NecronLord wrote: 2018-08-23 05:35am
Corruption - My earlier comments
The most revealing source on this topic is surely
Plagueis which shows the degree to which the sith were actually responsible for the corruption of the Republic, such as it is.
And the Republic honestly isn't that corrupt - we don't see bribes being paid on an everyday basis, nor does anyone we see from the Republic police - for instance - seem to expect such things, though of course we only see them on murder investigations most of the time.
We also don't know how true some things are. The Courts are gridlocked and inefficient? So much so that they do not function? Is that true... or is Palpatine simply keen not having the Niemodians cross examined by a talented lawyer? Does Doltray Dofine look like someone who would be cool on a witness stand? He's not exactly calm and collected when confronted by Jedi.
The thing is the conspiracy presented in Darth Plageuis owes a lot conceptually to New World Order type antics, in which the majority of those affected by the corruption of the Republic regularly visit Darth Plagueis (and then Palpatine's) secret retreat to recieve marching orders and to make their back-room details, and it is made clear that a lot of this is directly orchastrated by the sith.
It is not institutional corruption in the way of a real world failed state, it is corruption in the mould tinfoil hat conspiracy theorists fear; top down managed corruption.
Do you feel that the real world is corrupt? Like no we don't see bribes being paid on an everyday basis, but that's because sacks of cash are very crass. When China gives a great deal to Ivanka Trump's clothing line and Trump backs of Taiwan being separate from China as a result, is that a bribe? When Timothy Geitner protects private equity and predatory loan practices from prosecution and then heads up a firm where he rakes it in as a private equity specialist focused on predator lending, how about that?
Do you feel that justice and democracy are part of daily life in the United States?
Because here's the thing, the stuff that brought about our present situation is what is recapped in Plagueis with a veneer of star wars-ism smeared on top of it. Like the way he portrays Sith doctrine is basically a copy paste from The Reactionary Mind. And what we saw of the end was pretty textbook as well -why reinvent history after all?
We more or less know how the Republic fell. You had great colonial powers having parties that existed to deliver on their specific interests, not ideological interests but specific geographic and class interests. You had the core powers dominating outward and the rimward pushing back, upending things and getting additional votes in the senate, defending their own interests. And of course as it is turtles all the way down you had the leaders of those rim powers upset with pro-democracy pushes from below them. And over the course of decades the Sith through their parties and retreats and institutes and books and treatises and think tanks brought about those parties to framing their pursuit of those interests in terms of Sith doctrine about the need of the strong to dominate, the pursuit of power, how you proved power and worthiness in business, hunting, and on the battlefield, and how the modern constraints of the republic stiffled it all. So you had growing disillusionment of popular democracy framed as a loss of decisive action like in "the good old days"
That's step one.
That the corruption we see is small and direct is the result of how the novels focus, not limiting what is happening. That Sidious kept the Niemodians off the stand is fairly small yes, but that the system is so broken that he could easily and secretly do so is the greater corruption we are told was happening. Bounty Hunters instead of police, mercenaries instead of state controlled armies, murder, bribery, blackmail...but more to the point the regular soft bribery of there being no consequences for the elites, while dire for the poor. That it is so rare for the rich and powerful to see any consequences for their actions that one of them doing so is a heroic tale is a pretty good indicator that the widespread corruption and backscratching is widely spread. And to this comes the New Order movement, pledging reform and anti corruption - not in the form of a redistribution of power, but in the maintaining of the present system but with coercive force. From this come people like the Sieners, the Tarkins, the Tagges and Palpatine. The movement, in response to deadlock has become a major player.
That's step two.
You had the rise of confrontational parties demanding a massive restructuring of the vote and senate representation; an end of existing business practices and debt peonage, an end to structural bigotry and oppression. It was loose and uncoordinated and had its degrees of extremes, but this was the rising discontent that took the form of splinter cells, strikers, revolutionaries, smugglers with hearts of gold and pirates who gave up the cause for the excuse for more evil. In response to this Valorum invites Palpatine to take a larger role in sharing power hoping that Palpatine and the new order can offset this rising discontent.
That's step three.
Valorum's response was unlikely to work in any case, the source of the discontent was real because you had great powers out causing real misery. But in particular it didn't work because the Sith were aiding and formenting that dissent, pushing the elites to cause more pain as they enacted Sith doctrine while simultaneously giving resources and direction to the people upset to aid their pushback. The keystone here being the Invasion of Naboo. Which lead to Palpatine and the new order movement in control of the state in balance with the Jedi and traditional elites of the core powers.
That's step four.
But of course the rise of Palpatine had a radicalizing effect - the various factions opposing the elites had a situation where the moderates bought in with the new order, and the hardliners were frozen out of power, but were simultaneously proven right and given more resources as the Sith picked where the "reform" took place and who they aided and connected. War broke out and it became instantly disillusioning as mass trauma driven by brutal real-politik saw the "glory" of war revealed as pointless horror. The Republic slipped into traditional authoritarian rule until the time of Order 66 where it fully radicalized.
Step five.
So, the end of the Republic saw political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with community decline, humiliation, or victim-hood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and purity, in which a mass-based party of committed nationalist militants, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites, abandons democratic liberties and pursues with redemptive violence and without ethical or legal restraints goals of internal cleansing.
textbook
To save it, you'd want to either stop the adoption of sith style doctrine from the retreats, or have one of the previous chancellors go full leftist reformist. Anakin's treason mattered in the balance of the divine, but in the profane those dominoes were falling long before Plagueis was born.
It's kinda like how our present situation we see the purge of radicals from unions and capital adopting shareholder value theory, so managerial independence getting neutered as a result, leading to the short termism that even places like Forbes, Bloomberg, and The Economist can't deny. And when you've gutted great swaths of the country and need ever more to prove yourself the elites move into growing disillusionment of popular democracy framed as a loss of decisive action like in "the good old days". So you gerrymander and vote suppress and steal court appointments. That's not going to be enough going forward, because the democrats won't sign on to any more antics so polarization needs to be overcome, for that you need to combat demographics even further, you need to get whites off the bench and poc off the country. So aided by political deadlock and polarization, fascists becomes a player on the national stage. And hey shit Brat just took out Cantor, invite these freaks to share power on the national stage to keep them off your back in the primaries, and the Trump candidacy will flame out in the primaries so you can step back in charge. And if Marco can't get it done, well, Hillary won't forget to go to Wisconsin or actually campaign, right? Well shit, now the movement and its charismatic leader control the state in balance with state institutions such as the police and traditional elites such as the clergy and business magnates. And here we are slipping to stage five. Where the offramp was decades go, giving workers control at the office like in Germany, keeping capital from insisting on its return to dominance with SVT by banning leveraged buyouts (a way to enforce against management) and not tamping down on union actions (management needs a great deal of latitude to balance a well organized and active workforce against organized money), or by not putting filth like Bill Clinton in charge and having had actual reform then instead of continuing republican policies.
But there we are.