Lord_of_War wrote:I don't see how disallowing internal wars would impact sovereignty of small states.
Well now, whatever we may think of the merits and demerits of such things, I would think it is a matter of definition that external constraints of power is a diminution of a state's sovereignty. As you Americans yourselves put it in your declaration of independence: "[...] that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do." ;)
Either way, I don't see that the possibility of internal wars could said to intrinsically weaken the Empire against external attack, just as how the possibility of wars internal to Europe did not seem to weaken her very much to external attack. In the face of greater adversity, people tend to see the necessity to ally themselves. While you can certainly argue that ongoing wars weaken countries economically and whatnot, it is usually possible to put an opposing argument to each such argument, such as constant military training keeping up the general skill level and encouraging people to build capital buffers against war and whatnot. The reality of the situation is likely to be in a balance of many factors and not easily reducible to a single or a few principles.
Lord_of_War wrote:Such as Kaiser Wilhelm.
You mean that noble and benevolent monarch who did his best to keep his realm out of the war to the last moment, as against the pressure of international business interests and English aggression? Yes, I know how popular it is among the victors to blame him for it. ¦]
Lord_of_War wrote:Certainly the idea of training nobility is a good one but one must and should preserve some amount of meritocracy to preserve the standing of the realm and avoid overly poor decisions.
I think you will find that most traditional European states exhibit some or another form of balance between the two, for sure. Extremism is seldom a good way to go, and I don't think anyone would argue that it is. :) In the meantime, I'll leave some
quotes of Blackstone here in the exaltation of the specifically British doctrine on at least some aspects of the matter:
William Blackstone, in his Commentaries on the Laws of England, wrote:The executive power of the English nation being veiled in a single person, by the general consent of the people, the evidence of which general consent is long and immemorial usage, it became necessary to the freedom and peace of the state, that a rule should be laid down, uniform, universal, and permanent ; in order to mark out with precision, who is that single person, to whom are committed (in subservience to the law of the land) the care and protection of the community; and to whom, in return, the duty and allegiance of every individual are due. It is of the highest importance to the public tranquillity, and to the consciences of private men, that this rule should be clear and indisputable
[...]
But history and observation will inform us, that elections of every kind (in the present state of human nature) are too frequently brought about by influence, partiality, and artifice : and, even where the case is otherwise, these practices will be often suspected, and as constantly charged upon the successful, by a splenetic disappointed minority. This is an evil to which all societies are liable ; as well those of a private and domestic kind, as the great community of the public, which regulates and includes the rest. But in the former there is this advantage ; that such suspicions, if false, proceed no farther than jealousies and murmurs, which time will effectually suppress ; and, if true, the injustice may be remedied by legal means, by an appeal to those tribunals to which every member of society has (by becoming such) virtually engaged to submit. Whereas, in the great and independent society, which every nation composes, there is no superior to resort to but the law of nature ; no method to redress the infringements of that law, but the actual exertion of private force. As therefore between two nations, complaining of mutual injuries, the quarrel can only be decided by the law of arms ; so in one and the same nation, when the fundamental principles of their common union are supposed to be invaded, and more especially when the appointment of their chief magistrate is alleged to be unduly made, the only tribunal to which the complainants can appeal is that of the God of battels, the only process by which the appeal can be carried on is that of a civil and intestine war. An hereditary succession to the crown is therefore now established, in this and most other countries, in order to prevent that periodical bloodshed and misery, which the history of antient imperial Rome, and the more modern experience of Poland and Germany, may shew us are the consequences of elective kingdoms.
Lord_of_War wrote:I'm not a sufficient expert on how the aristocracy dealt with corruption historically.
I think you will find that there is no single European (or even Holy Roman) aristocratic tradition that can be examined for its treatment of corruption. ;) If anything common can be said, I would find it to be that corruption within a certain political group was dealt with, quite simply, but the political power of the groups that were the victims of the corruption, and that many traditional societies appear to exhibit a greater internal balance of political powers than modern states do.
In an interesting observation on the heterogeneity of the nobility of Europe, I find that it has been common in Sweden for the King and the commoners to band together against a corrupt nobility (such as in the war of liberation from the Kalmar union of 1523, the great Reductions of the 17th century, or the coup d'état of 1772), while in England it seems to be more common for the nobility and commoners to band together against a corrupt Monarch (such as the rebellion of the Barons of 1215, and a couple of other examples I've observed from time to time but cannot seem to remember right now).
Whereas, in modern society, there is noone to stand against the de-facto ruling class of party apparatchiks, since they pretend to be "of us".