by Jenab » Wed 31 Aug 2005, 08:24:23
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergySpin', 'T')he aristocratic system of government was never really abandoned. The moronic sheeple just believed that they can be the aristocrats while everyone else became the slaves. Top down idiocy, IMHO. Since you seem to know so much about your preferred form of government would you care to translate and understand the phrase 'Quis custiodet ipsos custiodes?.
Who guards the guardians? A Roman saying famous for its political wisdom. It seems an obvious consideration to us today for the same reason that Euclid's geometry appears simple. But probably it was a major breakthrough in thinking when it was thought of
for the first time.
Aristocracy has the usual drawback of any system of authority, but it has two advantages. First, the line of authority is HONEST. In a true aristocracy, the King is the boss, the ultimate judge, maker of law, and executive power.
That's secretly true of most "republics," also - where the Money Power is a clandestine controlling lever on government powers. There's probably no such thing as a mass democracy where the circular, endless flow of responsibility and power remains as theory would have it. In the first place, the masses aren't particularly "responsible" about anything, not even in regard to their duty not to let rich people or clever aliens usurp their power.
The word "sheeple" is appropriate to the nature of the human herd: each one assumes that someone else is looking after the political forces in play, and all he has to do is show up to vote occasionally. If a judge or a politician is bribed, he won't know about it, or much care even if he does. If the newspapers are falling, one by one, into the hands of a minority with discernable special interests, he won't know about it, at least not until it's too late, and then he'll too readily believe that there's nothing in it that he should be concerned about.
But the feature of aristocracy that provides the greatest mitigation of the lack of guards for the guardians is the very sense of proprietorship that the King has for his Kingdom. It's HIS. It is his garden, his home, his family, his reason for pride, his reputation before the world. If it's dirty, so is he. If it fails, so has he. If it becomes corrupt, he is to blame and knows it.
That's what no democracy ever has. It's what no temporarily elected political Chief Administrator can give a country.
Jerry Abbott