Queen_Herpes wrote:This from Wikipedia:Wikipedia wrote: The Parliament of Canada (French: Parlement du Canada) is the federal legislative branch of Canada, seated at Parliament Hill in the national capital, Ottawa. Formally, the body consists of the Canadian monarch – represented by her Governor General – the Senate, and the House of Commons, each element having its own officers and organisation...
...The parliament of Canada is composed of three parts: the monarch, the Senate, and the House of Commons.
The sovereign is regarded as the head of state by official government sources, judges, and constitutional scholars, while the Governor General and Lieutenant Governors are all only representatives of, and thus equally subordinate to, that figure.
The sovereign is styled the Queen of Canada, but she is one-and-the-same the Queen of England, Elizabeth II.
This from 2005, when the Queen dissolved Canada's Parliament:
"Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin dissolved the House of Commons Tuesday and elections were set following Parliament's vote of no confidence in the government.
Martin went to the official residence of Governor-General Michaelle Jean, representative of head of state Queen Elizabeth, and announced that she had granted his request to dissolve Parliament and that the election would be on Jan. 23."
IMO, you're in a monarchical government, and your taxes...eventually find their way to the Royal Family.
I don't need Wikipedia to tell me about my own government. The head of state ISN'T the Queen, but rather, the Governor General (who is appointed by the Queen). Anyway, she (or he) has no real power, and is legally and constitutionally bound to do what the Prime Minister (that's like our President, in case you didn't know) tells her to. It's a purely ceremonial role, though she'll sometimes go and do some diplomatic work, it barely goes past giving ambassadors tours and stuff like that. She prorogued parliament because the PM told her to. Not because she decided to flex her UNLIMITED POWER. Because she has no power. If she ever decides to go on some power hungry rampage, then she's breaking the law and we'll just give her the boot. It's that simple. So, once again, no, we're not paying taxes to the Queen.

