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Referendum: Abolition of the monarchy

Discussion in 'Sunderland' started by DAPARKERSAFC, May 11, 2015.

?

Abolish the monarchy

  1. Yes

    23 vote(s)
    41.8%
  2. No

    32 vote(s)
    58.2%
  1. Blunham Mackem

    Blunham Mackem Well-Known Member
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    Good point! Its all about checks and balances and apart from the odd old bugger falling asleep in the chamber, they generally do a good job.
     
    #61
  2. TankMarvin

    TankMarvin Member

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    Ha, I was talking about the Monarchy.
    Happy to see the House of Lords go (may or may not need replaced)

    I was editing my post when you replied to it...
     
    #62
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  3. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    This exactly..Yes we have written documents that on paper make the Queen the head of state which includes the military, but in reality there has not been one single event since the reformation of the Monarchy that a reigning monarch has went against parliament regarding military action..
     
    #63
  4. Rick O'Shea

    Rick O'Shea Well-Known Member

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    We've effectively got rid of the monarchy and kept it at the same time. We have the best of both worlds.

    Getting rid of monarchy smacks of a pre-21st century mindset.
     
    #64
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  5. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    I do tend to agree with this hence my vote to keep them....However, they should be expected to earn their substantial earnings with the work they do..If they ever lost their undoubted global appeal then I would change my stance..
     
    #65
  6. Billy Death

    Billy Death Well-Known Member

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    Thatcher had the Royal Navy twat the General Belgrano without even cabinet approval let alone parliament or Lizzie.
     
    #66
  7. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    Exactly mate...The Queen is nothing more and nothing less than a figurehead these days..
     
    #67
  8. TankMarvin

    TankMarvin Member

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    That was during the war, the decision to go to war had already been taken.
    The government doesn't consult the Queen for every operational decision during a war.
     
    #68
  9. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    And do you seriously believe that the Queen had any say in this?
     
    #69
  10. TankMarvin

    TankMarvin Member

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    I never said she did or didn't.
    I said the decision to fire on the Belgrano wouldn't have been discussed.
     
    #70
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  11. Billy Death

    Billy Death Well-Known Member

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    Falklands was slightly before my forces days but I'm pretty sure we hadn't declared war on Argentina at that time.
    It was a criminal act as the ship was outside the exclusion zone.
    It also spectacularly backfired as the Argentinian retaliation resulted in five British ships being sunk.
     
    #71
  12. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    What is rarely highlighted by our Tory press is that the Thatcher government had lots if intelligence and warnings regarding the Argentine threat and intentions, but done sod all about it..If they had put a couple of ships in the area in the first place, then a lot of lives could have been saved..
     
    #72
  13. Deletion Requested1

    Deletion Requested1 Well-Known Member

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    This was reported in the guardian in 2005
    http://www.theguardian.com/uk/2005/jun/01/argentina.military
     
    #73
  14. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    #74
  15. The Relic

    The Relic Well-Known Member

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    Royal Prerogative : "since the accession of the House of Hanover these powers have been generally exercised on the advice of the Prime Minister or the Cabinet, who in turn is accountable to Parliament, exclusively so, except in matters of the Royal Family, since at least the time of William IV." - note the word 'advice'. Parliament does not have an absolute right (other than, as Tankmarvin said, in a time of war).

    The part in bold above shows the safeguards I've been talking about. It'll never be put to the test, of course. I doubt if any MP would want the right to unlawfully influence votes and undermine democracy. But the safeguard is there, just in case.
     
    #75
  16. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    Which is exactly why a Monarch would never dream of questioning a decision made in parliament..The Royal family are nothing more than ambassadors these days, and some of them make a decent job of it...This Royal Prerogative you are bringing up is nothing more than a ritual these days, and in reality the Monarch follows the instructions given by parliament....The royal family are not elected and therefore would never dream of going against government and undermining democracy..
     
    #76
  17. The Relic

    The Relic Well-Known Member

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    Almost correct : try 'in reality the Monarch follows the advice given by Parliament'. To be honest, I don't think anything Tankmarvin or myself have dug up since you refused to look into it yourself (three times) is going to sway you from your fixed beliefs, mate. Count me out of this. It's been nice chatting with you.
     
    #77
  18. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    You will never sway me when I'm convinced my interpretation is the correct one..<ok>
     
    #78
  19. Billy Death

    Billy Death Well-Known Member

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    So do the government go to the Queen for deniable ops then?
     
    #79
  20. MrRAWhite

    MrRAWhite Well-Known Member

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    I'm actually quite surprised that some people think that these 'Royal Prerogatives' actually mean anything these days.. Nothing but protocol and rituals to follow.
     
    #80
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