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The prerogative appears to be historically and as a matter of fact nothing else than the residue of discretionary or arbitrary authority which at any given time is legally left in the hands of the crown. The prerogative is the name of the remaining portion of the Crown's original authority ... Every act which the executive government can lawfully do without the authority of an Act of Parliament is done in virtue of the prerogative.
Originally posted by SpearMint
The Queen can't just control the country. The UK is doing well, better than the US in that sense. It's fine, and the royal family brings it loads of money through tourism. I wouldn't be worrying about the UK if I were you.edit on 3-4-2013 by SpearMint because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Maxatoria
The powers there for in emergency situations (like parliament being blown up and no one around to take charge) but for day to day sense its the parliaments job to use it and her to rubber stamp it and if she did something without parliaments blessing it would cause a consitutional crisis which may just be enough to remove those last formal powers away from the crown to parliament which i think would then be putting all the power in one place and it would be easy for a rogue parliament to happen as there would be no one who could legally stand up to them
Originally posted by PLAYERONE01
Mate the Crown might be the only thing left standing between you being jolly old England and being ruled from Brussels and being a Provence of the "United Euro' Union" Although there flag has stars on it too.
Originally posted by Krakatoa
Originally posted by SpearMint
The Queen can't just control the country. The UK is doing well, better than the US in that sense. It's fine, and the royal family brings it loads of money through tourism. I wouldn't be worrying about the UK if I were you.edit on 3-4-2013 by SpearMint because: (no reason given)
If U.K. citizens can convey their opinions and stress their desires for the US to abolish the 2nd Amendment, why can't an American ask for the same courtesy of them (to criticize and ask for change the their ruling body)?
This idea that an entire kingdom can be ruled by the whim of a single person (although modern versions do require approval of Parliament, which is really just a rubber stamp approval) is simply irresponsible to it's people. There is no need for this amount of power to be in the hands of a single person here in the 21st century. . To live under the ever present thought of your life being irreparably changed on the complete whim of a single person?
Originally posted by SpearMint
Originally posted by Krakatoa
Originally posted by SpearMint
The Queen can't just control the country. The UK is doing well, better than the US in that sense. It's fine, and the royal family brings it loads of money through tourism. I wouldn't be worrying about the UK if I were you.edit on 3-4-2013 by SpearMint because: (no reason given)
If U.K. citizens can convey their opinions and stress their desires for the US to abolish the 2nd Amendment, why can't an American ask for the same courtesy of them (to criticize and ask for change the their ruling body)?
The current system in the UK is doing no harm, it works well. The two are very, very different.
Originally posted by Maxatoria
reply to post by Krakatoa
Comparing the possible actions of one person who needs permission of 600+ other people to do anything versus an act that allows 300+ million people to go around armed with no permission from anyone is a bit of comparing apples and oranges
For the monarch to actually take control would require such a major problem that there would be no known way to handle it and would be in the very very very very last resort category not something like the 2nd ammendment which is used millions of times a day
Originally posted by Krakatoa
So, out of the millions of citizens using their right we have a paltry 0.003% of cases where it is abused annually.
This is the (unfortunate) cost of freedom. But then, U.K. citizens would not understand that fact because they are not really free since they are under the auspices of a single monarch with Royal Prerogative this still intact.
Originally posted by Krakatoa
And tyhere you have it, you said " is a part of our culture and our identity". Well, the right to keep and bear arms " is a part of our culture and our identity". So, how is that different? I see no difference. If you are free to demand a change to our culture and identity, so should others demand a change to your culture and identity.
There is no difference.