RE: How do UK atheists feel about the Monarchy?
November 14, 2016 at 12:52 pm
(November 12, 2016 at 11:53 am)drfuzzy Wrote:
I have no tolerance of the Monarchy as an institution. It's the basis on which the UK is a Democratic Theocracy and I would see it end with the creation of a Great British Republic.
In political terms, the relationship between Crown and Parliament is a tenuous one. The Crown is officially the ultimate authority represented by Her Majesty's Government and protected by Her Majesty's Armed Forces. As a result of Cromwell's uprising and the creation of our democratic constitution, the Crown promises to authorise Acts of Parliament on the basis that Parliament continues to request authorisation for them. This effectively removes power from the Crown as it does what Parliament says however this is the ultimate 'gentlemen's agreement'.
In religious terms, the Crown establishes The Church of England (Anglicanism) as the state's official religion. No other religion has legal status in the UK except by various forms of Civil Rights legislation which have developed over the past ~150 years; only the CoE has constitutional protection, other religions can have their recognised status overturned on parliamentary whim. Establishment impacts us in many ways: state funding for religious institutions, enforced religious education, tax exempt status for profit-making religious organisations, reduced financial and regulatory governance compared to secular organisations, lifetime Peerage in the House Of Lords for church leaders, similar advantage being sought by other religions and granted...
In financial terms, the Crown draws out tens of billions of pounds, tax free, which would otherwise go to the government but instead goes to fund the Royal Family and their personal interests. Although some of this is brought/given back in by investment in industry and tourism, the costs are far greater than the returns. Further, schemes that are regularly touted as 'royal investment' aren't; the Duke of Edinburgh schemes/awards are financed in the main by 'participation fees' and only partly by funding from the royal coffers. The Crown earns more and more, year on year and even maintained growth during the recent financial downturns. It's clearly a profit-driven organisation.
I hear the claims that the Royal family are conditioned to this 'service' and that we should feel empathy for their plight. Well, maybe that was true in the past but it's not true today so I feel far less for their loss of freedom than I do for mine; we're all conditioned to give up our freedom for the sake of our place in society and in their case, the demands are far smaller than in mine with far larger rewards. Also, they have the option of leaving and their privilege would ensure that they would never face hardship. They have it easy. I don't feel sorry for them in the slightest.