Lord_of_War wrote:As for the HRE I still believe that any strife does weaken ones willingness to work together.
As I said, I'm sure there's a balance to be struck. It's not like I'm saying "the moar war, the better". And I'm sure that argument carries some truth, but that doesn't mean that it's the only or ultimate truth. Balance and moderation, &c&c.
Lord_of_War wrote:I forget the battle but it was The Coalition vs Napoleon and their greater numbers failed because they lacked the proper cooperation and organization.
In this greater context, I would like to point out that the Napoleonic wars are one particular example, and that the Empire had already survived for almost a thousand years through a diversity of adversities.
Lord_of_War wrote:Furthermore when the ottomans attacked weren't they stopped so successfully that they never made it to Vienna? ¦]
They got through various non-Imperial lands to Vienna, where they were immediately stopped, indeed. Your point? ¦]
Lord_of_War wrote:As for the united states, our current government while technically remaining a republic made up of politically independent states has been perverted to the extreme that it is no longer the Republic the founders envisaged. The states are completely economically dependent on the federal government and states power is an absolute joke. You should come over here and see for yourself. You also misinterpret our constitution. One example, While the president may ask for a declaration of war it is Congress that must approve it, and Congress is theoretically beholden to the states.
I am, of course, very well aware of all these things. I'm not sure what made you think otherwise.
Lord_of_War wrote:So your claim that Declaration of War is a federal power is questionable to say the least.
I never said it is a federal power (though it is; your arguments are invalid, but that's uninteresting). I only said that the declaration of independence states the power of levy war as a power rightly belonging to independent states.
Lord_of_War wrote:Afraid not. [blah blah]
The Kaiser's political situation at the beginning of the Great War was immensely complex, and my point was just that you can't use him as some kind of prime example of a nobleman triggering war. As one of many examples of a presentation of the opposite position, you can check this out. And keep in mind that I'm not upholding that as some kind of absolute truth, but rather as a way of exemplifying the complexity of the matter.
Lord_of_War wrote:Whilst England and a few others are advanced in this regard it is not wholly representative of the whole of Europe or the whole of European history.
Of course not. That's why I said "the specifically British doctrine". It was just one little window into the greater matter. :)
Lord_of_War wrote:Example, Louis XIV.
I know le Roi-Soleil is popularly used as an example of a despot, but I doubt this is true. French constitutional history is a matter that I'm having trouble finding good information on, but what I have found thus far leads me to doubt that any French kind had such absolute power as has been said since the revolution (and I would not be the least surprised if this is just a Jacobin smearing of the King). I guess I just need to learn French.
Lord_of_War wrote:A parliament seemed to work out well.
For England, perhaps. I think that is, however, "not wholly representative of the whole of Europe". ^^
Lord_of_War wrote:Isn't using Sweden as an example cheating? ¦]
Is it? :) It has been easier for me to study, for obvious reasons.
Lord_of_War wrote:Do regale me with the history of the united states!
The history of the United States seems to have little relevance to any discussion of traditional societies or the Holy Roman Empire specifically. :)
Lord_of_War wrote:Personally I refer to prospecting how these more archaic forms of government would deal with modern corruption.
By not having instituted it in the first place? :) That question seems to me to be like asking how a horse would deal with a breakdown of its piston rings. :)
As a final note, it seems this discussion is branching off into a tad too many irrelevant subjects. :P