I am unsure why you use the distinction 'English speaking countries' rather than 'Western countries'.
Because there are many western countries that are not English speaking, and I don't know what their legal systems are like.
Besides, surely Holland is a "western country", so the claim "western countries let you say whatever you like, including insulting the monarch" would not be true, whereas substituting English-speaking for western means the claim *is* true.
If the insult serves no respectable right then you do not get away with it, not in Holland not in the UK and I would be highly surprised if you got away with it in the US.
You'd be wrong. I'm not a lawyer, but I'm reasonably sure that you could call the Queen a slag or a ho in England without any respectable purpose, merely because you felt like insulting her, and it would not be illegal. And I'm absolutely certain that you can say all kinds of things in the US and be completely covered by the first amendment. Just look at Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck! You can deny the holocaust, you can say that gay people are evil, you can call the president a nazi, all constitutionally protected. Pretty much the only exceptions are encouraging violence and gross negligence ("shouting Fire! in a crowded theatre" is the cliche example of prohibited speech).
If I called the Obama an n-person for no other purpose then to insult him then you bet there will be hell to pay.
It would be entirely legal in the US, you can call him anything you like. Now, if you did it in the wrong place you might get beaten up (which would constitute assault), but the police can't touch you.
Free speech, ain't it great?
But Thailand was a side-issue; my main point was to say that its not true to say that illiberal civics like hereditary rule, slavery, despotism, caste system and so forth didn't exist after the medieval period; "medieval kingdoms" are alive and well in relatively recent history.
I agree that the social policy tree won't have explicit penalties, because, as Sid and other designers have said numerous times, bonuses are more fun than penalties. That said, I do hope that the different social policies offer substantial bonuses and correspond to different play styles and goals. This is already the case in Civ IV, but it could be developed further in Civ V.
Precisely.