Message from @Death in June
Discord ID: 673488183820025860
i think it's because they were dealt two major blows
Undoubtedly so, however the monarchy system's fatal flaw is the idea that everyone in the line of descendants upholds the health of the sovereignty as a whole. It has no ability to correct for incompetence in the event of a terrible leader by awarding authority based solely upon heredity.
one, from the ascent of capitalism, the bourgeoisie, and liberalism
and then from WW1
and perhaps you could say WW2 to an extent as well
sure i agree with that
to an extent at least
Yes. Nepotism would be the fall to a system that devalues meritocracy.
an elective monarchy might be preferable
but the thing is is that nepotism is restricted
because it's not in the interests of the monarch to allow for the health of the institutions that support the sovereign to be compromised by such things
and often they have a fair degree of authority to stamp out such things
i mean of course they might be nepotistic toward their family
but there would be many more situations in which nepotism would be more viable under a more diffuse system of power
A system of elective monarchy with restrictions on nepotism, which also upholds the interests of the sovereign, is essentially the idea behind a Democratic Republic.
if you really stretch the concept of what a monarch is sure
True, but the very idea of an "elective monarchy" is a stretch in itself
At that point you're just arguing over term limits
but the problem is that like an american president is only concerned about the effects their policies will have at most 4 years into the future
and of course the system is also entropic
since it produces constant changes in leadership
I wouldn't be opposed to scrapping term limits if the people had the right to hold an emergency vote of removal once for every 4 years.
It still affords the swiftest means for correction. 8 Years is the most a president can serve in their position, with a considerable election every 4 years in which the public if afforded the ability to elect a replacement if necessary.
But I'll agree, the constant changes in leadership by two parties with opposing viewpoints can be terrible for long-term policies.
I would say make 8 year term presidencies.
With that exception above.
the problem is you kind of miss the window for establishing effective long term leadership in a mature republic that produces a divisive political scene such as our own
Well it wasn't like term limits was a concept to the founding fathers.
the problem is is that the system was not designed to be efficient
which was fine when it had a lot less on its plate to manage
but historical progression changed that
yeah they were introduced after FDR
There is a strong argument to remove them.
Especially since a second term president is no longer truly accountable to the people.
partisan politics really fucks things up
like if you look at madison
he thought that the system would naturally be inclined to not produce partisan politics
he was pretty wrong on that one
The thing we should be trying to do is slowly devovle the role of the federal government and give states back their responsibilities.
and this is part of the problem i think, because ultimately nobody is smart enough to design a system that can, of its own volition, account for all the variables that will be thrown at it, especially in the long term