United States as a Constitutional Monarchy

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Does nobody actually study the Revolution? Nobody wanted a monarchical government.

Actually, the watchword of the Revolution was independence, not democracy. The colonists didn't have much issue with the Westminster system of government, but took issue with not be represented in government.
"No taxation without representation."
Besides, we're not talking about an absolute monarchy here.
 
No, no, no. King John I of House Adams, with Washington or Ben Franklin as PM.
By all accounts, John Adams was one for pomp and ceremony, and was (to my mind) the most likely American Emperor.

No United States of America, but a United Empire of Columbia.

You might even have a Holy Roman Empire-style elected monarch. Each state has an Elector-Count or something equivalent, and they vote on who will be King next.

Is there a reason you keep bringing back long-dead threads?
 

CalBear

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No, no, no. King John I of House Adams, with Washington or Ben Franklin as PM.
By all accounts, John Adams was one for pomp and ceremony, and was (to my mind) the most likely American Emperor.

No United States of America, but a United Empire of Columbia.

You might even have a Holy Roman Empire-style elected monarch. Each state has an Elector-Count or something equivalent, and they vote on who will be King next.

You REALLY need to stop digging up graves.
 
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