Originally posted by Paalikles
Who is king Harold? 
kind sir, I assume you are referring to my king, king Harald
Yes, that is the king to whom I was referring. I was following the custom of referring to foreign monarchs in my own language while speaking in my own language, as speakers of Western languages have always done. It's the same custom that leads me to say 'Frederick William' instead of 'Friedrich Wilhelm', or to call Catherine the Great 'Catherine' instead of 'Yekaterina'.
The custom has never been fully consistent, though. All the Russian rulers named 'Ivan' get called 'Ivan' instead of 'John', and the current Spanish king is always called 'Juan Carlos' and never 'John Charles'. So I have no problem saying 'Harald'. It's all the same to me.
Just out of curiosity, what is Prince Charles called in the various nations of Europe? Does he get called things like 'Carlos' and 'Karl' and 'Karol', or does everybody today call him 'Charles'?
Norway is one of those constitutional monarchies, where the king has no real power.
Would a republic be better? Perhaps
But what powers should the president, or whatever he or she shall be called, have? If money is the issue, I agree that having a royal family spend taxpayers' money is more expensive than having only a president spend taxpayers' money. To that extent, I say, sure why not.
On the part where one can discuss culture and tradition, I am of a different opinion. To the extent that the royal family can be considered part of a country's culture, I d say that is a good reason to keep them where they are.
Lately though, the first argument tend to outweigh the second.
So, you support the monarchy, or not? You almost sound like you have no strong feelings one way or the other, and wouldn't object to Norway's remaining a monarchy
or becoming a republic. What do the majority of Norwegians think about it?
Originally posted by willemvanoranje
On the other hand, the royal house is a great tradition. Our national colour wouldn't be orange
That's an interesting argument. Still, I don't see why you would need a monarch just to have a national color. I understand that it comes from the royal House of Orange, but surely orange is a 'Dutch' enough color by now that you could keep it even if the monarchy was abandoned someday. It might help if you put the orange stripe back on the national flag. When and why was it ever changed to red, anyway?
That raises an interesting question in my mind. How do modern French people feel about the fleur-de-lis? Is it a beloved symbol of France, a hated symbol of a despised monarchy, or is it just a meaningless image that nobody cares one way or the other about?