Poll: Do you like the British Royal Family?

Recommended Videos

WhitbyDragon

New member
Jul 15, 2013
37
0
0
I'm British and voted yes, but honestly more of a "Meh". I like the idea of them, but between the wedding and the baby I'm getting a tad fed up with it all. I am quite a grumpy person though :p
 
Apr 5, 2008
3,736
0
0
I am proud to support the Royals, I think they're a benefit to this country and an integral part of the nation's heritage. I don't particularly care about the media circus surrounding them, but I think Great Britain would be diminished without a Royal family.
 

wolfyrik

New member
Jun 18, 2012
131
0
0
Hazy992 said:
Define 'like'. I don't have anything against them as people (in fact I actually quite like William and Harry) but the institution of the Royal Family is something I have a fundamental disagreement with. And before any Royalists decide to try and put me in my place and tell me why I'm wrong then just save your breath. I've heard it all before.

I also find the way people fawn over them over every little thing pathetic and embarrassing. Alistair Stewart from ITV News described William & Kate leaving the hospital 'one of the most remarkable moments I've seen in my forty years of journalism' or words to that effect. That is beyond ridiculous, all they did was walk out of a hospital with their baby, something plenty of couples do in this country every day. I don't care if he's third in line to the throne, there's nothing remarkable about it.

And quick question to people outside the Commonwealth with monarchies? Do the people in your country get this worked up over the Royal Family anywhere as much as we do? I feel we're alone in this but I could be wrong.
Exactly this. All this fawning is absolutely sickening. It's been all over the news since yesterday and barely a relevelant bit of world news is getting past it. They're just people who happened to come out from between the legs of someone who just happened to come from between the legs of someone who was rich. As Thomas Paine so rightly put it "hereditory rulers make as much sense as an hereditory mathematician".

Retake all their land, strip their ill-gotten wealth, leave them with only the money they've actually earned on their own terms and then leave them the hell alone. They've neither earned nor deserved their positions and there's a lot of far better people, far more suited to being figureheads for the UK. Down with the monarchy, down with the greedy self-serving tories and down the trecherous etonian labour/lib dem politicians.

Not that I'm socialist or anything.....
 

wolfyrik

New member
Jun 18, 2012
131
0
0
Korolev said:
I'm half British and I'm completely ambivalent towards them since they don't do anything. I'm aware that they still have some measure of power, but I can guarantee that if the royal family ever attempted to use that power, they'd find themselves swiftly and utterly ignored. The Princes and Princesses get the courtesy treatment because they generally keep to themselves. Should one ever try to boss around the PM or start lopping heads off, you'll find that courtesy disappear very, VERY fast. They know this - the British people tolerate them only if they behave.
Edward the viii, is a good example. That guy wanted to help the poor and marry a woman he loved. Edward was outspoken on the rights of the masses and he was kicked out by the politicians for his trouble.
The result; the weak willed, pointless, useless shower that now inhabits the throne and enthralls inbred idiots across the nation. They're not something to be proud, they are something to be ashamed of and embarrassed by.
Edward VIII was a royal to be proud of.
Princess Diana was very nearly a royal to be proud of.
They're both gone. Lost to us before they could begin making the monarchy worth a crap.

Until any of them show the balls to either stand up and abdicate, abandon their royalty or start speaking out against the government, they're totally worthless.
 

odolwa99

New member
May 11, 2013
32
0
0
Abomination said:
I think the term you're looking for is "from the UK" and not "British". Or do you mean Anglo-Saxon? Did you actually mean "British" as in someone from the British Isles which includes The Republic of Ireland?
Look, I realize that many folk consider the term 'British Isles' as correct when referring to the islands of Britain & Ireland but there are, unsurprisingly, many people in Ireland who take exception to that term. My father is a citizen of Northern Ireland and has lived through 'the troubles', as it's referred to, but thinks of himself as Irish. This is a term which still carries a lot of weight and, quite frankly, there are still parts of Ireland where you'd be taking your life into your own hands if you referred to it as such, publicly.

Just giving you another angle on things. That said, I've got nothing against the royals and I have genuine respect for the Queen coming to Ireland and doing her bit to improve relations between our countries. So hats off to her.
 

TrulyBritish

New member
Jan 23, 2013
473
0
0
Well let's see. They're an ultimately harmless family led by a grandma at the moment that bring a net-profit from tourism and lands with no real political power to really speak of. I see very little they actually do that would annoy me. Add on to this they do a fair bit for charities and that makes me like them slightly more. So yes, I guess I "like" the Royal family, although it makes very little difference to me if they stay or not.
What annoys me a lot more is people talking about the royal family. First we have the damned media spewing largely trivial nonsense non-stop at us at the merest mention of royalty (I mean seriously, do we need 24 hour coverage of a baby being born? Somebody call me when the child actually takes the throne and leave me alone 'till then), but then the media annoys me with just about everything. Then we have those (thankfully few) idiots that seem to downright worship the royals and praise the ground they walk on as well as people who seem to actually think the UK is ruled by these people and we don't have democracy or that they're just tax avoiding free loaders.
So in conclusion, people annoy me. A lot.
I honestly don't understand peoples dislike for the monarchy when we have a perfectly good Prime Minister and Government doing enough to dislike them.
 

CriticalMiss

New member
Jan 18, 2013
2,024
0
0
I really couldn't give a damn about them, I don't hate them per se but I'm not going to go about waving flags and pledging allegiance to Liz. One reason I'll never serve in the armed forces other than being a weak little girly girl. I think the fuzz have to big up the queen too, so I'm not going to be tasering crims any time soon.

It would be way cheaper if we replaced them with carboard cutouts that wave and place them in the windows of Buckingham Palace. Tourists wouldn't know any better and it will save us a shit load of tax money.
 

wolfyrik

New member
Jun 18, 2012
131
0
0
odolwa99 said:
Abomination said:
I think the term you're looking for is "from the UK" and not "British". Or do you mean Anglo-Saxon? Did you actually mean "British" as in someone from the British Isles which includes The Republic of Ireland?
Look, I realize that many folk consider the term 'British Isles' as correct when referring to the islands of Britain & Ireland but there are, unsurprisingly, many people in Ireland who take exception to that term. My father is a citizen of Northern Ireland and has lived through 'the troubles', as it's referred to, but thinks of himself as Irish. This is a term which still carries a lot of weight and, quite frankly, there are still parts of Ireland where you'd be taking your life into your own hands if you referred to it as such, publicly.

Just giving you another angle on things. That said, I've got nothing against the royals and I have genuine respect for the Queen coming to Ireland and doing her bit to improve relations between our countries. So hats off to her.
Yeah but exactly what did she do to improve relations? Wave her hands at a few passers by, give some hollow gestures that aren't backed up by any kind of political power, give a few apologies cos we kinda cocked things up. Hell I could do that, only I'd actually be sincere. Frankly we could probably achieve the same end result by sending in Stephen Fry or Bill Bailey. At least they might lighten the mood and give people a larf.
 

irok

New member
Jun 6, 2012
118
0
0
Only 31% like them? yes , yes feel that sweet vindication, getting sick of all the new about them and everyone around me seems to be interested.
 

wizzy555

New member
Oct 14, 2010
637
0
0
I am British and indifferent.

If I were designing a country I would not have a royal family. But I don't see the point in getting rid of them.
 

odolwa99

New member
May 11, 2013
32
0
0
wolfyrik said:
Yeah but exactly what did she do to improve relations? Wave her hands at a few passers by, give some hollow gestures that aren't backed up by any kind of political power, give a few apologies cos we kinda cocked things up. Hell I could do that, only I'd actually be sincere. Frankly we could probably achieve the same end result by sending in Stephen Fry or Bill Bailey. At least they might lighten the mood and give people a larf.
Fair point, but considering the various attempts on the life of members of the royal family by the IRA, particularly that of Lord Mountbatten, the Queen's 2nd cousin, it had implications both for her, and us.

Also, Stephen and Bill are pretty awesome, yes.
 
Feb 28, 2008
689
0
0
British and I voted Yes. I think of the Royal Family rather as I do an old church. It doesn't do any harm to anyone, and while I disagree with the principles behind it, it's historical and brings in tourists. If anyone harps on about costs, I usually remind them that this country spends a far far more ludicrous amount on bombs to blow people up, or nuclear missiles for some hypothetical war.
 

original_funk

New member
Apr 27, 2013
5
0
0
Non-British but since I'm Australian, she's my queen too.

I have nothing against them and they seem nice. But I wish we could be a truly independent republic. Why should we have a monarch who lives on the other side of the world?
 

Abomination

New member
Dec 17, 2012
2,939
0
0
odolwa99 said:
Abomination said:
I think the term you're looking for is "from the UK" and not "British". Or do you mean Anglo-Saxon? Did you actually mean "British" as in someone from the British Isles which includes The Republic of Ireland?
Look, I realize that many folk consider the term 'British Isles' as correct when referring to the islands of Britain & Ireland but there are, unsurprisingly, many people in Ireland who take exception to that term. My father is a citizen of Northern Ireland and has lived through 'the troubles', as it's referred to, but thinks of himself as Irish. This is a term which still carries a lot of weight and, quite frankly, there are still parts of Ireland where you'd be taking your life into your own hands if you referred to it as such, publicly.

Just giving you another angle on things. That said, I've got nothing against the royals and I have genuine respect for the Queen coming to Ireland and doing her bit to improve relations between our countries. So hats off to her.
Hold up, I wasn't the one claiming a person is one or the other. I was asking what the OP meant and the various interpretations the word "British" can have.

It is geographic, geopolitical, cultural, or imperial. Each version is right and each version is wrong. A citizen of the Republic of Ireland could be British, not-British, British and not-British respectively or any combination of those... apart from the geographic one because they ARE collectively known as the "British Isles" and it would be as accurate as calling an Indian, a Russian, a Chinaman, a Thai and a Korean "Asian".

The fact that someone might be offended and visit violence upon me doesn't change that in the least.
 

Biggyzoom

New member
Jan 9, 2013
19
0
0
I'm British and I'm simply not interested or caring about the Royal Family. Prince William had a baby? That's nice but that's as far I'll go on the matter. It really confuses me how much the rest of the world cares.
 

odolwa99

New member
May 11, 2013
32
0
0
Abomination said:
It is geographic, geopolitical, cultural, or imperial. Each version is right and each version is wrong. A citizen of the Republic of Ireland could be British, not-British, British and not-British respectively or any combination of those... apart from the geographic one because they ARE collectively known as the "British Isles" and it would be as accurate as calling an Indian, a Russian, a Chinaman, a Thai and a Korean "Asian".

The fact that someone might be offended and visit violence upon me doesn't change that in the least.
I understand what you're saying, and I'm not endorsing violence in any form (I get nauseous when I see someone bleeding, for god's sake), the reason for my post was to simply give another perspective. I have an English granny, a Northern Irish father and my grandfather, though not a member of the IRA, knew people who claimed to be. The world is made binary by people in power but things are rarely so simple. That was the point I was making.
 

conmag9

New member
Aug 4, 2008
569
0
0
Not British, but I AM Canadian, so there's the tie of constitutional monarchy technically still in place (if pretty toothless). Personally, I don't have any strong feelings for or against them. I think this whole Royal Baby thing is perplexing behavior on the part of many people, but I suppose it's a sort of celebrity thing (something, again, I've never understood). I suppose I have a very mild like for the Queen herself, but I don't support or oppose the actual position she occupies. The rest I don't pay any attention to at all, the point where I have a hard time remembering their names.
 

fish iron4

New member
Dec 6, 2010
83
0
0
I support the royal family mainly due to how many people don't realise is yes they do live of taxpayers money (which is like 50p per person a year) but they provide a profit to the country by giving it £20 million a year from rent on royal lands as well as providing an estimated £200 million through tourists, its because of this your taxes are actually 60-70p cheaper a year, not 50p more expensive.

(This info is from sources I found a long time ago so this is from memory and most likely not completely accurate, but its the same general idea).

EDIT: Several people have already posted the video explaining the info above so you can probably just ignore my post and go watch that.
 

Legion

Were it so easy
Oct 2, 2008
7,186
0
0
I dislike the concept of Monarchy in the current day and age (it worked in the past in some cases, but not now we have a separate government). They are extremely wealthy but the taxpayer still funds them for the most part, and they the authority that they do have is mostly symbolic or simply outdated and unnecessary.

As people they seem pretty nice, and I have respect for Prince William and Harry for being very down to earth people despite the non-stop adoration and not really living "normal" lives. They do a hell of a lot more good for the country than our worthless government at least.

So both really. I dislike the position that they hold but I like them as people.
 

Tynian

New member
Feb 4, 2008
46
0
0
I personally like them. Elizabeth inherited a strong 'rule for the people, not over the people' from her father, King George, and this ethic shows in every one of her offspring and grandchildren. Charles does a lot for the working farmers of the United Kingdom, he owns and runs his own farms, generates his own profits and thus reduces his 'load' on the taxpayers. William and Harry are both 'working' Princes, serving in the armed forces, enormously respected by the soldiers too. William works as a Search and rescue helicopter pilot (actually drawing a salary too), again, reducing his cost to the UK Taxpayer. They all, as a group, devote a lot of time to the citizens they rule over. The Queen has still rejected a few laws the government wanted to pass as she didn't deem them fit for 'her people'.

Do I think they could do more to reduce their cost to the taxpayer? Maybe.

Do they draw a lot of tourists? Hell yes.