn’t just the content of his speech, it was the reminder of what language sounds like when it is treated with respect. Full sentences. Complete thoughts. A measured cadence that doesn’t lurch from grievance to grievance like a drunk driver weaving across lanes. It was, quite simply, the sound of someone who understands that words are not just noise, they are instruments of meaning, responsibility, and, occasionally, wisdom.
And in that moment, the contrast with Donald Trump wasn’t subtle, it was seismic.Charles spoke of alliances not as transactional leverage, but as living commitments. He invoked NATO not as a protection racket, but as a shared defense of democratic stability. He referenced Ukraine not as a bargaining chip, but as a moral obligation. And when he turned to the climate crisis, he didn’t reduce it to a punchline or a hoax, he framed it, correctly, as a systemic threat to prosperity, security, and the continuity of life itself. This is what leadership sounds like when it is informed by history rather than inflated by ego.
Meanwhile, Trump stood beside him, physically present, intellectually absent, delivering his usual slurry of half-formed thoughts, superlatives without substance, and that unmistakable whiny bloviation that has become his linguistic signature. Listening to him after Charles is like following a symphony with a kazoo solo. One man builds an argument; the other builds a grievance. One understands that words carry weight; the other uses them like confetti at a rally.
What made Charles’s remarks particularly striking was their subtlety. This wasn’t a scolding, it was something far more devastating: a polite, impeccably delivered reminder of what America used to be. When he spoke of checks and balances, rooted in the legacy of Magna Carta, he wasn’t just offering a history lesson, he was holding up a mirror. When he said, “America’s words carry weight and meaning… the actions of this great nation matter even more,” it landed less as praise and more as a challenge. A nudge, perhaps, but one delivered with the kind of elegance that makes it impossible to dismiss.
I couldn’t help but think of Barack Obama in that moment. Not because Charles is Obama, or Obama is Charles, but because both men understand the architecture of language. They know how to construct a thought, how to guide an audience, how to elevate rather than inflame. Listening to them reminds you that rhetoric, when done properly, is not manipulation, it’s illumination. It clarifies. It connects. It aspires.
Charles called the U.S.–U.K. alliance “one of the most consequential in human history,” and he’s right. But alliances, like language, require maintenance. They require honesty, consistency, and a shared understanding of reality. You cannot sustain them with slogans, tantrums, and a worldview that reduces every relationship to a deal to be won or lost. What Charles offered in that chamber was more than diplomacy, it was a reminder. A reminder that the world is watching. A reminder that leadership still has a vocabulary, even if we’ve forgotten how to speak it. And perhaps most painfully, a reminder that somewhere along the way, we traded eloquence for noise, clarity for chaos, and principle for performance. And the silence that follows that realization?
That’s the loudest indictment of all.
Michael Jochum
Author, Not Just a Drummer: Reflections on Art, Politics, Dogs, and the Human Condition
the orange one on CIII: "the king agrees with me even more than I do"
ReplyDeletethe orange mobster on comey arrest over a social media post showing "86-47" written in seashells): "Everyone knows 86 is a mob term for kill him"
the orange friend of putin: "I've told putin to take a break, a little ceasefire. Ukraine are done, militarily. Finished."
Sadly the orange dumbass got exactly what he wanted; the opportunity to display CIII as his friend, as someone who agrees with him, as an ally to his madness. The subtleties of CIII's words will be lost on the masses, drowned out by the orange baboons proclamations of "glory be to me".
One in the eye for the anti monarchists and why having a king or queen matters. As for this bit, 'performance art for the aggrieved', safe to say I'll be stealing that phrase and passing it off as my own!
ReplyDeletesox
The author is spot on regarding the use of language. I'm able to manage a few good paragraphs then inevitably mistakes are made. Then one day I read a letter of complaint from a barrister. It was perfect by any measure you could apply to it. I realised then I will never be that clever.
ReplyDeleteThat’s because that barrister had a paralegal, a legal secretary, a trainee solicitor and ChatGPT to draft that letter!
Delete"the reminder of what language sounds like when it is treated with respect. Full sentences. Complete thoughts. A measured cadence... the sound of someone who understands that words are not just noise, they are instruments of meaning, responsibility, and, occasionally, wisdom."
ReplyDeleteWhat a *good* probation report should be, be it court report, parole report, lifer report: an "instrument of meaning, responsibility, and, occasionally, wisdom."
Certainly not the trash/rehash/spam/spaff that oasys & other systems regurgitate as an excuse for a report.
Yes hear that and 100% your right . Where did all get lost.
DeleteAn interesting read that exposes some of the myths & failings around the concept of 'managing' risk:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/clyp4enekneo
A mentally ill man who carried out fatal attacks in Nottingham "deceived" and "out-manoeuvred" medical staff, a former nurse has told a public inquiry.
When Carter did become Calocane's CCO, he claimed the handover process was "inadequate".
However, he admitted he did not read all of Calocane's background notes, saying he would not have had time.
Carter made a cold call to visit Calocane at an address where he no longer lived...In fact, that was accommodation Calocane was no longer allowed to live at or visit following an assault on a housemate... Carter said that was the address Calocane had given him, but he did not take any further steps to find out where he lived.
Challenged on the lack of steps he took to find Calocane, Carter said: "Well, ultimately after the failed visit, as I look at it, we just had one more card left and that was contact the police... The alternative was discharge him and I didn't think that was a good idea... People had just run out of ideas as to how to manage this man, when it was blatantly obvious what needed to happen to him,"
Counsel to the inquiry, Rachel Langdale KC, asked: "Which was what?"
Carter replied: "He needed to be admitted to hospital for a lengthy period of time and treated. It really is that simple."
Sound Familiar???
lack of time, overwhelmed, overloaded, poor staff communications, lack of inter-agency communications, manipulative case giving false information &/or deliberately misleading those working with him.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/standard-determinate-sentence-sds40-release-data-october-2024-to-december-2025
ReplyDeleteKnown Releases in Error have been removed from these figures, because these are not legitimate SDS40 releases.
In the latest 12-month period (January to December 2025), there were 43,886 SDS40 releases, with 11,177 of those coming in the latest quarter (October to December 2025).
Conditional releases remained the largest number of releases across all months, with 7,880 in the latest quarter. This accounts for around 70% of all SDS40 releases during this period.
91% of releases during the latest quarter were from male prison establishments (10,164). There were 1,013 releases from female establishments in the same period.
Approximately three quarters (77%) of prisoners released were White (8,658), 8% were Black or Black British (932), and 7% were Asian or Asian British (759).
Nearly half (48%) of those released had a Judicially Imposed Sentence Length (JISL) of less than 12 months (5,400). 12% of those released had a JISL of 4 years or more.
______________________________________________________
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/offender-management-statistics-quarterly-october-to-december-2025
87,342 prisoners in England and Wales as at 31 March 2026
14,349 licence recalls between October and December 2025... This was a 38% increase on the same quarter in 2024.
248,568 offenders under probation supervision as at 31 December 2025... This represented a 3% increase compared to 31 December 2024.
Between 2015 and 2019, the total number of pre-sentence reports (PSRs) prepared by the Probation Service decreased by 35% to 103,004... This number then fell by 34% in 2020 to 68,077 before increasing by 30% in 2021 to 88,657... A decrease of 6% was seen in 2022 to 83,240, however, this was followed by consecutive year-on-year increases of 10%, 8% and 5% to reach 104,264 in 2025.
The number of SSOs proposed in PSRs declined steeply from 12,762 in the year ending December 2018 to 2 in the year ending December 2025.
In the year ending December 2025, 87% of immediate custodial sentences proposed in PSRs resulted in that sentence being given, representing the highest concordance between sentence proposed and sentence given... immediate custody represented 9% of all sentences proposed in PSRs over the same period.
Community sentences, which had a concordance rate of 47%, represented 88% of all sentences proposed.
***47% hit rate for non-custodials doesn't sound like the courts are being persuaded by proposals in reports.
"Sound Familiar???"
ReplyDeleteYes, way to familiar. I work in community mental health and it's terrible.
"manipulative case giving false information"
Id say some of the managers do something similar but rather than it being false, they at times downplay things to coerce staff into taking on more work, expect it to be done off goodwill alone, try to guilt trip and if you question practises will get met with defensiveness. They also explain away bad behaviour through the lens of diagnosis, something I think might of occurred regarding the Southport attacker. If you mention the 'c' word - capitalism - you'll get looked at like a witch or something.