[...] if you do believe monarchies have a place in society. And if you think they do, I'd like to hear why.
My attitude has changed, from no to maybe, since living in the UK for the reasons sap5 mentions.
One example: The divisions of Brexit have healed a lot more quickly than the divisions of Trumpism. I thought that was a good thing for a number of years, but I'm starting to think it's a bad thing. We're sleepwalking through disaster under an illusion that we're healed when we're actually bleeding out.
Another example: As horribly wrong as the government got it, the Queen was spot on with her covid messaging. We haven't had the crazy anti-vaxx movement here, I believe in part because we have a figure (the Queen, now the King) who people will listen to without politicizing everything.
I remember sitting in a poli sci class and being told that Elizabeth's job is to maintain the face of the UK, as it wants represented to the world. That having the monarchy allows the identity of the UK to be separate from its politics, unlike the situation in the US. I'd be interested to know if that is what people in the UK think as well.
I understand this point of view a lot better than I did before I lived here. I think I'm still a republican, but my attitude has changed from "why the f*ck does anyone still have a monarchy?" to "I get it, even if I can't totally come around to agreeing with it."
Is the monarchy a good representation of the state? Or would an elected head of state be better?
Not sure on the former. God no, on the latter. If the monarchy ever goes, I would prefer a neutral head of state.
Bolding mine - personally I think that's a ridiculous reason for the Crown to remain, and one thing we don't discuss enough is that I sincerely don't see how the royal family really is as apolitical as they infer.
I agree, and I'll add to your examples the Queen's subtle interference (at Cameron's request) in the Scottish referendum, which is probably the most egregious example. I hope Scotland gets a second, fair referendum - whatever the outcome. Between the monarch's interference and the irony of the threat of being removed from the EU, the people of Scotland were woefully mistreated.
If we're talking conspiracy theories, I wouldn't be surprised if the Queen wanted to die in Scotland - both to bring together / strengthen the union, and because the plans for her funeral celebration were always the most elaborate were she to die in Scotland (even more elaborate than if she had died overseas).