Message from @ThisIsChris
Discord ID: 511789309557211140
Perfect score on either
oh he's trying to get a PhD
@Jacob perfect GREs I expect? That's kind of a bare minimum for any top 20 grad school
my mom doesn't know the difference between bachelor's and master's so she's having trouble explaining lol
The specialized GRE for his discipline I mean
@ThisIsChris @Nemets It depends on which era were talking about. The early Roman empire was both very centralized in somethings and very decentralized in others.
@ThisIsChris idk probably
@Jacob yeah it's easier to get a perfect GRE score if you did that major. Easier than getting a perfect SAT schore
Tax collection was decentralized at first, the Emperor would essentially deputize tax collectors to tax a province with little oversite so abuse and corruption was rampant, they moved away from that eventually.
@Jacob still he should apply to a very large range of grad schools
I applied to 37
wow
Were tax collectors ever killed by people?
Although not ideal, Rome breaking into 3 parts during the crisis of the third century allowed the central roman empire's retarded politics of come and go emperors to not affect the Gaulic or Palmynran Empires, in fact the Palmyran Empire slapped Parthia hard
Was that a common occurrence?
@Jacob I'll be honest with my concern: when I hear someone saying they're applying to MIT, I want to know that they're applying to at least 30 other schools. Saying "ah if I don't go to MIT then I won't get a phd" is a bit silly. If that is someone's attitude then they probably should be going for a PhD anyway
@Selma I'm not sure but in the bible they were spoken of as hated, hence people asking Jesus what he was doing hanging out with one of them
At church they equate tax collectors with prostitutes in a manner of speaking.
Aquaducts and roads were centralized
@ThisIsChris that makes sense
What you would have is Tax Collection agencies would bid for the right from Rome to be the tax collector in a certain region.
@Nemets Just roman rebel states, their local identities had been displaced much earlier.
The winning bid would become Rome's tax collection for itself
Then the tax collectors would try to profit by collecting more taxes from the inhabitants than they had paid to rome
That was the business model
During late antiquities they always seemed to be making new offices and titles while simultaneously making both the Eastern and Western emperors more high and mighty
@Nemets interesting, I didn't know that
I wonder if that's been a norm for a long time
@Nemets how did tax farming lead to opium growing?
Weird
During the Empire, oneof my college profs told us of a letter from a city in Anatolia (modern day Turkey) that was from the governor asking for permission to start a fire department, it took him about a year to get a 'no' because the emperor thought it was dangerous to organize people like that, I forgot who it was excatly. This was peak centralization and inefficiency.
@Nemets Get in
basically diversity correlates with anything that sucks
Fast forward to late antiquity and the wealthy land owners run the show despite the high and mighty emperors. This was because during the crisis of the third century, the empire switched towards manoralism, which is where people had to try to produce evrything they needed close by because trade broke down. This was a preview of the dark ages, and a serf class, the colonii began.
more diversity = more suck
this is science
I don't see color, but I see enough color to want diversity - my friend
@Nemets they don't understand American.
I only see one color: the human color
NEMETS IS IN VOICE?