cthia wrote:However, I did not consider that my sentiments would be analyzed out of context. When I say that Manticore has no right to meddle in the SL's Constitution, I stand by it.
If you want to mean moral right, it's your right to have that opinion. It's difficult to debate subjective opinions, instead of hard facts. The fact was that there were requirements imposed in the books and that has happened in real life too, so they can occur.
The other problem with discussing morality, is that it's neither consistent in time nor in space. Different populations will have different moral principles and those will also drift over time. For example, slavery was morally acceptable throughout most of human history and was legal in some jurisdictions as late as 135 years ago [1], but today most people on Earth would say it is not acceptable.
[1] I'm not judging and don't want to get into discussion of whether forced labour of prison inmates, or what may be happening to certain populations in certain countries today is effectively slavery. I'm saying that there are no legal slavery any more.
For instance, war does not give a victor the "right" to do as he pleases. War gives a victor the opportunity to take liberties, yes, but it does not give them a human right to do so.
War does not give a victor an unalienable right to steal a government's priceless heirlooms, yet they oftentimes do. We hear all of the time of how these priceless heirlooms have finally been returned to their rightful resting place after decades.
War does not give a victor the right to rape the women of the conquered, or perform any number of other common atrocities just because they can. Although it has been happening for centuries, civilized governments now ban together to set things right. And these governments call out such acts for what they are. War crimes.
I completely agree. In fact, those are actually war crimes. But defining what is a war crime is a legal determination and that could change over time too. Some practices that we may consider completely legal today, not to say morally acceptable, may not be in 100, 200, or 2000 years from now.
Likewise, IMHO, war does not give a victor the "right" to meddle with another government's Constitution. The fact that it is done anyway does not make it "right" on any moral or human level.
No government will like its precious Constitution being "essentially" written by any foreign power; on that we seem to agree. But definitely not by a conquerer at gunpoint.
That one I disagree with. You appear to have a very US-centric view of how precious a constitution is. Most countries have had several constitutions in their histories, most of which in the last 300 years. Rewriting the Constitution to suit changing times is not uncommon. To give an example of a modern, industrialised country that did so without the force of arms due to losing a war: France. The Fifth Republic and its Constitution were created not because of a change in government type, like what had happened in the First through Fourth Republics, but through vote. That's not to say there weren't internal and external social pressures, but it wasn't a force of arms.
A victor has historically always gotten away with it by having enough weight in the britches to back it up. But if the smaller "nail" in those other britches becomes the hammer then he will likely nail your balls to the wall. So I personally don't recommend toying with an enemy's manhood if he will undoubtedly grow much bigger than you are and want to swallow you whole.
No dispute there.
But there's a difference between something being legally right, morally right, or a good idea. You have the legal right to donate all your money and savings to charity (minus legal obligations you may have incurred, like debts and alimony); some might say this is even morally right and laudable. That wouldn't necessarily make it a good idea.
Constitutions are sacred and this is old Terra, the cradle of civilization. Is there anyone who does not imagine the initial discussion going on in Chambers being something like this ...
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It is their (c)onstitution that needs to be changed. I agree that that is a difficult task to accomplish. But summoning an enemy's demons by inciting the worst ingredients of his (c)onstitution by MEDDLING with his precious, longest lived Constitution doesn't sound like a very good plan to me. YMMV.
Evidence shows that they did not treat such a Constitution in that high a esteem as you attribute to them. Most member systems only paid lip service to it, doing the minimum necessary with their representatives in the Assembly. The effective government of the League also tried to gut it by passing inconstitutional provisions like the direct taxation and saying that the right to secede had lapsed and was ineffective.
I agree that only shows the tendencies of a few. However, if such a Constitution was important to the population at large, they would have risen in anger against those attempts by the government both on Earth and on the closer member systems, and they didn't. What this tells me is that the average Solarian on the street did not care enough about the Solarian Constitution. And as I've said, for the vast majority of the world today, including that of the Western world where Constitutions and the rule of law are a thing, they have little qualms in rewriting those Constitutions from time to time.
Also remember we're told that a Solarian Citizen considers himself first and foremost a citizen of their system, before the League.
It is just not acceptable, and it won't be if something can be done about it down the road. War has always had the unspoken onus of civilized governments to handle victory, well, responsibly.
Again, agreed. Quod vide the Harrington Plan.
Constitutions are personal. Living with the knowledge that their precious Constitution was forced to be rewritten at gunpoint might be a constant source of aggrievement. One doesn't want another's aggrievements to become personal. That is what created many malignant war machines. That is how the MAlign was created.
No, they're not.
They're important, no doubt. But they're not even required for a proper rule of law, at least not as a single, standing document. See "United Kingdom."