A
Andromedus
Guest
In what way would you violate someones human rights by calling that person your Majesty? Or is it the rights of everyone else I violate if I claim someone is royal? Is it the same with the word ‘‘mother’’? Not to be disrespectful but perhaps you didn’t think that statment through? However, while you can have a democracy with a monarch inheriting their position it is indeed undemocratic that they do inherit it. But calling someone royal in itself is not undemocratic, but since monarchs these days inherit their title it is of course undemocratic, which is what I think you meant, not the word.Excuse me, but to think someone is royal is silly. Um, not silly, but not democratic and against all human rights. I treat all people the same way, and just because someone was born with a golden spoon in his or her arse doesn’t make them any better than the rest of us. To give a honorific title to someone who has *earned *it, like a PhD or -sensei, is one thing, to give it to someone just because his ancestors were ruthless enough to plunder and dominate over their fellow citizens, something different. An ordinary name is good enough for them, as it is for anybody else.
A noble wants to be addressed in a special way, and that’s purely his choice? Well, I tell them this: Your neck is as fragile as mine, and here’s a Guillotine to prove it.
So? You can change your last name right? If they have then it is their new name which is the correct one.Oh, btw, Saxe-Coburg and Gotha is just the English translation of Sachsen-Coburg-Gotha, they are all half-German anyway.
But about the topic, I am not sure what I would call, for example Dalai Lama, but I would try to be respectful. Perhaps I would call him ‘‘Your Holiness’’, but just out of respect for him and the people around him and not because of any religious reasons, I am not sure if I would call him that though.