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Thank you Ma'am
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CougarFull Member
Could you give us a sample of this incredible hard working day?
http://www.royal.gov.uk/HMTheQueen/DayInTheLife/Queensworkingday.aspx
The Queen has many different duties to perform every day.
Some are public duties, such as ceremonies, receptions and visits within the United Kingdom or abroad.
Other duties are carried out away from the cameras, but they are no less important. These include reading letters from the public, official papers and briefing notes; audiences with political ministers or ambassadors; and meetings with her Private Secretaries to discuss daily business and her future diary plans.
Even when she is away from London, in residence at Balmoral or Sandringham, she receives official papers nearly every day of every year and remains fully briefed on matters affecting her realms.
In front of the camera or away from it, The Queen’s duties go on, and no two days in her life are ever the same.
Continued:
http://www.royal.gov.uk/HMTheQueen/DayInTheLife/TheQueensworkingday/Morning.aspx
http://www.royal.gov.uk/HMTheQueen/DayInTheLife/TheQueensworkingday/Afternoon.aspx
http://www.royal.gov.uk/HMTheQueen/DayInTheLife/TheQueensworkingday/Evening.aspxwwaswasFull MemberDon’t forget she has to reign 24/7 as well.
I expect that takes it out of you after 60+ years.
chewkwFree MemberFrom the current crop of politicians who have the look/charisma of being the first British president? 😯
BunnyhopFull MemberDo you really think that she doesn’t have adequate relaxation / downtime scheduled in? when has she ever had to juggle late / early meetings with school runs / partners job? She’s never had a single day’s worry in her life. One of the hardest working people she’s met? Nice work if you can get it.
Know her well do you?
I wouldn’t want to do her job thanks.
I am proud to be British and today, proud to have her as queen.
bencooperFree MemberVersus someone who got to the top because they really really wanted the power and might only have four short years to make as much money and “social change” as possible before they can disappear and blame it all on their successor.
Which is what we’ve got at the moment with the PM and political parties. This is just about replacing a hereditary monarch who we’re all supposed to bow down before with an elected head of state to open hospitals and meet foreign dignitaries and the like.
bencooperFree MemberThat list of the queen’s duties is a big part of what I object to, by the way:
Some are public duties, such as ceremonies, receptions and visits within the United Kingdom or abroad.
Fine, great, a bit of pomp and circumstance when opening a shopping centre is fine.
official papers and briefing notes; audiences with political ministers or ambassadors
This is where I have the problem – no-one elected her to do this stuff. She shouldn’t be getting anywhere near the running of the country. Figurehead, fine. Ruler, definitely not fine.
she receives official papers nearly every day of every year and remains fully briefed on matters affecting her realms.
Her realms? Bollocks to that.
miketuallyFree MemberI wouldn’t want to do her job thanks.
Maybe she doesn’t want to either.
miketuallyFree MemberI’d quite like to live in a cottage on Anglesey and fly helicopters. If we abolish the monarchy can I go too?
Yes: learn to fly, then apply for the job. Selection by ability.
If you want to be the monarch, however, tough.
ctkFull MemberGet rid of the lot of them, no need for a President above the Prime Minister. Cameron can lead the country until Corbs takes over in 2020
zippykonaFull MemberI really enjoy undoing my trousers after a big dinner.
The Queen can’t do that.
Ps .I know she doesn’t wear trousers.GrahamSFull MemberGet rid of the lot of them, no need for a President above the Prime Minister. Cameron can lead the country until Corbs takes over in 2020
Do you think Cameron would have been available to open the new Borders-to-Edinburgh railway today? Because that’s what the Queen was doing.
I’d rather our elected leaders focused on running the country and left the ceremonies and pomp to someone much better suited to it.
miketuallyFree MemberDo you think Cameron would have been available to open the new Borders-to-Edinburgh railway today? Because that’s what the Queen was doing.
And if she’d not been there, would everyone have sat around just looking at each other?
I’d rather our elected leaders focused on running the country and left the ceremonies and pomp to someone much better suited to it.
Better suited to cutting a ribbon? So, almost anyone with opposable thumbs?
seosamh77Free MemberGrahamS – Member
Get rid of the lot of them, no need for a President above the Prime Minister. Cameron can lead the country until Corbs takes over in 2020
Do you think Cameron would have been available to open the new Borders-to-Edinburgh railway today? Because that’s what the Queen was doing.I’d rather our elected leaders focused on running the country and left the ceremonies and pomp to someone much better suited to it.I reckon the Krankies would have been better suited.
convertFull MemberDo you think Cameron would have been available to open the new Borders-to-Edinburgh railway today? Because that’s what the Queen was doing.
I’m kind of assuming that was ironic! All that irrelevant bobbins should be the first to be struck off the list of stupid jobs that didn’t need doing in the first place.
For me the monarchy is giant symbol of inequity. We live in a society where we try to instil a culture that every man and woman, provided they have the capability, can strive for any role in society. We continue to attempt to break down class divides and we bemoan the number of privately educated people that end up at Oxbridge and in the top paying jobs. As a nation we think we stand for equality and fairness. Yet right up there like a massive belisha beacon shining out for all the world to see is some old dear born into a divine right to be head of state and her idiot son waiting in the wings to take over. A huge symbol to every child that no matter how hard you strive, there will be some things you will never be good enough for. To the rest of the world a giant symbol of our archaic system of governance.
Yet those in the most underprivileged positions in our society with seemingly the most to be peeved about when it comes to equality seems to be her most ardent supporters. Those with barely a pot to piss in are the first to stand on the street and wave a plastic union flag whist shedding a tear as she trundles past giving them a condescending wave. I am baffled by my fellow British subjects.
Given the opportunity I’d happily be the person who got to press the button to eject the lot of them into space (you’d have to get the whole lot of them – leave one behind and the canker would grow again) not because I dislike them personally but because I think the nation would be better for it. I appreciate I would be the most vilified man alive if I did it though. Cruel to be kind and all that.
GrahamSFull MemberWhich is what we’ve got at the moment with the PM and political parties. This is just about replacing a hereditary monarch who we’re all supposed to bow down before with an elected head of state to open hospitals and meet foreign dignitaries and the like.
I have no idea why you think that would be any different to just having the PM as head of state?
You get exactly the same problems: someone who is power hungry and only in the job for a short period. Basically anyone who actively wants such a job probably shouldn’t get it.
I suppose you could rectify these issues by making it a lifetime term, and selecting the candidate at random. But then that wouldn’t be much different from a monarch.
GrahamSFull MemberI’m kind of assuming that was ironic! All that irrelevant bobbins should be the first to be struck off the list of stupid jobs that didn’t need doing in the first place.
Absolutely, what are all these people doing celebrating and having a nice day out to see the Queen today?
They should all be busy working for the betterment of the
U.K... sorry..
the Allied Republic of Scotland, England, Wales, Ireland and Previous Empires.convertFull MemberAs I said – people are weird. Seeing the Queen and imagining it was a fun thing – odd. But people seem to have an equally nice day out at a shopping centre. I suspect some people as just easily pleased idiots. I’ve met the queen to talk to and everything – it wasn’t all that.
GrahamSFull MemberTo be fair, in that top photo only one bloke appears to have noticed that the Queen is there – but look how excited he looks! 😀
DrJFull MemberI don’t get the “it’s better than an elected head of state” argument.
What you’re saying is that someone randomly chosen by accident of birth is always going to be better at the job than someone who’s got there by merit, elected presumably because people think they’d be a good choice.
Is this another way of saying that the electorate is stupid, so can’t be trusted to choose the head of state?
And presumably, by extension, can’t be trusted to choose the government. Down with this sort of democracy thing!!
GrahamSFull MemberHave you ever read the comment on YouTube?
If we had a real democracy then those people would have a say in important decisions that directly effect our lives.
Scary!
ransosFree MemberVersus someone who
got to the top because they really really wanted the power and might only have four short years to make as much money and “social change” as possible before they can disappear and blame it all on their successor.can be booted out if we don’t like themFTFY.
NorthwindFull MemberShe’s done a good job of everything except the heir, and if she hangs on just a wee bit longer we can end the entire royalty thing on a high
DrJFull MemberHave you ever read the comment on YouTube?
If we had a real democracy then those people would have a say in important decisions that directly effect our lives.
Scary!Well, now you point it out…
neilthewheelFull MemberActually, if you don’t like the look of any of Elizabeth’s heirs, there’s plenty of precedent for just getting rid of them and getting someone else in. You could almost call it traditional…
William Rufus: Killed in a hunting “accident”
Edward II: murdered
Richard II: deposed, murdered
Edward V: deposed, murdered
Richard III: Killed in battle fought to depose him
Henry VI: deposed, possibly murdered
Charles I: Deposed and executed
James II: Deposed
George V: euthanizedWith apologies for any I missed.
Edric64Free MemberCant we just get rid of the scrounging gits who cost us a fortune ,flog their bloody great houses to Arabs and save a fortune ?
GrahamSFull Member…can be booted out if we don’t like them
That system must be why we end up with such likeable politicians?
Cant we just get rid of the scrounging gits who cost us a fortune
I’m guessing you didn’t watch the CGPGrey “cost of the royals” video posted earlier?
JunkyardFree MemberI like the way the media interviewed all the loyal subjects who turned up to cheer to see what we all thought
I have no opinion on her but the institution and her political powers shouls be removed
The UK moves slowly by about the middle of this century we may be like 18 the Century democracies…..fingers crossed anyway.thanks aracer and toys it works great
SaxonRiderFree MemberHerman Melville in Moby Dick on the coronation of kings and queens:
“It is well known that at the coronation of kings and queens, even modern ones, a certain curious process of seasoning them for their functions is gone through. There is a saltcellar of state, so called, and there may be a caster of state. How they use the salt, precisely–who knows? Certain I am, however, that a king’s head is solemnly oiled at his coronation, even as a head of salad. Can it be, though, that they anoint it with a view of making its interior run well, as they anoint machinery? Much might be ruminated here, concerning the essential dignity of this regal process, because in common life we esteem but meanly and contemptibly a fellow who anoints his hair, and palpably smells of that anointing. . . . But the only thing to be considered here is this–what kind of oil is used at coronations? Certainly it cannot be olive oil, nor macassar oil, nor castor oil, nor bear’s oil, nor train oil, nor cod-liver oil. What then can it possibly be, but sperm oil in its unmanufactured, unpolluted state, the sweetest of all oils? Think of that, ye loyal Britons! we whalemen supply your kings and queens with coronation stuff.”
😀
jambalayaFree MemberShe’s been an outstanding Monarch and Head of the Commonwealth.
With the talk of a Republic it’s worth noting when the Australians had a vote it was conclusively in favour of retaining the Queen as head of state. Any such vote in the UK would be even more supportive. Personally I think we’d be better off with the Monarch having greater powers, we’d have more consistent centrist government as a result
JunkyardFree Member55 v 45 is conclusively ?
conclusively
Also found in: Legal, Wikipedia.
con·clu·sive (k?n-klo?o?s?v)
adj.
Serving to put an end to doubt, question, or uncertainty;Its about 25 % to little hence the debate still rumbles on
Still I am sure she admires your noble support and excellent maths
thanks aracer and toys it works great
KlunkFree MemberI’m all in favour of tradition when comes to odd numbered charles
grumFree Memberhttp://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-28066081
None of his has any place in a modern democracy. It’s ludicrous.
franksinatraFull MemberWell I went to see her to today. The new railway is a really big deal for us who live locally and it felt like an extra special day having her here to open it.
She went of to Bowhill afterwards for a private engagement, perhaps to ride some of the cracking singletrack in the woods.
jivehoneyjiveFree MemberWell I’ve just checked back and it seems my gamble has failed to pay off… I was hoping for some over eager bravado and some carbon exotica coming my way, but willard doesn’t want to play…
Nonetheless, I’m a sporting man
Here is one of the reasons I was more than happy to lay my bike on the line:
Queen tried to use state poverty fund to heat Buckingham Palace
konabunnyFree MemberWith the talk of a Republic it’s worth noting when the Australians had a vote it was conclusively in favour of retaining the Queen as head of state.
So you’re saying she’s legitimised by a popular vote? Funny position for a monarchist to have…
binnersFull MemberJammers – you are funny, old thing – could you talk us through how having the very epitome of engrained hereditory anti-meritocratic, unacountable, anti-democratic privilege, that would have us all as subjects, or possibly serfs, as opposed to citizens, having more power, somehow give us a more centrist government?
Would it be to finally counter the rabid left-wing, almost communist ideologies we’ve been ruthlessly ruled by for decades now? If so, then a ruddy great Huzzah!!!! About time too!!
😆
deadlydarcyFree MemberIt’s been one of those days that comes along every so often – a royal “occasion”. It’s a curious thing for a citizen of a republic (and more than happy to be one, not a subject) to see the sheer amount of obsequious forelock-tugging that goes on amongst normal people who find themselves feeling inferior by virtue of the fact that they entered the world through a different birth canal. I can never quite figure it out (to be fair with some of the posters here, I can) but it’s quite entertaining to read some of it.
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