
The Monarchy is “a form of government in which supreme authority is
vested in a hereditary figure e.g. the queen. These powers can vary from those
of an absolute despot to a figure head”.
The British royal family have ruled over the British Isles and its former
symbiotic empire for the past 1140 years. Some believe that the royals have
brought security, patriotism and heritage to the country, a country that we all
love and cherish. But in the year 2014, is it still necessary to endlessly
cling on to these, somewhat archaic ideologies? The ideological system of birth
rights to power is archaic and goes against the democratic values we hold in
such high esteem in the UK. Values such as equality and the right to vote for
the country’s figure head. Let’s look at this passively. What is the difference
between a monarch and a dictator? The simple answer is…there is none. A
dictator’s successor is controlled by the ideology of a birth rights system, as
is the monarchy. A dictator has the most powerful political and economic
position in a country even if it claims to be a democracy, as does the monarchy.
The power of which the Crown has is second to none. Many forget that every law,
every elected member of parliament and even our own Prime Minister must all
seek the approval of the vitriolic Crown. Putting this into perspective, even
if we as the free democratic nation elect a leader, the wicked Witch of the West
and her gullible advisors would still authorise the position. So in the words
of Rene Guenon, “there is no such thing as democracy”. There is no such thing
as a freedom to vote, leadership voted for by the people.
On average the tax payer spends an estimated £202 million a year on the
monarchy. In a time of major economic recovery, in a time when tuition fees are
at a staggering £9000 a year and in a time of high child poverty (17%), in a
time when hospitals are majorly underfunded and under staffed, and more
recently a time when public workers conform to strikes as a means of protest.
What the people must know is that all of the anger portrayed must be
re-directed to the family of thieves we like to praise in such high esteem in
the UK. The family that steal from the taxpayer to send their “silver-spoon”
born offspring on the pathway through Eton, Oxford and then to the royal
academy for un-worthy celebrities. This money un-rightfully spent on the
royals, could be used to keep the sick healthy, subsidise university for
students from underprivileged families, to help the extortionate costs of
tuition and the make sure that the armed forces who are fighting in a
capitalist money making wars are fully equipped deterring the need for death.
Even our history books tell us that there is no good from the ideology
of birth rights. King Henry VIII was a cruel and vicious man who squandered the
wealth his father had made and ultimately caused considerable misery and
suffering. This man was king due to birth rights. To sum up this man in a subtle
persuasive triadic structure; Crude, corrupt, crazy. Taking this into
less archaic time and more modern, the latest addition to the family of thieves
Prince George. What if he were to turn out like a barbarian like his predecessors?
We have a choice, we could leave things the way they are and wait for the
witch of the west to die and face the “prospect of a politically active and
unaccountable King Charles”. A politically motivated barbarian like Kim Jong-un
of North Korea. Inherited heads of state with strong political prospects such
as Prince Charles should not be allowed to be one of the most powerful men in
the world through the ideology of birth right and the potential to cause a
dictatorship nation like Mr. Jong-un or go to war with declare war with the
United Nations like Mr. Jong-un.
This does not have to be the answer. We as the people still have a
choice, we don’t have to sit and watch the next dictator of Britain claim the
throne. But there is a solution. A vote for democratic reform of the monarchy
would finally see Britain out of the depths of Twenty First Century oppression
in the west and into the brightest sunshine. A fairer nation built of the
foundation of equality.
I call for democratic reform.
Do you?