Essentially the government in power is allowed to appoint a very small minority of people in the legislature.
How on earth are they a "very small minority of people" when they number at over 700? The House of Commons only has 650. Granted their power might make them a minority but the Lords have enough power to cause trouble, and like I said they can request revisions to legislation put forward by the Commons and filibuster it to hell.
Which is .... uh.. unusual, but I support the theory because too frequent elections causes short term thinking and popularism which can have devastating consequences...
How frequent is "too frequent" for you?
As long as the house of commons can appoint party line hacks as lords if need be, the house of lords is a rubber stamp. That makes it a perfect dumping ground for dangerous individuals you want to remove from the legislature or old guard idiots who are holding the party back. Let them play act that they are politicians while the real government does the work of governing.
A rubber stamp that can delay the passing of bills by two years?
They're not removed from the legislature anyway. They're a part of the legislature and are until they die. The problem in Britain at the moment actually has nothing to do with the "old guard" causing problems - if Labour had a powerful old guard they'd be a party I'd consider voting for (if the SNP didn't exist) because then they'd be a lot more left leaning. Instead new cabals form that are just as powerful and just as prohibitive as any old guard, like the New Labour lot and Cameron's Eurosceptics.
I'd say I'd want something like that in the US but it probably would be difficult to hit the same balance.
Why the hell would you want people in your legislature forever? You're fine as it is. I know you've got problems with your Old Guards, particularly in the Republican Party, but the House of Lords is not an answer.
Yeah, no. The very thought of unelected religious figures and plutocrats having a say in legislature makes me feel ill. They have far too much influence as is.
It is morally reprehensible.