Lightbringer
Loves Me Some Souls
We call them political parties...we should call them conglomerations.
Except that most of our civil and commercial institutions down to this very day are based on the ground work laid by the Romans.I go to a class to keep up my Latin. I cannot stand the Romans personally, but our teacher points out that they are the only ancient people who have left us anything personal about relatively ordinary people, and just as few of their writers are worth reading. On the whole, though, I don't think we can learn much from them, positive or negative: they start from a very different place - pagan superstition and an imperial mission, and were never very democratic (though they had their moments). They used a professional army to conquer people, but when they stopped having people to sell, the inadequacies of a slave society showed up fast. I don't think they are enough like us to be much worth bothering with, under either the Republic or the Empire
Organized political parties maybe. As the great humorist Will Rogers said "I belong to no organized political party. I'm a Democrat."One could argue that they still don't.
All political parties are coalitions.We call them political parties...we should call them conglomerations.
Bill - the question is, why were the Romans employing barbarian troops. It was because their army was becoming too demanding, and not into doing too much fighting either.
It had more to do with the change in the legions mission from an aggressive one to a defensive one. The Empire essentially reached its extent under Trajan. From that point on the legions mission changed from a conquering force to a defensive force focused on defending the Roman frontiers. It became easier to recruit auxiliary troops from the local populace on the frontiers who either were hybrid Romans or non Romans. As time went on and as commanders of these auxiliary troops gained power these troops became full Roman. Citizens.True they were employing many barbarians to fight other barbarians as the empire began to recede but I don't know if it that is because it was becoming to demanding [of Roman citizens] or as many have speculated, that the Roman populace just got lazy &/or ambivalent about warring when there was not much incentive for them in it..????
True they were employing many barbarians to fight other barbarians as the empire began to recede but I don't know if it that is because it was becoming to demanding [of Roman citizens] or as many have speculated, that the Roman populace just got lazy &/or ambivalent about warring when there was not much incentive for them in it..????
Not as appealing as you think. A man who made it through his 20 years in the legion would have, with his discharge award of monies and property, would have been considered quite wealthy by the standards of the day. However, even during the era of the Imperium the odds of surviving 20 years in the legions were about 50%. Not exactly appealing odds.I suppose that most 'ordinary' Romans had been eliminated by the later days. For those who were poor the legions offered very good prospects indeed, but it was not applicable to the dead!
Many "non" Americans join our armed forces~see any parallels??It had more to do with the change in the legions mission from an aggressive one to a defensive one. The Empire essentially reached its extent under Trajan. From that point on the legions mission changed from a conquering force to a defensive force focused on defending the Roman frontiers. It became easier to recruit auxiliary troops from the local populace on the frontiers who either were hybrid Romans or non Romans. As time went on and as commanders of these auxiliary troops gained power these troops became full Roman. Citizens.
Only that it was a means to provide for manpower while assimilating them into our culture and thus spreading our values.Many "non" Americans join our armed forces~see any parallels??
That's probably about one of the dumbest articles Krugman ever published. There were many reasons why the Republic fell and to compare our Republic to the Roman republic is a strawman. You can make the argument Krugman makes about any President who advocated increasing the scope of powers of the executive branch.Paul Krugman uncovers chilling parallels between Trump, fascism and the fall of the Roman Republic
The parallels between the rise of fascism in the 1930s and the dawning of the Trump era are already frighteningly clear. So, Paul Krugman thought he’d do a little light reading about ancient Rome to take his mind off of the whole upsetting situation. Instead, he found some scary “contemporary resonances of some Roman history — specifically, the tale of how the Roman Republic fell,” he writes in Monday’s column.
Here’s what I learned: Republican institutions don’t protect against tyranny when powerful people start defying political norms. And tyranny, when it comes, can flourish even while maintaining a republican facade.
On the first point: Roman politics involved fierce competition among ambitious men. But for centuries that competition was constrained by some seemingly unbreakable rules. Here’s what Adrian Goldsworthy’s “In the Name of Rome” says: “However important it was for an individual to win fame and add to his and his family’s reputation, this should always be subordinated to the good of the Republic … no disappointed Roman politician sought the aid of a foreign power.”
America used to be like that, with prominent senators declaring that we must stop “partisan politics at the water’s edge.” But now we have a president-elect who openly asked Russia to help smear his opponent, and all indications are that the bulk of his party was and is just fine with that. (A new poll shows that Republican approval of Vladimir Putin has surged even though — or, more likely, precisely because — it has become clear that Russian intervention played an important role in the U.S. election.) Winning domestic political struggles is all that matters, the good of the republic be damned.
The republic technically survived, on paper anyway. The Senate lost all power and all decisions were made by the emperor. Krugman sees a similar destruction of the substance of our democracy and it is chilling.
Trump is far from the only sign that democracy is being subverted. Look at North Carolina, where the voters’ clear choice of a Democratic governor is being subverted by the. Republican legislature which has stripped him of power.
This is of a piece, Krugman argues, with efforts to discourage minority groups from voting. Trump even went so far as to thank African Americans for not voting. The result could be a “de facto one-party state,” Krugman writes. “One that maintains the fiction of democracy, but has rigged the game so that the other side can never win.”
Krugman’s theory is that the attack on democracy we are witnessing is driven by “careerism on the part of people who are apparatchiks within a system insulated from outside pressures by gerrymandered districts, unshakable partisan loyalty, and lots and lots of plutocratic financial support.” These careerists don’t respond well to criticism and viciously attack those who dare speak up.
Donald Trump didn’t start the sickness overtaking American democracy, though he may be the most perfect expression of it. But the destruction has been underway for decades, and thus that much harder to undo.
How the fall of Rome mirrors the fall of the Democrat party? Make your first parallel.![]()
I apologize in that I did not have a chance to edit this post. Usually I'll just put my thoughts down in a rush and then go back and edit before I post. I didn't get a chance. She who must be obeyed had chores for me. It's pretty disjointed. I normally don't throw up a wall of text this poorly written. It's locked from editing so I don't believe I can go back and fix it.
That's unfortunate as I've done a lot of reading in recent years on the era of the late Roman Republic. It's one of the most fascinating historical events to study. Just this huge convergence of events and the simultaneous rise of men of genius (and some utter idiots and madmen) caused some extraordinary events that influence us to this day.
We should be clear on one thing. Rome never really fell. Rome the city fell and for nearly a millennia Europe stagnated but Rome itself lived on in the Vatican and the Holy Roman Empire which spread Roman Catholicism and along with it Roman cultural customs and institutions throughout almost the entire European continent. Economic, civil and political institutions too. Not just religious.
I think it's a misnomer to view Western History from a "Rome fell on 453 AD" standpoint. It would be more accurate to say the middle ages began on that date. Roman culture and Roman influence was alive and well. Rome the Capital city of a world wide empire was gone though. Rome did climb back to being the Capital of a world wide Empire, and a great one at that, but it's a religious one.
Well yeah.Tis the season as they say. I've been real busy as well....
You don't feel "Rome" continued in the east?? Then after the renaissance to the great "west/USA"??