Under a Type 1, laws are (if not wholly just) deterministic & impartial, and people don't usually make a fuss about the imperfections. 4/
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Replying to @CTZN5
Type 2 can't help but flagrantly conflate social class with actual legal rights, and give each other special treatment under the law. 5/
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Replying to @CTZN5
A hallmark of a strong Type 1 is that they punish their own violations MORE severely than identical infractions among the lower classes. 6/
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Replying to @CTZN5
A hallmark of a rotting Type 2 is stuff like the above. Such blatant dual standards break the illusion of a "rule of law" society. 7/
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Replying to @eli_schiff
@eli_schiff Most recently, the aristocrats Keynes grew up around. Greece for a bit; Rome for a bit; Japan (seems now slipping toward 2)@vgr1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @CTZN5
@eli_schiff Basically any civilization that ever amounted to anything in the world, was at its peak a country with a Type 1 noble class@vgr1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @CTZN5
@eli_schiff Variations on "Republics" seem most resistant to this downward slide, among the classifications of govs we use@vgr4 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @CTZN5
@CTZN5@eli_schiff read Fukuyama's 2 vol magisterial account yet?1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @vgr
@vgr no, I've generally avoided corrupting my mind with political texts. Is it good? My own theories are fully developed now so@eli_schiff2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
@CTZN5 @eli_schiff that's the best time to challenge yourself :) fully developed means you're at republic --> empire cusp personally 
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