followup question:when are you guys gonna all band together and make a lynch mob to kill prince andrew
Because I absolutely hate free healthcare and would like to pay £30,000 for hayfever tabletswhy are you tory
Let’s stick to the movie, folkshow does it feel to be a derivative nation
we’re getting there, can’t comment just yet but we are getting therewhen are you guys gonna all band together and make a lynch mob to kill prince andrew
If you want my honest answer, I don’t think we’ll see a monarch after QE2, certainly not after Charles. Monarchy is, in a certain sense, outdated and on its last legs in the country. The monarch has ceremonial power only- she has no real power as this can only be exercised through the prime minister’s prerogative. I do believe the queen has an important role in acting as a uniting figurehead, but this role is slowly becoming less and less important as time goes by. It would only take reform akin to the post war state OR labour’s reforms in 1997 to introduce a catalyst for widespread liberal change.followup question:
when and what events concerning the royal family will facilitate the inevitable political crisis that leads to a constitutional reform of the united kingdom
paedophile prince-son of her majesty has so far not seemed to be enough so i wonder what is next
this is a question i want a genuine answer to from an english conservative
we’re notwhy is everyone here teached to speak in received pronounciation when most of you sound like farmers
Piss off govoi, you got a license for this thread?
bigger than yours I bethow big is your cock
Heyhello england
a deeply unpopular monarch that doesnt resonate with old or young, royalist or republicanfollowup question:
when and what events concerning the royal family will facilitate the inevitable political crisis that leads to a constitutional reform of the united kingdom
paedophile prince-son of her majesty has so far not seemed to be enough so i wonder what is next
this is a question i want a genuine answer to from an english conservative
i know very well that it fills a basic constitutional purpose and why it's so popular, which is why i believe it is only a matter of time before there is some crisis that facilitates a formalization of the monarchy's constitutional role beyond its very broad capacity it's holding nowthe reason our monarchy is so popular is because the ruling monarch and the monarchy in general fulfils an actual constitutional and [a]-political purpose and aren't just a band of aristocrats that spend their lives drinking swans blood and eating truffles with whatever life they care to have. expecting the monarchy to go anywhere within the next 100 years shows a lack of depth. political impartiality has always been a requisite of senior royals/the ruling monarch, whatever event 'ousts' them from power will have to be very specific