Crezth
i knew you were a real man of the left
One wonders, if monarchies were such awful things, why they have managed to survive for so long and why so many people have went to all that trouble to defend or reinstate them.
You must not be familiar with the concept of "inertia."
As for the other point, that is one of the obstacles that we are not going to be able to overcome here, hence my termination of the argument yesterday. If you really cannot see the difference between a king and a tyrant or the difference between law and tyranny, or how a law does not need to be devised or acknowledged by democratic means to be a law, then there is no point to discussing this further.
My point is not that kings are identical with tyrants, but that people have little to no recourse in the event of a tyrant king. They must suffer the king's tyranny until such a time as he is content to die.
This isn't to suggest that democracies can't turn up tyrants, but that a democratic government is fundamentally extant based on the pleasure of the people. If a leader or his cabal is considered undesirable, he can be removed in the next election. No such luxury with a king. With a democracy, unlike monarchism the bottom line of all policy is not "like it or lump it."
Worst-case scenario, you get slavers not wanting to free their slaves, and concomitant barriers to righteousness. But it is still better to give people the freedom to choose poorly than no freedom at all. And we have 8 centuries of European mischief as testament to that. For all the good your European monarchies got up to, that a great many of them ended bloodily and permanently does not exactly speak to their virtue. And despite America's civil war, which ended in the best way possible vis a vis freedom and liberty, and which since has spawned no further questions as to whether men should own other men or separate unilaterally from the union, the US is still standing strong in only the most marginally changed of forms since its inception.