evilthecat said:
[Snip - see page 7, post 244]
EDIT:
Completely missed the point here, should
read, not just skim the bold titles. I guess my points stand so I'll leave this post here, but I'm technically agreeing with the fellow.
The royal family brings in loads in tourism!
Impossible to prove. Seriously, look at this entire thread. Royalists say yes, republicans say no, and neither one can conclusively prove their case by any means short of abolishing the monarchy and looking at the figures, say, 100 years down the line. Which I'd totally be up for, but it's not very practical. I'm gonna call this one a draw.
A lifelong head of state has more responsibility than an elected one
This statement taken literally, I'll agree with. But is that a good thing? Is it truly relevant? The real argument here is whether the identity of one's ancestors has the slightest f*cking thing to do with competence. I say, what a load of, uh, "hot air". Best way to do it is on merit, elected officials is what we do simply because it's better than the alternative, but lineage is utterly absurd. But I suspect royalists/republicans are at an impasse on this matter.
A monarch is more highly respected internationally than a representative would be
Let's be honest here.
Nope.
What, don't believe me? Check the top of this page. See the survey there? Those two categories labeled "Non-British, and..."? Judging by their balance, evidence would tend to contradict you here.
Besides, if you're telling me Prince bloody Philip's casual racism is a good trait in a diplomat, then regrettably my response must be laughter. And before you tell me he only married into the family, remember that he was chosen by the royal family, knowing that his words and actions would be taken to represent all of them. David Cameron is,
ahem, "far from being in my good books", and Milliband and Clegg aren't much better, but at least they don't make gaffes of nearly the same magnitude when the world is watching. And when 53% of your own country and 73% of everyone else (at time of writing) says bloodline is
not an acceptable way to choose diplomatic officials, you've kinda got a problem. Am I saying our real diplomats' selection method is perfect? No, but it's a damn sight better than genealogy. As for the argument that they don't actually do anything of import on these diplomatic functions - what's the sodding point then? It is therefore a waste of everyone's time and money to ship them and their entire entourage over to another country at best, and at worst an annoyance to endure just to indulge our absurd and quaint "traditions" before the grown-ups can get down to the real work.
The monarchy keeps the government stable
Not entirely sure what you're trying to say here, but I think you're actually making an argument
against monarchy? Most people these days will agree that equality is always good, therefore obtaining the most egalitarian society as possible is a worthy goal. Having a family that will
always be treated more favourably than others, receiving special tax breaks and having privileges that will always be denied to the rest simply for having the right parents (for example a royal family), is reminiscent of a wasteful caste system (
ie, permissive of zero social mobility) that frankly I think our culture should have recognised and outgrown by now. Because that's basically what having a royal family is - a caste system, just with only a fraction of a percent of the population in the upper caste. Social mobility is great, and as far as my limited sociological knowledge tells me, it's never been higher, but while the lower "caste" can move around within that level, as long as there's a royal family there will always be that last step above that no-one else can reach - regardless of ability, hard work or wealth, their social mobility will hit a glass ceiling and stops dead.
Again, judgement based on merit good, discrimination based on parentage bad. The central point of all my arguments is equality - the same as my opinions regarding race, gender,
etc. A British citizen should be a British citizen, no more and no less, until their own (not their parents') words and actions change that.