The Dug barks.
Gaun yersel, Paul......
https://weegingerdug.wordpress.com/2022/09/16/notes-from-normal-island/
Interesting article which raises some interesting points provided you get beyond the one-eyed nationalism.
Something the article discusses which I've also thought about is the notion that so much of what we have seen over the past week has been justified, uncritically, on the basis that this is centuries old tradition and protocol and therefore 'just is what happens' so to speak. Yet actually scratch below the surface and quite of lot of the decisions being made are actually without precedent, and if you can breach prior tradition in that respect, why not in other respects. So as examples.
1. Public lying in state - centuries old tradition - nope, only since 1910 - Edward VII was the first and actually this was based on the funeral of Gladstone.
2. Immediately making William Prince of Wales - nope. Of course Charles spent 17 years as heir to the throne before he became Prince of Wales. Ah, you'll say, but that was because he was a child, protocol dictates that you become Prince of Wales when you become the heir unless you are under 21. Nope, wrong again - Edward VIII became Prince of Wales at 16, Edward VII soon after birth. Making William Prince of Wales one day after the death of the pervious monarch, is as far as I can see, without precedence - typically, weeks, months or even (e.g. Charles) years.
3. New monarch making public address to the nation and touring the nations prior to old monarch's funeral - as far as I can see this is without precedent. The Queen made no such addresses nor travelled outside London (other than to accompany the body back from Sandringham) during the period before her father's funeral (albeit she did have to return from Kenya, arriving back the day after her father's death). So Charles addressing the nation and touring Edinburgh (OK the body was there), NI and Wales in this period is without precedence.
So Charles has ridden roughshod over precedence in a number of ways (far enough, that's his choice), but let's be honest, his trip to Wales today isn't something based on precedence, but his decision, presumably to try to cement the notion that he is King as early as possible.
Yet having ignored precedence he then folds back into it when appointing his Counsellors of State (de-facto deputies), somehow implying that he has no choice over appointing Andrew (disgraced), Harry (no longer active royal - disgraced, well depends on whether you read the Daily Express) and Beatrice (who on earth is she), rather than including Anne (almost certainly preferred by the public and more suited). If he can make choices in other areas that area consistent with precedent, why not in this case.