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1818 Aug. 25
Government
Things as they are: or First lines &c.
§.1. Misrule Necessity
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9. In /Under/ a democracy whether self ruling or representative, self-regarding interest will in like manner be in every breast predominant. It will therefore be so in the breast of every member of the representative body. On such occasions Every such member would if he could sacrifice to his own personal interest the interest of the whole people. Without the concurrence of a majority of that whole body no such member can make any such sacrifice /as such can do that or any thing else/. If a majority could agree and continue long enough in such their trust they would act as an aristocracy, they would sacrifice the interest of the rest of the people to that interest which they have in common. But, by the supposition, acting on this ocasion they can not continue long enough in such their trust /situation/. For power on one part exerts not but in proportion to obedience /obsequiousness/ on the other. What the people are disposed to is to pay obedience /shew obsequiousness/ to the objects of their confidence, so long as but no longer than, they are regarded by them as abstaining from those acts by which the interest of the people is /would be/ sacrificed to the interests of all or any of these their delegates and so long as they continue so, their rulers. In the event of his concurring in the endeavour to make any such sacrifice, that which no such representative sees before him is any tolerable /considerable/ chance of success: that which every one sees before him is a certainty of dismission which is itself a punishment, coupled with a chance more or less considerable of ulterior punishment.
Under a Monarchy no such unpleasant chance does the Monarch see: under an Aristocracy no such unpleasnt chance does any member of the Aristocracy see.
A representative democracy is therefore not a government of misrule: and it is the only one that is not so. it is in its essence a good government; and the only one that is so.
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Title: [[lxxxiv. 130] 1822 Jany 30 B ulto]Description: [lxxxiv. 130] 1822 Jany 30 B ulto Codification Offer ulto ?.5. Admission Universal ?.5. Members unapt After inserting the Explanation as above go on there. In every government, with only the above mentioned exeption the ruling few with the assistance of portion more or less considerable of such of the influential few as are not of the number of the ruling few, are, ever have been, and ever will be continually occupied in the making of the sinister sacrifice. With the exception of a headless Aristocracy, the examples of which past and present are too few in number and extent, and at the same time too incapable of encrease to present on the present occasion a demand for any further notice, all /every/ governments that is, has been, or ever will be are either pure Monarchy, a mixt Monarchy or pure Representative Democracy. 1. In a pure Represenatative Democracy the sinister sacrifice is to any considerable extent, manifestly impracticable: it is therefore never endeavoured to be made In a pure Monarchy the sinister sacrifice is already consummated. In a Mixt Monarchy, it is made by degrees by a junction /the joint [...?]/ between the Monarch and the Representatives of the people. Like the human body It contains in it the seeds of its own [...?], and sooner or later that [...?] is virtue and [...?] According to the mutual disposition of these two antagonizing powers /forces/ with relation to one another. As these two powers have a conjunct sinister interest, so has each of them a separate sinister interest. According as the one or the other prevails, they will at each moment of time be in a state of conflict or of amity. At a time of /In case of/ continued conflict the representati of the people, if they have the people on their side will rid themselves of the Monarch. If they continue in a state of [...?] they will go, making [?] on each occasion the sinister sacrifice, till at length the system of oppression and depredation being given institution, the people will rid themselves of both together and on the ruin of the Monarchic Aristocratical tyranny set up a pure democracy
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