▲ | markus_zhang 13 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I guess it depends on who the Monarchy is. It was like asking, do you really think you will be treated better under Augustus or the Senate? I bet back then a lot of people would want the Monarchy — after all Augustus won and the Roman Empire was born. In general we consider democracy > monarchy because good monarchies are rare and far between, so democracy is the least bad option. And no, I don’t think Trump could be Augustus. Augustus and Caesar beat their enemies and cut them down like chicken. We are more civilized now, but I don’t think Trump is willing and can do enough sweeping. It is only by sweeping away the old aristocratic that the new ones can building a new Empire. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | JumpCrisscross 13 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> depends on who the Monarchy is We have a pretty good hint! > do you really think you will be treated better under Augustus or the Senate? Augustus’s rein started with him engineering a peninsula-wide famine and economic collapse. He grew up after the civil war. But promptly after him you got Trajan. > we consider democracy > monarchy because good monarchies are rare and far between, so democracy is the least bad option Sort of. There is also the whole part about being able to fire the leaders once in a while. > We are more civilized now, but I don’t think Trump is willing and can do enough sweeping Trump would absolutely mow down Americans if his life depended on it, most leaders would, this is what makes dictatorships and other systems without a peaceful transition of power so dangerous. > only by sweeping away the old aristocratic that the new ones can building a new Empire Octavianus was a Claudian, one of Rome’s most prestigious patrician families. Most of the Emperors were also patricians. (Rome collapsed shortly after the aristocracy actually lost control. It’s literally referred to as the fall of Rome.) If America goes monarchy, it would be in a way that ensconced our current elites into a generational aristocracy far more powerful than what Americans think is social immobility today. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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