FrisianDude
Archduke

what do you mean?BerserkerRezo said:This is not Game of Thrones that everyone kill each other.
what do you mean?BerserkerRezo said:This is not Game of Thrones that everyone kill each other.
Well damn, allow a man to be confusedVicccard said:For ****s sake, allow a man to make a typing error![]()
Úlfheðinn said:Essentially, I don't buy the logic that being born with great privilege, being raised with great privilege and being conferred a position for life (guaranteeing that they will always be privileged) makes someone an inherently valuable representative of the state nor does it ensure that they will remain neutral.
Heskeytime said:Úlfheðinn said:Essentially, I don't buy the logic that being born with great privilege, being raised with great privilege and being conferred a position for life (guaranteeing that they will always be privileged) makes someone an inherently valuable representative of the state nor does it ensure that they will remain neutral.
I dont believe it either, but if they end up neither of those things they're easy to remove. My point was that if you were going to have a permanent representative of the cultural side of a nation how do you choose one? If you were to choose one you would have to provide them with all of those things in their upbringing anyway, but how would you choose them in the first place?
Add to this that elected officials are generally born of privilege too. We may claim to be democratic, but it takes a lot of backdoor politics to get the candidate even remotely in position for a public vote on them, by coincidence it's generally people from wealthy families and a good school who get to that stage. We get little-to-no say on the candidates put forward, only on which we choose, that's hardly any better than having the 2 or 3 next-in-line to the throne stand and the public votes on which one should be the absolute ruler of the country.
I never suggested the Monarch should lead, and by their nature today any Monarch who made themselves unpopular or disregarded the will of the people risks having their entire position removed permanently from the nation. It's nice to have a symbol of permanence, and a ready-made figurehead for if things ever got really bad - eg. it's nice to imagine, but nobody's going to follow a randomer.
Comrade Crimson said:Napoleon Bonaparte would beg to differ. He started out as a random artillery officer and became an Emperor. Chairman Mao would also beg to differ as he was born a peasant.
crodio said:Stalin was the son of a shoemaker right? The Bonaparte were a corsican local noble family tho.
Bluehawk said:You said "nobody is going to follow a randomer", which presumably means legitimacy is derived from a long-established pedigree, and Crimson named a few examples of new rulers with no regal ancestry gaining widespread popularity. In context though, I believe you meant no one would accept a new, purely symbolic monarchy if the first king was no one of significance. Crimson was cherry picking.
crodio said:Also you ignored muh presidents ;_;
Vicccard said:Depends on what you mean by 'democracy'. As you can only choose between picked candidates, it doesn't really pass the definition of a liberal western Democracy with Rule of Law.
Foeurdr said:It's great to see topic like this dicuss about moderns monarchy, as a french it isn't something I heard often, we often stop at the revolution when we speak about it albeit we had a short experience again soon after (and I'm not speaking of the two empire).
I found a bit strange this idea of a representative head of the nation incarned by the king/queen. I guess it's a matter of how people refer themselves to their country, I mean there is more than a century we didn't have in France any royal figure in the light of the political scene and most people this day don't even know the man who could be the king, plus the fact that we like to say how we came to be free of the tyranny that was the absolutism (A little nice story with a lot of sugar coat feel good, no ?).
In the other hand it's seems like in some sountry the figure of a monarch is a essential thing to the country identity like the Queen in England even if it's purely symbolical.
Amman de Stazia said:You do realise, I hope, that the current dynasty dates back barely 200 years?
The myth of the long continuity of the British royal lineage is rather laughable ...
Saxon dynasty- ends in 1066
Then the Plantagenets Tudors and Stuarts all ended in mess and bloodshed, being replaced by the least offensive candidate put forward by the most powerful nobles.
The succession of the Hanoverian dynasty was an election of a dynasty by parliament, quite unusual, but again based on the lack of offence or power in the candidate.
They lasted until the death of Victoria of course, and the saxecoborggothe dynasty was disowned by George at the outbreak of ww1, and the Windsor dynasty founded.
One thing which the various dynasties did remarkably well was women's lib.
Look at the matriarchal inheritances. Elizabeth and Mary Stuart were queens in their own right, rather than wives of kings. Victoria and Elizabeth again in the last 200 years.
Most other monarchies until the last century could not survive without male heirs, and absurd lengths were gone to to find some grandnephew or other to take the crown.
Sums it up pretty nicely.Bluehawk said:The desire to remove a harmless figurehead because it is undemocratic, and the desire to keep one because it is culturally unifying, are both arguments for idealism. There is no use in discussing the practicality of either scenario when the concern is with the symbolism of the state and how it portrays itself in relation to the ethnos - and not with the distribution of power. Everyone in this thread is dead set in their ideological positions, and the facts, upon which we essentially already agree, can not persuade either party.