Yet is this different from the view of the Egyptians, the Chinese or the Aztecs? What I gather, large empires are typically quite ethno-supremacist and quite full of themselves.For instance, Rome and to a greater extent Greece have to be condemned for their ethno-supremacism, for instance, though it must be said that Rome appears to have been far less ethno-supremacist than Greece, see e.g.: — Tristan L
If that is so, then I believe it shouldn’t be. — Tristan L
.. which doesn’t mean that it wasn’t ethno-supremacist. After all, it did view so-called “barbarians” as inferior, didn’t it? — Tristan L
"Barbarians" could attain power through the military, which gained more and more influence over the succession. — Ciceronianus the White
For instance, Rome and to a greater extent Greece have to be condemned for their ethno-supremacism, for instance, though it must be said that Rome appears to have been far less ethno-supremacist than Greece — Tristan L
What I gather, large empires are typically quite ethno-supremacist and quite full of themselves. — ssu
Yet is this different from the view of the Egyptians, the Chinese or the Aztecs? — ssu
I agree. But usually we assume that people are making a statement of today when referring to history. Yet history in itself deserves focus, even some times it hasn't got much in common with our present. — ssu
Let's not forget. Let's try to look at them with the same objectivity (and criticism) that we look at our own "Western" history. If we do that, many interesting question arise. — ssu
For instance, most Western Eurasian (“European”) states from antiquity to modernity are Indo-European, yet the Indo-Europeans are invasive in Europe, so how can any of those states be legitimate? — Tristan L
This isn't to say it was "good." But it is to say that it was remarkable. — Ciceronianus the White
The Roman Empire was fairly extraordinary, though, in that many emperors weren't from Rome or even Italy, but instead from the provinces, e.g. Spain, Africa, Syria, Gaul, Dacia and Moesia. — Ciceronianus the White
I can't think of any imperial power in which high status and power was more available to men of "low birth," provincials and barbarians (meaning, outsiders) than Rome. — Ciceronianus the White
Yes, generally, but in the same sense so many of us, and others, have considered people different from us inferior in some manner. — Ciceronianus the White
Many barbarians served the Empire well [...]. And I think the Empire generally did well by them, for the most part. — Ciceronianus the White
History is filled to the brim with horrors. No nation, no tribe is innocent. Placating our modern views and standards on the past as you are doing is pretty useless. Sure the Caesars killed many, that what kings and emperors do... Water under the bridge. — Olivier5
This isn't to say it was "good." — Ciceronianus the White
Yes, and even though we may like the historical underdogs, those who lost, it doesn't mean that them losers where any better morally speaking.we are all sons of the winners - in the case of the West: Greece and Rome -; being ressentful for those who have long since lost, means nothing on the grand scale of humanity. — Gus Lamarch
even though we may like the historical underdogs, those who lost, it doesn't mean that them losers where any better morally speaking. — Olivier5
Any European who resent the Roman Empire for killing millions should remember what happened in the 1940's in those oh-so-civilized parts. — Olivier5
Yet then, fascists came to power in Rome, murdered Stilicho and began a systematic extermination of Germanics. This backfired twofold, for it robbed the Empire of a great pillar and provoked the Sack of Rome by King Alaric I. Fast-forward to the twentieth century, and we see fascists bring their own folks to their knees. — Tristan L
Mind you, the European project is about that: recognising that there exists a European indentify, built through empires as it was, that transcends national identities. The project makes sense because European nationalism and division killed so many in the last century. — Olivier5
:up:No states are morally legitimate; all any state ever has is its effective control over a territory. — Pfhorrest
No states are morally legitimate; — Pfhorrest
And that's the kind of authority states categorically claim. — Pfhorrest
But, regarding the state, if it prevents Bob from attacking innocent Charlie under threat of force, is that immoral? Why would that be arbitrary? — James Riley
why is that morally illegitimate instead of simply amoral authority — James Riley
No states are morally legitimate; all any state ever has is its effective control over a territory. — Pfhorrest
It's the arbitrariness of the claimed authority of the state that makes it morally illegitimate. — Pfhorrest
But you don't have -- and nobody has -- justification to just make anybody do or not do anything for no reason at all, just because they say so. But states by definition claim the power to do so, and since they're not morally justified in that claim, they are morally illegitimate. — Pfhorrest
No, a state is a monopoly on the use of violence. That's the textbook political science definition. — Pfhorrest
Where is this arbitrary claim of authority (in the U.S.)? — James Riley
is not the use of (or threat of) coercion the primary means by which States prove their legitimacy? — Bitter Crank
Each state constitution and the US constitution has a clause granting their legislature the power to create and enforce laws in general; often with some limitations, and sometimes nominally only within certain limited domains, but in practice that's always completely ignored, e.g. the US Congress doesn't have to cite which of the enumerated powers granted to them they are passing a law in the name of and show that that law accomplishes that purpose, unless they're challenged by the Supreme Court in which case they can usually just comically hyper-extend one of the enumerated powers like the Commerce Clause. In practice, if a state (either the constituent states or the federal state, in the case of the US) agrees with itself that something is a law, then you're forced to comply regardless of any argument to the contrary, which is tantamount to "because we said so". — Pfhorrest
The power of the state is such that it need not spell it out for each individual, so long as it has been spelled out for everyone. — James Riley
And it does not have to be spelled out for everyone, only for itself. — Pfhorrest
If part of the state (e.g. the legislature) says that such-and-such is mandatory or prohibited and the rest of the state (e.g. the judiciary) goes along with it, then no further explanation to anyone is taken to be necessary. — Pfhorrest
There is no one else to appeal to, — Pfhorrest
the state's authority is beyond question (according to the state). — Pfhorrest
not in accordance with law — James Riley
moral authority under the laws, as set forth in our organic documents — James Riley
allows you to find some other place in the world more to your liking — James Riley
Power does not = moral illegitimacy — James Riley
That just means an agent of the state did something contrary to what the state said they could. It's the laws themselves that can be arbitrary. — Pfhorrest
Documents which can say anything, or be interpreted to mean anything, that the people with all the power say they do. — Pfhorrest
See Hume's "carried aboard a ship asleep". — Pfhorrest
I said power != moral legitimacy. — Pfhorrest
Just because they can force you to comply with their commands does not make their commands morally binding. — Pfhorrest
Power does not = moral illegitimacy
— James Riley
I never said it did. — Pfhorrest
No states are morally legitimate; — Pfhorrest
Do you think there are such things as unjust laws? Morally bad, wrong laws, that morally should not be enforced, and that nobody is morally obligated to obey -- despite, nevertheless, actually being the law, in full compliance with all legal requirements for laws? — Pfhorrest
If you say no to that, then you're a reprehensible monster and I'm not going to continue this conversation. — Pfhorrest
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