Polybius, You Knew! You Really Knew

Polybius | Biography, Books, & Facts | Britannica

Man, some of those ancient historians, they knew! They’d have figured out our time in a matter of minutes.

Polybius, who died in 118 B.C., lived as a hostage in Rome and deeply studied Roman life and politics. Two things he wrote jumped out at me today.

First, he admired Rome’s government, which he saw as a system of checks and balances that prevented any single branch of government from dominating the others. Our own country’s founders, who had read Polybius and others, adopted this model for our Constitution. Idiots and villains have been trying to topple it ever since.

Second, his study of history convinced him that tyranny most often arises in response to chaos and instability: when the desperate populace turns to a strong man to pull them out of the ditch. But eventually, he said, government sinks back into chaos, a new tyrant emerges from the melee, and the whole damned cycle repeats itself. He thought the Romans had found a solution; but if he’d lived some seventy years longer, he would have seen they hadn’t.

Polybius has no comfort to offer us. Thanks be to God, we have the Bible, God’s word. His laws, His precepts, will protect whoever embraces them. We are only forced to live in that hopeless political cycle if we rely on man’s word–and the false wisdom of a fallen world. Polybius did the best he could, but he lived in the wrong time and the wrong place.

But he would have felt at home at our Constitutional Convention. He didn’t have the Bible; America’s founders did. I think he would have rejoiced in it.

Let’s not lose it.

Government: The Problem, Not the Solution (My Newswithviews Column, Oct. 26)

Bust of Julius Caesar (100-44 BC) - Roman as art print or ...

Julius Caesar killed the republic–then perished in its general ruin.

Government makes a mess, then demands more power to clean it up. It seeks perpetual expansion, at the people’s expense. It has always done so.

Government: The Problem, Not the Solution

Y’know, you can operate a government without doing harm; you can even do good. But not if your lust for power becomes a mania, and drowns out everything else. How often have we seen that pattern!

“A republic–if you can keep it,” said Benjamin Franklin.

We are way too close to losing it.

A Snippet of Imaginary History

Head of a Roman Patrician (article) | Khan Academy

It’s 160 B.C., and the Roman Republic is the dominant power in the Mediterranean, governed by the Roman Senate and the Roman People’s Assembly.

But there has been friction between Rome and a power far inland–the United Scythians of Asia. We join the Senate with the debate in progress. Marcus Cato, Cato the Elder, is speaking.

“Senators, the United Scythians are ruled by a doddering dotard who can’t always remember to put his trousers on; and his newest government minister is this fat guy who paints his face and insists he is a woman. Their government is the laughing-stock of the civilized world! How long would it take us to conquer them? Fifteen minutes? Twenty? Or a whole day, if the weather’s bad? The only reason I can think of to send an army there would be if we felt sorry enough for those people to replace their government for them. And it wouldn’t have to be a big army, either!”

Happily, we know that no government like that would ever come into existence in the real world…

By Popular Demand: America Is Not a ‘Democracy’

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Democrats want to undo the 2016 election, they say, to “save the Nation” and protect America from threats to “democracy.” This is crapola. It has always been crapola, and always will be.

From the Constitution, Article IV, Section 4: “The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government…” Not a “democracy.”

Our country’s founders knew their history. They saw in classical Greek democracy–vividly clear in Thucydides’ history of the war between Athens and Sparta–a recipe for self-destruction. To them “democracy” was a nice name for hysteria. For example: Athens self-destructed, and lost the war with Sparta that they were winning at the time, by picking a fight–for no reason but pure arrogant foolishness–with Syracuse. Athens sent her army to Sicily to attack Syracuse, which was richer and stronger and more populous than Athens. As for the Athenian expedition, no one came home; and before much longer, the Spartans were tearing down Athens’ walls and imposing a puppet government to replace the democracy. Attacking Syracuse wasn’t the only foolishness indulged in by the democracy in the war, but it was the worst folly they could think of.

Our founders wanted nothing to do with democracy. It’s pure majority rule: and not only does the majority sometimes get completely carried away with some self-destructive project from which no reason can deter them, but it also has a habit of riding rough-shod over the minority. Just imagine a whole country run as Democrats now run our House of Representatives, and you’ll get the picture.

Our founders also studied the example set by Rome. The Romans had a republic. Instead of rule by mere majority, Roman government was operated by elected representatives, with two main branches of government (executive and legislative) and a system of checks and balances. The Greek historian Polybius praised the Roman system for being more stable and more just than anything they had in Greece.

But Rome couldn’t keep her republic. Our founders knew that, and decided to improve on Rome’s model by adding a third branch of government, the judiciary, and by writing everything down, with changes only to be made by a clearly-defined amendment process. They also tried to protect the states from being engulfed by the central government. We’re still working on that today. The great weakness of Rome’s republic was that it was never finished; it was always a work in progress; there was always an element of making it up as they went along. In framing our Constitution, this was what our founders labored to avoid.

And so, you see, the United States is not a democracy but, by law and custom, a republic. The two terms are not interchangeable.

For anyone to prattle on and on about “America’s democracy” is either ignorant, dishonest, or both. We do not have a democracy, and heaven forbid we ever do.