This is Peter Hitchens’s Mail on Sunday column

We are already living in a republic. We just don’t know it yet. Diana Spencer, perhaps the most brilliant politician of our age, destroyed the British monarchy 20 years ago.

The current Queen continues to occupy the throne solely because she has been transformed by skilled public relations into the nation’s favourite grandmother. Her survival is personal, not political. She goes through the motions of being the Sovereign, but is well aware that one false step could bring the weeping mobs out again, not weeping but snarling, and who knows how that would end?

It began in those ghastly weeks in 1997 when all pretence ended that Britain contained a ‘silent majority’ which would one day assert itself and defy the moral and cultural revolution that was eating away at our country.

Millions, to be sure, whispered to each other in private places that they were not part of the strange semi-pagan festival of fake emotion, as the crowds piled up their plastic-wrapped flowers and shed tears over a person they had never met. But they had no rally ing point. They did nothing. They were cowed by a dictatorship of grief, even if the grief was largely self-pity. When the Blair creature appropriated Diana as a saint and martyr of New Labour, nobody contradicted him. For alas, it was true. She really was the People’s Princess, if by ‘the People’ you mean the new resentful Britain of wounded feelings, which utterly rejects all the old dutiful rules of behaviour, and which also has no time for, and no understanding of, hereditary monarchy.

In that moment was born the deadly, subversive idea that the true heir to the throne, Prince Charles, should never reign, but that we should ‘skip a generation’ and hand the vacant throne (when the vacancy inevitably comes) to Diana’s son – because he is her son.

New and credible versions of this idea have been floated in two fictional dramas, House Of Cards and Charles III. The Prince himself can do nothing about this. No matter how hard he has tried to fill the gap in his sons’ lives left by the death of their mother, no matter how thoughtful he is and no matter how seriously he takes his task, the gossip never ends.

What this means is monarchy based on opinion poll, not on lawful right. And that’s the end of monarchy. Let’s speculate further into the future. Charles abdicates to please the crowds. William takes the Crown. But he who rules by permission of the polls also falls on the whim of the polls. And when those polls turn on a once-popular William, as they will, he too will be gone, and Buckingham Palace will be a museum. I wouldn’t give it that long.

Does it matter? Yes. First because, by having a non-political monarch we can respect, we are freed to be properly disrespectful towards politicians, while remaining loyal to our country. Without a monarch, loyalty can demand political submission.

Also, the British monarch is like the king on a chessboard. He cannot attack. But by occupying his square he prevents others from doing so – politicians who long for the supremacy that monarchs have, who yearn to be escorted by booted cavalry and greeted with trumpets, and who want us to respect them even when they don’t deserve it. Especially when they don’t deserve it.

It’s not an accident that most of the longest-lasting free, law-governed countries in the world are constitutional monarchies. Yet we seem keen to throw this advantage away, because we no longer know who we are or how we came to be so free and happy.

Now it's Taylor's turn to try the sleazy trick

Is it in the US constitution that wholesome, suburban female singers have to transform themselves into less wholesome female singers, dancing in rubberwear, sneering a lot and generally embracing the sleazy non-suburban zeitgeist, as soon as their fan base gets old enough? Taylor Swift, in her Look

What You Made Me Do video (pictured), is just the latest. Will it be tattoos next? If they started out like this, it wouldn’t work.

Isn’t there something a bit tricky about such transformations?

The BBC's addicted to drugs hype

The scandalous takeover of the BBC’s flagship Today programme by the drug lobby has just got even worse. You may recall a few weeks ago a drug propagandist giving out the street prices of cocaine (the buying and selling of which are imprisonable offences) quite unchallenged, on this programme.

This is just one of many instances where the arguments of drug legalisers are prominently presented without serious challenge, on this and other BBC programmes. If, like me, you oppose this policy, you are hardly ever asked on.

On Thursday, under the guise of a debate on the Government’s failed attempt to restrict ‘legal highs’, the Today programme invited two people to give their views. The BBC’s charter says it should be impartial on major controversies. So you might think they would have been balanced – one on one side, one on the other. Not a bit of it.

The first, Kirstie Douse was introduced as ‘head of legal services for Release, that’s an organisation that campaigns on drugs and drugs law’. I’ll say. Release has been lobbying ferociously for the weakening of drug laws for 50 years.

The second was Mike Trace, described as ‘the former deputy drugs tsar’. This is technically correct. But Mr Trace, just like Ms Douse, is in fact (to put it mildly) a veteran fighter against anti-drug laws. So the BBC’s idea of balance is to invite on two people who completely agree and nobody who dissents. How is this even allowed? Then it made it worse, allowing them to be questioned by a clueless, gullible presenter. John Humphrys has been absurdly attacked this week for an interview about fashion. Who cares? But on this occasion he allowed Ms Douse to get away with the claim that ‘we know that the law enforcement approach in a country doesn’t have any impact on levels of [drug] use’.

This isn’t true. Japan, where drug possession is still treated as a crime, has much less drug use than Britain. But legalisers try to slither out of this awkward fact by claiming (without a scrap of evidence) this is due to Japanese ‘culture’. If so, why don’t foreigners in Japan ignore the law and smoke dope in the street, the way people do in London? Do they too have a different ‘culture’?

Mr Humphrys doesn’t know this because, like the rest of the BBC, he seldom if ever speaks to anyone who disagrees with the billionaire drug-legalisation lobby. We have to wonder, why is the Corporation so sympathetic to that lobby?

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There is absolutely no evidence that the Texas storm was caused by climate change. But watch and see how many times warmist propagandists try to claim that it was. It is this sort of thing which makes me doubt all their assertions.