Stan- Suspect WSC had pretty well disguised his trouble with
pronouncing the letter "s" by the late 1930s. Anent Hitchens, the
following draft is proposed to run in Finest Hour 150, Spring 2011.
David Freeman will be reviewing the film for FH.

WASHINGTON, JANUARY 25TH— The King's Speech, a recent television
docudrama (to be reviewed next issue) “is riddled with gross
falsifications of history” according to Christopher Hitchens, writing
in Slate (www. slate.com/id/2282194/).  The film, Hitchens says,
whitewashes Churchill by painting him as an ally of George VI, who
succeeded his brother, the egregious, Nazi sympathizer Edward VIII,
when in fact the “bombastic” Churchill stuck with Edward unto the end,
at the expense of his political capital as an anti-appeaser. Once he
had abdicated, the Royal Family was rehabilitated: “Almost the entire
moral capital of this rather odd little German dynasty is invested in
the post-fabricated myth of its participation in ‘Britain's finest
hour.’”

We were all set to send Slate a rebuttal to Hitchens’ characteristic
psycho-babble and Churchill rants, as over his silly Atlantic article
in 2002 (Finest Hour 114, http://xrl.us/bif47u), which labeled
Churchill “incompetent, boorish, drunk and mostly wrong.” But it looks
like the readers of Slate who responded on their website have nicely
addressed that little chore.   If the film emphasizes Churchill’s
instinctive support for the monarchy, however undeserving the monarch,
it hits the nail squarely. “Mr. David Windsor” was indeed a
regrettable character, and contrary to Hitchens wasn’t even
controllable as Governor of The Bahamas, where some locals still
recall the kettles of fish left stinking in his wake when he left
Nassau.

But George VI was hardly alone in backing Chamberlain and appeasement—
a whole generation had been wasted in the last war. A more sensitive
evaluation is the one by Alistair Cooke at the 1988 International
Churchill Conference: “The British people would do anything to stop
Hitler, except fight him. And if you had been there, ladies and
gentlemen—if you had been alive and sentient and British in the 1930s—
not one in ten of you would have backed Churchill.” (One can only
imagine what the Hitchens of the 1930s would write about the
“bombastic” Member for Woodford. Come to think of it, some did.)  King
George VI’s deportment in World War II won him the lasting love of his
people and Churchill, eclipsing his mistaken beliefs before 1940.
Churchill’s setback after defending Edward VIII was brief and
insignificant; his carefully nurtured comeback as the “Prophet of
Truth” was soon back on track as events proved that Churchill had, to
the regret of his countrymen, been right all along.   Gross
falsifications of history? All we have here is the grossly
iconoclastic Chris Hitchens, current personification of the Member of
Parliament  described by Arthur Balfour: “The hon. gentleman has said
much that is trite and much that is true, but what’s true is trite,
and what’s not trite is not true.” —Editor

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