• @[email protected]
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    -359 months ago

    What exactly do you hate about him? Is it his stance on climate change or the Prince Trust maybe? The Royal family are an important source of culture, tourism, and soft power when the UK’s overseas influence is waning. What good to you think will come of getting rid of them?

    • Zellith
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      9 months ago

      The Royal family are an important source of culture, tourism, and soft power

      The Royal family isnt an important source of tourism.

      • @atp2112
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        9 months ago

        Palaces like Versailles and Sanssouci get millions of visitors every year without a group of racists and pedophiles around and actively in power to give it some greater meaning.

    • SanguinePar
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      359 months ago

      What good to you think will come of getting rid of them?

      We’d become a proper modern country where the person who represents the nation is chosen by the nation? We’d move on from a system where who’s up front simply depends on who their mum or dad were? We’d rid ourselves of a system trained with centuries of imperial exploitation, racism and subjugation? We’d open up new tourism opportunities, with the palaces and castles being available for anyone to visit, a la Versailles?

      And that’s just off the top of my head.

    • Cowbee [he/him]
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      169 months ago

      The UK truly is in shambles if their tourism industry and culture depend on a cabal of ghouls siphoning vast amounts of wealth from the people purely for show.

      Personally, I like to think the people of the UK have a lot more to them than their vestigial rulers.

    • BruceTwarzen
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      149 months ago

      You think no tourist will go to see the palace if the inbreeds don’t exist anymore?

      • lazynooblet
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        -89 months ago

        It doesn’t explain why you have so much venom. I see the royal family as British heritage. I don’t see how having a monarchy with no real power has any effect on the day to day lives of British people. Certainly not enough to explain the hate.

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          339 months ago

          You know what else is a British heritage? Famines in India.

          Aristocracy is privilege without any kind of merit whatsoever. It costs the tax payer millions and undermines democracy.

        • Zellith
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          269 months ago

          So some guy came to England, killed another guy who claimed to rule it, and now we have to watch their family spend eternity in decadent luxury because “British Heritage”. pfft.

          Tell you what. I’ll go perform some actions that make myself king, and then a few generations from now my family will be British heritage. Then we can all be happy.

        • davel [he/him]
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          179 months ago

          a monarchy with no real power

          I don’t know if it’s that you don’t know anything about the royal family, or that you don’t know anything about how power works, or both.

          • lazynooblet
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            -39 months ago

            They have influence, not governing power. Sure you could argue they don’t deserve the influence they have just for being in that position. The main point however is questioning the /hate/. I know you’re not the poster who I was replying to, but I didn’t want to distract the point of my post. Why should we hate the monarchy so much?

            • SanguinePar
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              9 months ago

              We shouldn’t hate the monarchy, necessarily. We should hate monarchy as a concept.

              It’s archaic, it formalises and legitimises unbelievable levels of inequality and elitism, and it gives rise to at least the strong possibility (and in the UK’s case at least, the actuality) of a tiered legal system, with some laws simply not applying to some people because of their position.

              It’s a repulsive idea, based on historical might and hereditary right, and with no regard for democracy or equality of all people.

              • lazynooblet
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                29 months ago

                That makes sense. I agree with that. Thank you.

                I felt somewhat disheartened that the response of a guy announcing he has cancer is filled with such toxicity.

            • Arthur Besse
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              9 months ago

              They have influence, not governing power

              The old man that this post is about literally does have governing power, not only in the UK but also in 14 other countries including Australia and Canada. A common argument made by monarchists is that the monarch’s actual influence is negligible, and their governing power should be ignored because it is only ceremonial.

              As Wikipedia puts it:

              Royal assent is the method by which a monarch formally approves an act of the legislature, either directly or through an official acting on the monarch’s behalf. Under a modern constitutional monarchy, royal assent is considered little more than a formality. Even in nations such as the United Kingdom, Norway, the Netherlands, Liechtenstein and Monaco which still, in theory, permit their monarch to withhold assent to laws, the monarch almost never does so, except in a dire political emergency or on advice of government.

              But… there is a catch:

              screenshot of the top of wikipedia "royal assent" article showing "Not to be confused with King's Consent."

              It turns out that there is also a less formal process (or a “parliamentary convention”; another part of the UK’s heritage is having an “unwritten constitution”, whatever that means) called King’s Consent whereby the monarch, in secret, is consulted before parliament is allowed to debate anything which might affect their personal interests. And it turns out, a lot of things might affect their personal interests, so, this procedure has been and continues to be used to review, shape, and in some cases veto, numerous laws before they are allowed to be debated by parliament. You can read more here.

              🤡

        • @Aggravationstation
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          149 months ago

          I don’t see how having a monarchy with no real power has any effect on the day to day lives of British people.

          Then what the hell is the point in the amount of tax money that we spend on them? If tourism is such a big money spinner for the country then getting rid of them and keeping the related buildings would still bring in money without having to pay for the decadent lives of these parasites.