OGEvilgenius
Well-Known Member
People need something to believe in on some level. Everyone does. It's partly why governments can exist, but also because of external threats (which is the primary reason). Any government needs to be almost non existent in terms of power. With no ability to write new law beyond the constitution and limited actual uses. Basically it exists but doesn't do anything. It's more a principle than a functional thing. And the politicians with any kind of power should face serious penalties for even minor infractions.It was ever-escalating war that led to social systems like the Greek poleis and the feudal systems worldwide. A resource that becomes very important as a war society matures is the willing subscription to the idea of joining the local potentate's army in order to protect homeland and culture. Most systems of government evolved to find the best compromise between defensibility and long-term prosperity. Only the latter will grow enough healthy and motivated participants in the defense force to hold off reasonably extrapolable future threats by either enemy armies or bandits.
Such a system has its instabilities. The expansionist intervals under e.g. Alexander and Genghis were the showy exceptions, and they didn't outlast their architects.
At some point humanity has to evolve. Governments have a terrible history and no current system is a good one. Anarchy would be superior if not perfect. But it's not what I envision.