"For the aid of those watching this debate, I request that Mr. Belecono's original statement be replayed sentence by sentence so I may rebut each point of his seperately."
"Some of this talk is near traitorous! Restricting the powers of the Crown? Removing them? Unacceptable! I find each of your lack of faith in Her Majesty deeply disturbing.
Please stop with the
ad hominem attacks, Mr. Belecono, and you too, Mr. Finestone, or I will ask the moderator to censure (ooc: not censor; it means to condemn conduct) you both. Furthermore, Mr. Belecono, you will find that the Constitution is quite clear on the powers of the Empress. Excepting the power to veto laws, the Empress' power is solely confined to the appointment of officials. It is not only the Socialist Party, or the Progressive Party, or the Conservative Party, who want to restrict the Empress' powers; the people who wrote our Constitution saw clearly that such powers do not belong in the hands of a hereditary official whom nobody has the power to legally remove!
Let us not betray our traditional values and roots in these modern times - we should be encouraging the survival of such things!
If you want to talk about tradition, Mr. Belecono, you cannot simply elevate Canada's monarchical tradition; you must take our entire tradition, including our democratic tradition, into account. And given the state of our government before the Border War, before Alia was elevated by her emergency powers, one can clearly see that our democratic tradition was, and should remain, the stronger.
"If anything we should broaden the powers of the monarchy. For the Empress to be a figure of hope and justice to the people, she should have the power to act as one! Let us not sell out to the demands of modern politics. Emergency powers are a necessity, especially in the current climate. I'd rather a divine Empress than a fascist dictator."
Actually, Mr. Belecono, and I have already pointed this out, the "current climate" does not demand that any figure, including the Empress, retain emergency powers. The "current climate" does not in any way resemble an emergency. Dysanii is dismembered, unable to attack Canada. The DSA is occupied in the south, and our military is able to prevent any surprise attack that may come our way from the south. The domestic state is stable, as evidenced by the fact that we are able to have this debate at all. In point of fact, there is no emergency, and thus no need for emergency powers.
And as to your point about the current state being preferable to a fascist dictatorship, I totally agree. However, the point is moot. No major group in Canada is advocating fascism, nor is there any danger that a fascist group might take power. No power in Taijitu has the military fiat to impose fascism on Canada. Therefore the choice is not between fascism and autocracy. The choice is between autocracy and democracy, and the Canadian people will support me when I say I prefer the latter!