What's the monarchy for?

You have yet to show how you or anyone else has been affected.

I'll wait.....

Do you have a definition for "affected"?

Are innocent people in westernised nations affected by Muslims driving lorries into them?

Are the taxpayers in the UK affected when their money is used by the Government to fight a court case when they've acted illegally?
 
Do you have a definition for "affected"?
The democratic harm you claimed that has been imposed upon the UK people. Explain it? Quantify it?
Are innocent people in westernised nations affected by Muslims driving lorries into them?
Yes. Strange unrelated analogy but yes.
Are the taxpayers in the UK affected when their money is used by the Government to fight a court case when they've acted illegally?
Not particularly no. Better analogy and has at least pointed you in the right direction.

I look forward to you explaining this democratic harm you imagined.
 
The democratic harm you claimed that has been imposed upon the UK people. Explain it? Quantify it?

Why does it have to have been "imposed upon the UK people"?

I have explained it - you simply don't agree that having unelected people as lawmakers, and an unelected head of state interfering with or blocking laws being debated in the chamber of elected lawmakers is undemocratic.

I don't see how any amount of "explaining" is going to shift your opinion so that you are no longer in favour of unelected lawmakers and secret interference by an unelected head of state.

And why does it have to be "quantifiable"?


Yes. Strange unrelated analogy but yes.

It is neither strange nor unrelated.

Public opinion was behind him at the time and that's a powerful motivator. Most people thought we were doing the right thing at that time.
Certainly, no one realised that attacking Muslim nations would have the result we have today i.e. disaffected Muslims driving lorries into innocent people in westernised nations.

Of course we will never know if, or how, things would have gone differently, but a Bill was introduced which would have meant that Blair could not just have decided to go to war in Iraq - it would have to have been debated and agreed by Parliament.

The Queen refused to allow that Bill to be debated, and that was that. Blair was then able to go to war without the agreement of Parliament.


I look forward to you explaining this democratic harm you imagined.

I refer you to what I said above. You either agree that unelected lawmakers and secret interference by an unelected head of state are good things, compatible with democratically elected government, or you don't.

I don't. You do.
 
No 'tangible' harm. Just as I thought.

Unelected lawmakers. Perfectly democratic.

Unelected head of state secretly instructing Parliament to do what they want and refusing to let them do what they don't want. Perfectly democratic.

OK.
 
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