"Mortal Republic" - How Rome Fell Into Tyranny

David Trammel's picture

Vox has an interview with Edward Watts, author of a new book on the Fall of the Roman Republic government.

"What America can learn from the fall of the Roman republic"

Some interesting similarities to our modern American government today.

If you were a Roman citizen around, say, 200 BC, you probably would have assumed Rome was going to last forever. At the time, Rome was the greatest republic in human history, and its institutions had proven resilient through invasions and all kinds of disasters. But the foundations of Rome started to weaken less than a century later, and by 27 BC the republic had collapsed entirely.

The story of Rome’s fall is both complicated and relatively straightforward: The state became too big and chaotic; the influence of money and private interests corrupted public institutions; and social and economic inequalities became so large that citizens lost faith in the system altogether and gradually fell into the arms of tyrants and demagogues.


If all of that sounds familiar, well, that’s because the parallels to our current political moment are striking. Edward Watts, a historian at the University of California San Diego, has just published a new book titled Mortal Republic that carefully lays out what went wrong in ancient Rome — and how the lessons of its decline might help save fledgling republics like the United States today.

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As much as the current dysfunction is eating up the News discussions, I don't think the current president is the last of the type. I expect a pull back when he leaves office into more "business as was usual", until the next stair step downward economically gives rise to another "Caesar".