Mojo
Mostly harmless
Let me get this straight, just so I understand your mindset. A document which is 144 years old, and is an inanimate object, which no one alive agreed to, gives some people power over others, and neither the governed nor the governing can change it, and their consent is not required, BECAUSE A DOCUMENT GIVES ONE PARTY POWER OVER ANOTHER, AND CONSENT IS NOT REQUIRED BY EITHER PARTY TO BE BOUND BY THOSE WORDS NEITHER OF THEM WROTE OR AGREED TO. Is THAT your position?
Nope. It doesn't in itself give anyone power over anyone else. It allows your elected representatives to consent to legislation on your behalf. You have exactly the same rights as they do to stand for election and, if you can get sufficient numbers of your fellow citizens to agree with you, to change it. You're living in a representative democracy, and that's how a representative democracy works.
Well then I would agree and say that the consent the Senate and House of Commons gives to The Queen is not consent for me. Exactly like your argument above.
Yes it is. See above.
The Senate and HOC consented to the Queen enacting something. Now if they do not rep[resent me, does their consent empower the Queen over me?
The question does not arise, because they do represent you.
If in doubt, just read your own position above, and try to explain why it would work in one situation, when the Senate and HOC is the one doing the consenting, and not in the other?
Because that's how your constitution works. If you don't like it you can get yourself elected and change it.
Can't have it both ways. Either one party or group can affect others with their consent alone, or they cannot, as a function of law.
Your representatives' consent includes your consent. They are your representatives (and the representatives of your fellow citizens), but you are not their representative.
Me consenting to someone doing something to me does not empower them to do it to someone else who has not consented directly or consented to me entering agreements on their behalf.
Patently, because you are incapable of getting yourself elected to a position where it would.
The Senate and HOC consenting to someone doing something to them, does not empower that someone to do that something to someone else who has not consented, nor consented to being represented by them.
But their consent to legislation means that you are deemed to have consented to it. They are your representatives, and that is how a representative democracy works.
EXACT SAME THING. Unless, the people in the government are above the law.
Nope. The laws apply to them as well.