Empire: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
m robot Adding: eo:Imperio |
|||
(40 intermediate revisions by 18 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[File:Virgil .jpg|thumb|Aeneas] is the symbol of Rome; and, as Aeneas is to Rome, so is ancient Rome to Europe. Thus Virgil acquires the centrality of the unique classic; he is at the centre of European civilisation, in a position which no other poet can share or usurp. The Roman Empire and the Latin language were not any empire and any language, but an empire and a language with a unique destiny in relation to ourselves. ~ [[T. S. Eliot]]]] |
|||
'''''[[w:Empire (2006 novel)|Empire]]''''' (2009) is a [[science fiction]] novel by [[Orson Scott Card]]. It is the first book of the ''[[w:The Empire duet|The Empire duet]]'', and is followed by ''[[Hidden Empire]]''. |
|||
An '''{{w|empire}}''' is an aggregate of nations or peoples ruled by a single sovereign government. |
|||
__NOTOC__ |
|||
⚫ | |||
{{TOCalpha}} |
|||
* Treason only matters when it is committed by trusted men. |
|||
** Chapter One: Captain Malich |
|||
⚫ | |||
* When do you first set foot on the ladder to greatness? Or on the slippery slope of treason? Do you know it at the time? Or do you discover it only looking back? |
|||
** Chapter Two: Recruitment |
|||
=== B === |
|||
* Heroic love is to do what is best for the loved one, disregarding desire, trust, and cost. Unfortunately, it is impossible to know what is best for anyone. |
|||
* The world is full of the markers of abandoned empires, from Hadrian’s Wall to the Great Wall of China, from the remnants of the one in Arizona to the remnants of the one in Berlin. |
|||
** Chapter Three: New Boy |
|||
** [[Elizabeth Bear]], ''The Hand is Quicker—'' (2014), reprinted in [[w:Rich Horton|Rich Horton]] (ed.), ''The Year’s Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2015'' (p. 430) |
|||
=== C === |
|||
* In war planning, you must anticipate the actions of the enemy. Be careful lest your preventive measures teach the enemy which of his possible actions you most fear. |
|||
* By the time of [[Augustine of Hippo|Augustine (354-430 AD)]], the [[Roman Empire]] had become an Empire of lies. It still pretended to uphold the [[rule of law]], to protect the people from the [[Barbarian]] invaders, to maintain the social order. But all that had become a bad joke for the citizens of an empire by then reduced to nothing more than a giant military machine dedicated to oppressing the poor in order to maintain the privileges of the rich. The Empire itself had become a lie: that it existed because of the favor of the Gods who rewarded the Romans because of their moral virtues. Nobody could believe in that anymore: it was the breakdown of the very fabric of society; the loss of what the ancient called the auctoritas, the trust that citizens had toward their leaders and the institutions of their state. |
|||
** Chapter: Tidal Basin |
|||
** [[Noam Chomsky]], Cassandra’s Legacy, The Empire of Lies, February 8, 2016, quoted in [https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/07/12/a-world-of-total-illusion-and-fantasy-an-interview-with-noam-chomsky/ A World of Total Illusion and Fantasy: Noam Chomsky on the Future of the Planet, Robert Hunziker, ''CounterPunch''] (12 July 2021) |
|||
* It was this idea (Be nice!) that fueled [[Liberalism|liberals]]' rage at [[Ronald Reagan|Reagan]] when he vanquished the [[Soviet Union]] with his macho "cowboy diplomacy" that was going to get us all blown up. As the [[The New York Times|Times]] editorial page [[W:Hysteria|hysterically]] described Reagan's first year in office: "Mr. Reagan looked at the world through gun sights." Yes, he did! And now the Evil Empire is no more. |
|||
* War triggers human inventiveness at the most brilliant, because if you don't win your wars, your civilization disappears. |
|||
** [[Ann Coulter]], "Are videotaped beheadings covered by Geneva?" (20 September 2006) |
|||
=== D === |
|||
* While war is the ultimate expression of mistrust, it cannot be waged without absolute trust. A soldier trusts his comrades to stand beside him and his commander to lead him wisely, so that he will not be led to a meaningless death. And the commander trusts his subordinates and soldiers to act with wisdom and courage in order to compensate for his own ignorance, stupidity, incompetence, and fear, which all commanders possess in ample measure. |
|||
* When I was a kid, I would sit on the floor of my house in Mumbai and I would read about the great nations, the great empires. The [[Roman Empire]], the [[Ottoman Empire]], the [[British Empire]]... they all came and they all went. But I always thought there was one exception to that rule, and that's the [[United States of America]], which is a different kind of empire, if it's an empire at all. It's an empire of ideals. |
|||
** [[Dinesh D'Souza]], ''[[2016: Obama's America]]'' (2012) |
|||
=== E === |
|||
* There are hard wars and easy wars. It's easy to conquer a country whose people hate their own government more than they hate the invaders. It's hard to fight a war when your army knows that back home, their families are rooting for the other side. |
|||
* [<nowiki/>[[Aeneid|Aeneas]]] is the symbol of [[Rome]]; and, as Aeneas is to Rome, so is [[w:Ancient Rome|ancient Rome]] to [[Europe]]. Thus [[Virgil]] acquires the centrality of the unique classic; he is at the centre of [[W:Western Civilization|European civilisation]], in a position which no other poet can share or usurp. The Roman Empire and the [[Latin|Latin language]] were not any empire and any [[language]], but an empire and a language with a unique destiny in relation to ourselves, and the poet in whom that Empire and that language came to consciousness and expression is a poet of unique destiny. [...] No modern language can hope to produce a classic, in the sense in which I have called [[Virgil]] a classic. Our classic, the classic of all [[Europe]], is Virgil. |
|||
** [[T. S. Eliot]], "What is a Classic?" (1944) |
|||
== |
=== F === |
||
* Three things seem to me necessary to explain the extreme violence of the twentieth century, and in particular why so much of it happened at certain times, notably the early 1940s, and in certain places, specifically [[East/Central Europe|Central and Eastern Europe]], [[w:Manchuria|Manchuria]] and [[Korea]]. These may be summarized as ethnic conflict, economic volatility and empires in decline. By ethnic conflict, I mean major discontinuities in the social relations between certain [[Ethnicity|ethnic groups]], specifically the breakdown of sometimes quite far-advanced processes of assimilation. This process was greatly stimulated in the [[20th century|twentieth century]] by the dissemination of the hereditary principle in [[Racism|theories of racial difference]] (even as that principle was waning in the realm of politics) and by the political fragmentation of ‘borderland’ regions of ethnically mixed settlement. By economic volatility I mean the frequency and amplitude of changes in the rate of economic growth, prices, interest rates and employment, with all the associated social stresses and strains. And by empires in decline I mean the decomposition of the [[Multiculturalism|multinational]] European empires that had dominated the world at the beginning of the century and the challenge posed to them by the emergence of new ‘empire-states’ in [[Turkey]], [[Russia]], [[Japan]] and [[Germany]]. This is also what I have in mind when I identify ‘the descent of the West’ as the most important development of the [[20th century|twentieth century]]. Powerful though the [[United States]] was at the [[Aftermath of World War II|end of the Second World War]] — the apogee of its unspoken empire — it was still much less powerful than the [[Europe|European]] empires had been forty-five years before. |
|||
⚫ | |||
** [[Niall Ferguson]], ''The War of the Worlds'' (2006), p. xl |
|||
*[[Orson Scott Card]] |
|||
*[[Ender's Game]] |
|||
*[[Speaker for the Dead]] |
|||
*[[Xenocide]] |
|||
*[[Children of the Mind]] |
|||
*[[Shadow Puppets]] |
|||
*[[Ender's Shadow]] |
|||
== |
=== G === |
||
* The various modes of [[worship]], which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people, as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful. |
|||
{{wikipedia|Empire (2006 novel)}} |
|||
** [[Edward Gibbon]], ''[[The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire]]'' (1776), Volume 1, Chapter 2 |
|||
* [http://www.hatrack.com The official Orson Scott Card website] |
|||
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=0dkjJ70wATEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=empire+by+orson+scott+card&ei=mPJ_S6yxPI7YM5_K1JoH&cd=1#v=onepage&q=&f=false Empire preview on Google Books] |
|||
* Overcoming an imperial past is never easy for any country, Nikolay Eppl says, because it requires the rejection of the imperial [[ideas]] that had been at the core of national [[identity]] and the acceptance of the genuine [[independence]] of former [[colonies]] that the metropolitan center had long considered its own. |
|||
[[Category:Science fiction books]] |
|||
** {{w|Paul A. Goble}}, [https://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/05/russia-destroying-itself-by-trying-to.html "Russia Destroying Itself by Trying to Maintain Its Former Empire, Eppl Says"], ''Window on Eurasia'' (May 15, 2024) |
|||
[[Category:Novels]] |
|||
[[Category:Orson Scott Card books]] |
|||
* Russian regionalists and non-Russian nationalists must recognize that they live in a territorial rather than a colonial empire and that as a result, the demise of the Russian one is almost certain to be more explosive and protracted than the other kind, Andrey Smirnov, a Siberian activist says.<br>He argues that there are “two polar types of empire, the territorial and the colonial,” and that they arise, live and die in fundamentally different ways. Territorial empires arise when a state expands either by attraction or by force and wants to transform its acquisitions into a people just like those at its center ([http://region.expert/imperii/ region.expert/imperii/]).<br>Colonial empires in contrast, Smirnov continues, start with a nation state that is not interested in spreading its culture but rather in extracting resources for itself. The British empire had no interest in transforming the peoples of India into Englishmen, a sharp contrast with the Russian empire, an empire of the territorial kind, which wanted to make others into Russians. |
|||
[[eo:Imperio]] |
|||
** {{w|Paul A. Goble}}, [https://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2024/03/unlike-empires-with-nation-states-at.html "Unlike Empires with Nation States at Their Centers, Those Like the Russian which Lack One Live and Die Violently, Smirnov Says"], ''Window on Eurasia'' (March 20, 2024) |
|||
** Curator's Note: A probably more accurate term is "economic" rather than "colonial" to describe an empire. |
|||
=== H === |
|||
* [[Christianity]], with its strong emphasis on unity under one God (an emphasis that it shares with [[Islam]]), can seem an almost natural ally of empire—unless, of course, the prophetic-critical dimension of the biblical tradition, which the Jesus of the [[w:Synoptic Gospels|synoptics]] certainly represented, is allowed a hearing. But as the history of [[w:Christology|Christology]] in the West easily demonstrates, after the establishment of Christianity, the prophetic office of the Christ, based not only on [[Jesus]]’ teaching but (even more so) on his suffering at the hands of power, was definitely subdued in favor of his priestly and kingly offices. Triumphant peoples, successful peoples, possessing peoples—empires!—do not want crucified criminals as their chief cultic symbol, especially not when they themselves are the crucifiers ... as they regularly are! |
|||
** [[Douglas John Hall]], "Where in the World Are We?" [[w:Princeton University|Princeton]] [http://www.ptsem.edu/lectures/?action=tei&id=youth-2006-01 Lectures on Youth, Church, and Culture] (2006) |
|||
* Cultural elites in countries that dominate peoples have adapted subject people’s religion for their own purposes. |
|||
** [[Richard A. Horsley]], ''Religion and Empire: People, Power, and the Life of the Spirit'' (2003), p. 12. ISBN 0800636317. |
|||
=== J === |
|||
* Amerika faces no meaningful threat to its security except from those who live within its own territorial borders.<br>The domestic upheavals of the [[1960s|1960’s]] and [[1970s|70’s]] taught empire some valuable lessons on just how dangerous an informed and discontent population can be. As a result, and through a steady application of [[misinformation]], carrots, and sticks, empire has worked steadily to drain the focus, resolve, and militancy of the informed and discontented. From that point to this, empire has manufactured a discontinuity in popular struggle, while maintaining continuity in its own growth and consolidation. One of the empire’s principal tools and weapons has been its prisons. |
|||
** [[Kevin Rashid Johnson]], ''Defying the Tomb: Selected Prison Writings and Art of Kevin Rashid Johnson'' (2010)\ |
|||
=== K === |
|||
* Empires have no interest in operating within an [[International relations|international system]]; they aspire to ''be'' the international system. Empires have no need for a balance of power. That is how the [[United States]] has conducted [[Foreign policy of the United States|its foreign policy]] in the [[Americas]], and [[China]] through most of its history in [[Asia]]. |
|||
** [[Henry Kissinger]], [https://books.google.com/books?id=VPHQMG3Ue1wC&pg=PA21 ''Diplomacy''] (1994), p. 21 |
|||
=== M === |
|||
* States and empires have grown through wars of conquest or when weaker powers have capitulated to them rather than engage in a hopeless one-sided struggle. The [[Athens|Athenians]] used their navy and their land forces to bring their neighbours under their control. [[Alexander the Great]] led his armies to build a vast empire. The [[Roman Empire|Roman legions]] marched outwards from [[Rome]] conquering as they went. [[China]] was once divided among some 150 small states which were gradually consolidated in a painful and bloody process. The Chinese still remember with horror their [[w:Warring_States_period|Warring States period]] from the fifth to the third century BC, when the remaining handful of states fought an endless series of wars and the people were ground down and impoverished. The [[Qin Shi Huang|Qin Emperor]] who finally brought the different states under his control in 221 BC was a ruthless tyrant, but he has been remembered with [[gratitude]] as the ruler who brought peace and order to China. He was buried in Xi’an with ranks of terracotta soldiers, a fitting reminder of the role that military force had played in creating his state. Closer to our own times, [[w:Prussia|Prussia]], that patchwork collection of territories, used its army to accumulate more and more territory and ultimately to create modern [[Germany]]. The [[Soviet Union|Soviet Empire]] in the [[Cold War]] was acquired and held down by the [[Red Army]]. |
|||
** [[Margaret MacMillan]], ''War: How Conflict Shaped Us'' (2020) |
|||
=== P === |
|||
* Empires are inherently politically unstable because subordinate units almost always prefer greater autonomy, and counterelites in such units almost always act, upon opportunity, to obtain greater autonomy. In this sense, empires do not fall; they rather fall apart, usually very slowly, though sometimes remarkably quickly. |
|||
** Donald J. Puchala, "Theory and History in International Relations", p.56. |
|||
=== R === |
|||
* So, in your discussions of the [[w:Nuclear_freeze|nuclear freeze]] proposals, I urge you to beware the temptation of pride, the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of [[history]] and the aggressive impulses of an [[Soviet Union|evil empire]], to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between [[right and wrong]] and [[good and evil]]. |
|||
** [[Ronald Reagan]], Speech to the National Association of Evangelicals (8 March 1983) |
|||
=== S === |
|||
* Every single empire in its official discourse has said that it is not like all the others, that its circumstances are special, that it has a mission to enlighten, civilize, bring order and [[democracy]], and that it uses force only as a last resort. And, sadder still, there always is a chorus of willing intellectuals to say calming words about benign or altruistic empires, as if one shouldn't trust the evidence of one's eyes watching the destruction and the misery and death brought by the latest ''[[w:Civilizing mission|mission civilizatrice]]''. |
|||
** [[Edward Said]], ''[[w:Orientalism (book)|Orientalism]]'',(1978), p.XXI. ISBN 0804153868. |
|||
== See also == |
|||
* [[Colonialism]] |
|||
* [[Imperialism]] |
|||
⚫ | |||
== External links == |
|||
* {{Wikipedia-inline}} |
|||
* [https://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com/2022/02/how-empires-die.html "How Empires Die"] by Charles Hugh Smith (February 7, 2022) |
Latest revision as of 22:20, 20 May 2024
An empire is an aggregate of nations or peoples ruled by a single sovereign government.
Quotes
[edit]B
[edit]- The world is full of the markers of abandoned empires, from Hadrian’s Wall to the Great Wall of China, from the remnants of the one in Arizona to the remnants of the one in Berlin.
- Elizabeth Bear, The Hand is Quicker— (2014), reprinted in Rich Horton (ed.), The Year’s Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2015 (p. 430)
C
[edit]- By the time of Augustine (354-430 AD), the Roman Empire had become an Empire of lies. It still pretended to uphold the rule of law, to protect the people from the Barbarian invaders, to maintain the social order. But all that had become a bad joke for the citizens of an empire by then reduced to nothing more than a giant military machine dedicated to oppressing the poor in order to maintain the privileges of the rich. The Empire itself had become a lie: that it existed because of the favor of the Gods who rewarded the Romans because of their moral virtues. Nobody could believe in that anymore: it was the breakdown of the very fabric of society; the loss of what the ancient called the auctoritas, the trust that citizens had toward their leaders and the institutions of their state.
- Noam Chomsky, Cassandra’s Legacy, The Empire of Lies, February 8, 2016, quoted in A World of Total Illusion and Fantasy: Noam Chomsky on the Future of the Planet, Robert Hunziker, CounterPunch (12 July 2021)
- It was this idea (Be nice!) that fueled liberals' rage at Reagan when he vanquished the Soviet Union with his macho "cowboy diplomacy" that was going to get us all blown up. As the Times editorial page hysterically described Reagan's first year in office: "Mr. Reagan looked at the world through gun sights." Yes, he did! And now the Evil Empire is no more.
- Ann Coulter, "Are videotaped beheadings covered by Geneva?" (20 September 2006)
D
[edit]- When I was a kid, I would sit on the floor of my house in Mumbai and I would read about the great nations, the great empires. The Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the British Empire... they all came and they all went. But I always thought there was one exception to that rule, and that's the United States of America, which is a different kind of empire, if it's an empire at all. It's an empire of ideals.
- Dinesh D'Souza, 2016: Obama's America (2012)
E
[edit]- [Aeneas] is the symbol of Rome; and, as Aeneas is to Rome, so is ancient Rome to Europe. Thus Virgil acquires the centrality of the unique classic; he is at the centre of European civilisation, in a position which no other poet can share or usurp. The Roman Empire and the Latin language were not any empire and any language, but an empire and a language with a unique destiny in relation to ourselves, and the poet in whom that Empire and that language came to consciousness and expression is a poet of unique destiny. [...] No modern language can hope to produce a classic, in the sense in which I have called Virgil a classic. Our classic, the classic of all Europe, is Virgil.
- T. S. Eliot, "What is a Classic?" (1944)
F
[edit]- Three things seem to me necessary to explain the extreme violence of the twentieth century, and in particular why so much of it happened at certain times, notably the early 1940s, and in certain places, specifically Central and Eastern Europe, Manchuria and Korea. These may be summarized as ethnic conflict, economic volatility and empires in decline. By ethnic conflict, I mean major discontinuities in the social relations between certain ethnic groups, specifically the breakdown of sometimes quite far-advanced processes of assimilation. This process was greatly stimulated in the twentieth century by the dissemination of the hereditary principle in theories of racial difference (even as that principle was waning in the realm of politics) and by the political fragmentation of ‘borderland’ regions of ethnically mixed settlement. By economic volatility I mean the frequency and amplitude of changes in the rate of economic growth, prices, interest rates and employment, with all the associated social stresses and strains. And by empires in decline I mean the decomposition of the multinational European empires that had dominated the world at the beginning of the century and the challenge posed to them by the emergence of new ‘empire-states’ in Turkey, Russia, Japan and Germany. This is also what I have in mind when I identify ‘the descent of the West’ as the most important development of the twentieth century. Powerful though the United States was at the end of the Second World War — the apogee of its unspoken empire — it was still much less powerful than the European empires had been forty-five years before.
- Niall Ferguson, The War of the Worlds (2006), p. xl
G
[edit]- The various modes of worship, which prevailed in the Roman world, were all considered by the people, as equally true; by the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as equally useful.
- Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (1776), Volume 1, Chapter 2
- Overcoming an imperial past is never easy for any country, Nikolay Eppl says, because it requires the rejection of the imperial ideas that had been at the core of national identity and the acceptance of the genuine independence of former colonies that the metropolitan center had long considered its own.
- Paul A. Goble, "Russia Destroying Itself by Trying to Maintain Its Former Empire, Eppl Says", Window on Eurasia (May 15, 2024)
- Russian regionalists and non-Russian nationalists must recognize that they live in a territorial rather than a colonial empire and that as a result, the demise of the Russian one is almost certain to be more explosive and protracted than the other kind, Andrey Smirnov, a Siberian activist says.
He argues that there are “two polar types of empire, the territorial and the colonial,” and that they arise, live and die in fundamentally different ways. Territorial empires arise when a state expands either by attraction or by force and wants to transform its acquisitions into a people just like those at its center (region.expert/imperii/).
Colonial empires in contrast, Smirnov continues, start with a nation state that is not interested in spreading its culture but rather in extracting resources for itself. The British empire had no interest in transforming the peoples of India into Englishmen, a sharp contrast with the Russian empire, an empire of the territorial kind, which wanted to make others into Russians.- Paul A. Goble, "Unlike Empires with Nation States at Their Centers, Those Like the Russian which Lack One Live and Die Violently, Smirnov Says", Window on Eurasia (March 20, 2024)
- Curator's Note: A probably more accurate term is "economic" rather than "colonial" to describe an empire.
H
[edit]- Christianity, with its strong emphasis on unity under one God (an emphasis that it shares with Islam), can seem an almost natural ally of empire—unless, of course, the prophetic-critical dimension of the biblical tradition, which the Jesus of the synoptics certainly represented, is allowed a hearing. But as the history of Christology in the West easily demonstrates, after the establishment of Christianity, the prophetic office of the Christ, based not only on Jesus’ teaching but (even more so) on his suffering at the hands of power, was definitely subdued in favor of his priestly and kingly offices. Triumphant peoples, successful peoples, possessing peoples—empires!—do not want crucified criminals as their chief cultic symbol, especially not when they themselves are the crucifiers ... as they regularly are!
- Douglas John Hall, "Where in the World Are We?" Princeton Lectures on Youth, Church, and Culture (2006)
- Cultural elites in countries that dominate peoples have adapted subject people’s religion for their own purposes.
- Richard A. Horsley, Religion and Empire: People, Power, and the Life of the Spirit (2003), p. 12. ISBN 0800636317.
J
[edit]- Amerika faces no meaningful threat to its security except from those who live within its own territorial borders.
The domestic upheavals of the 1960’s and 70’s taught empire some valuable lessons on just how dangerous an informed and discontent population can be. As a result, and through a steady application of misinformation, carrots, and sticks, empire has worked steadily to drain the focus, resolve, and militancy of the informed and discontented. From that point to this, empire has manufactured a discontinuity in popular struggle, while maintaining continuity in its own growth and consolidation. One of the empire’s principal tools and weapons has been its prisons.- Kevin Rashid Johnson, Defying the Tomb: Selected Prison Writings and Art of Kevin Rashid Johnson (2010)\
K
[edit]- Empires have no interest in operating within an international system; they aspire to be the international system. Empires have no need for a balance of power. That is how the United States has conducted its foreign policy in the Americas, and China through most of its history in Asia.
- Henry Kissinger, Diplomacy (1994), p. 21
M
[edit]- States and empires have grown through wars of conquest or when weaker powers have capitulated to them rather than engage in a hopeless one-sided struggle. The Athenians used their navy and their land forces to bring their neighbours under their control. Alexander the Great led his armies to build a vast empire. The Roman legions marched outwards from Rome conquering as they went. China was once divided among some 150 small states which were gradually consolidated in a painful and bloody process. The Chinese still remember with horror their Warring States period from the fifth to the third century BC, when the remaining handful of states fought an endless series of wars and the people were ground down and impoverished. The Qin Emperor who finally brought the different states under his control in 221 BC was a ruthless tyrant, but he has been remembered with gratitude as the ruler who brought peace and order to China. He was buried in Xi’an with ranks of terracotta soldiers, a fitting reminder of the role that military force had played in creating his state. Closer to our own times, Prussia, that patchwork collection of territories, used its army to accumulate more and more territory and ultimately to create modern Germany. The Soviet Empire in the Cold War was acquired and held down by the Red Army.
- Margaret MacMillan, War: How Conflict Shaped Us (2020)
P
[edit]- Empires are inherently politically unstable because subordinate units almost always prefer greater autonomy, and counterelites in such units almost always act, upon opportunity, to obtain greater autonomy. In this sense, empires do not fall; they rather fall apart, usually very slowly, though sometimes remarkably quickly.
- Donald J. Puchala, "Theory and History in International Relations", p.56.
R
[edit]- So, in your discussions of the nuclear freeze proposals, I urge you to beware the temptation of pride, the temptation of blithely declaring yourselves above it all and label both sides equally at fault, to ignore the facts of history and the aggressive impulses of an evil empire, to simply call the arms race a giant misunderstanding and thereby remove yourself from the struggle between right and wrong and good and evil.
- Ronald Reagan, Speech to the National Association of Evangelicals (8 March 1983)
S
[edit]- Every single empire in its official discourse has said that it is not like all the others, that its circumstances are special, that it has a mission to enlighten, civilize, bring order and democracy, and that it uses force only as a last resort. And, sadder still, there always is a chorus of willing intellectuals to say calming words about benign or altruistic empires, as if one shouldn't trust the evidence of one's eyes watching the destruction and the misery and death brought by the latest mission civilizatrice.
- Edward Said, Orientalism,(1978), p.XXI. ISBN 0804153868.
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Encyclopedic article on Empire on Wikipedia
- "How Empires Die" by Charles Hugh Smith (February 7, 2022)