LOL! I go away for a quiet midweek outing (included a curry and some beers!), and when I get back there's a fight going on!
Originally posted by lazs2
LOL... I never said the queen made laws.... I said that you guys think the queen is royalty and knows best..
So you're still wrong.
even so... say there were a hundred hard core pistol aficianados in your country....
Oh? Last time you posted, it was five million.
Mr. Toad! You're welcome!
No, it wasn't impossible; difficult but not impossible.
I did say
almost impossible. I certainly never knew anyone who knew anyone who had a friend who knew someone who had a handgun... As you seem so convinced it was possible, please give examples of the people in Britain who had handguns. Shouldn't take you too long to come up with a full list!
An unproven hypothesis as you know;
No, banning alcohol has been tried - in the US
and in Finland, at roughly the same period. In both countries it was a disaster. Quod erat demonstrandum, my old china. But what's this - in one post you describe the lawlessness caused by alcohol, and now it's
the Brits as a whole are quite orderly and lawful as you know.
with regard to your suggestions about drinks measures...
Pubs to monitor alcohol consumption and end the pour after a shot or two. A very good start, I'd think. We can go for a ban sometime after that by simply increasing the restrictions.
Spirits have not been "poured" in British pubs in over 40 years! Measures are served from optics. I am not a spirits drinker (except the od bottle I get at xmas, and the post-curry freebies), but as I recall, spirits in pubs in England are sold in measures of one sixth of a gill. In Scotland I think its one quarter of a gill. And... if someone has had too much, the bar staff are required by law to stop serving that person. Sure, if you go to Spain it's a pour from the bottle - glug-glug-glug-glug... I prefer to stick to beer and wine, although when I was out with curval and the lads, Ravells did introduce us all to an excellent single malt - Oban, I think it was.
Good show! Then you wouldn't move to another country if alcohol were banned in England? I mean you respect the process right? And it would be the whim...er... will of the people.
Yes, I respect the process. But that doesn't mean I have to like who has gained power in accordance with that process, and does not tie me to living here if I chose not to.
No. The FAA has amazing powers, much like our IRS. They wrote a rule and air carriers had to comply. No one voted, no majority was consulted. They have their own little fiefdom and they rule like a King.
Wow! An
absolute monarchy - within the USA!
Thrawn - the queen plays no part in formulating new laws. To maintain that she does is a bit silly. Sure, the queen signs the royal assent using a pen. Clearly the pen must have ink in it for this to be possible. What you're saying is akin to arguing that the manufacturer of the ink inside the pen is "part of the law formulation process". Of the monarchs who have tried to defy parliament, one was executed in 1649, and the other was overthrown (James II - 1688-1689).
so... you can have a bill become a law without her approval?
Yep - I'm sure she doesn't approve of some of the bills coming through, but she never refuses to sign them. If she did, I'm sure that T. Blair would find some way to circumvent her, just as he circumvented the house of lords in order to railroad through the ban on foxhunting with hounds. But I don't think the queen would be beheaded or overthrown - unlike Charles I and James II.