How Empires End

Guest Post by Jeff Thomas via International Man

How Empires End

Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny.” – Thomas Jefferson

Histories are generally written by academics. They, quite naturally, tend to focus on the main events: the wars and the struggles between leaders and their opponents (both external and internal). Whilst these are interesting stories to read, academics, by their very nature, often overlook the underlying causes for an empire’s decline.

Today, as in any era, most people are primarily interested in the “news”—the daily information regarding the world’s political leaders and their struggles with one another to obtain, retain, and expand their power. When the history is written about the era we are passing through, it will reflect, in large measure, a rehash of the news. As the media of the day tend to overlook the fact that present events are merely symptoms of an overall decline, so historians tend to focus on major events, rather than the “slow operations” that have been the underlying causes.

The Persian Empire

When, as a boy, I was “educated” about the decline and fall of the Persian Empire, I learned of the final takeover by Alexander the Great but was never told that, in its decline, Persian taxes became heavier and more oppressive, leading to economic depression and revolts, which, in turn led to even heavier taxes and increased repression. Increasingly, kings hoarded gold and silver, keeping it out of circulation from the community. This hamstrung the market, as monetary circulation was insufficient to conduct business. By the time Alexander came along, Persia, weakened by warfare and internal economic strife, was a shell of an empire and was relatively easy to defeat.

The Tang Dynasty

Back then, I also learned that the Tang Dynasty ended as a result of the increased power amongst the eunuchs, battles with fanzhen separatists, and finally, peasants’ revolts. True enough, but I was not taught that the dynasty’s expansion-based warfare demanded increases in taxation, which led to the revolts. Continued warfare necessitated increasing monetary and land extortion by the eunuchs, resulting in an abrupt decrease in food output and further taxes. Finally, as economic deterioration and oppression of the citizenry worsened, citizens left the area entirely for more promise elsewhere.

Is there a pattern here? Let’s have a more detailed look—at another empire.

The Spanish Empire

In 1556, Philip II of Spain inherited what was regarded as Europe’s most wealthy nation, with no apparent economic problems. Yet, by 1598, Spain was bankrupt. How was this possible?

Spain was doing well but sought to become a major power. To achieve this, Philip needed more tax dollars. Beginning in 1561, the existing servicio tax was regularised, and the crusada tax, the excusado tax, and the millones tax were all added by 1590.

Over a period of 39 years (between 1559 and 1598) taxes increased by 430%. Although the elite of the day were exempt from taxation (the elite of today are not officially exempt), the average citizen was taxed to the point that both business expansion and public purchasing diminished dramatically. Wages did not keep pace with the resultant inflation. The price of goods rose 400%, causing a price revolution and a tax revolution.

Although Spain enjoyed a flood of gold and silver from the Americas at this time, the increased wealth went straight into Philip’s war efforts. However, the 100,000 troops were soon failing to return sufficient spoils to Philip to pay for their forays abroad.

In a final effort to float the doomed empire, Philip issued government bonds, which provided immediate cash but created tremendous debt that, presumably, would need to be repaid one day. (The debt grew to 8.8 times GDP.)

Spain declared bankruptcy. Trade slipped to other countries. The military, fighting on three fronts, went unpaid, and military aspirations collapsed.

It is important to note that, even as the empire was collapsing, Philip did not suspend warfare. He did not back off on taxation. Like leaders before and since, he instead stubbornly increased his autocracy as the empire slid into collapse.

Present-Day Empires

Again, the events above are not taught to schoolchildren as being of key importance in the decline of empires, even though they are remarkably consistent with the decline of other empires and what we are seeing today. The very same events occur, falling like dominoes, more or less in order, in any empire, in any age:

  1. The reach of government leaders habitually exceeds their grasp.
  1. Dramatic expansion (generally through warfare) is undertaken without a clear plan as to how that expansion is to be financed.
  1. The population is overtaxed as the bills for expansion become due, without consideration as to whether the population can afford increased taxation.
  1. Heavy taxation causes investment by the private sector to diminish, and the economy begins to decline.
  1. Costs of goods rise, without wages keeping pace.
  1. Tax revenue declines as the economy declines (due to excessive taxation). Taxes are increased again, in order to top up government revenues.
  1. In spite of all the above, government leaders personally hoard as much as they can, further limiting the circulation of wealth in the business community.
  1. Governments issue bonds and otherwise borrow to continue expansion, with no plan as to repayment.
  1. Dramatic authoritarian control is instituted to assure that the public continues to comply with demands, even if those demands cannot be met by the public.
  1. Economic and social collapse occurs, often marked by unrest and riots, the collapse of the economy, and the exit of those who are productive.
  1. In this final period, the empire turns on itself, treating its people as the enemy.

The above review suggests that if our schoolbooks stressed the underlying causes of empire collapse, rather than the names of famous generals and the dates of famous battles, we might be better educated and be less likely to repeat the same mistakes.

Unfortunately, this is unlikely. Chances are, future leaders will be just as uninterested in learning from history as past leaders. They will create empires, then destroy them.

Even the most informative histories of empire decline, such as The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, by Edward Gibbon, will not be of interest to the leaders of empires. They will believe that they are above history and that they, uniquely, will succeed.

If there is any value in learning from the above, it is the understanding that leaders will not be dissuaded from their aspirations. They will continue to charge ahead, both literally and figuratively, regardless of objections and revolts from the citizenry.

Once an empire has reached stage eight above, it never reverses. It is a “dead empire walking” and only awaits the painful playing-out of the final three stages. At that point, it is foolhardy in the extreme to remain and “wait it out” in the hope that the decline will somehow reverse. At that point, the wiser choice might be to follow the cue of the Chinese, the Romans, and others, who instead chose to quietly exit for greener pastures elsewhere.

Editor’s Note: The US government is overextending itself by interfering in every corner of the globe. It’s all financed by massive amounts of money printing. However, the next financial crisis could end the whole charade soon.

The truth is, we’re on the cusp of a global economic crisis that could eclipse anything we’ve seen before. That’s exactly why New York Times best-selling author Doug Casey and his team just released a guide that explains what could come next and what you can do about it.. Click here to download the PDF now.

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25 Comments
TheAssegai
TheAssegai
April 19, 2021 8:07 pm

Back then, I also learned that the Tang Dynasty ended as a result of the increased power amongst the eunuchs

Fast forward to today, and the end will be because a bunch of dicks got elected.

falconflight
falconflight
  TheAssegai
April 19, 2021 9:49 pm

Cis-Gendered Asshole! /s

TheAssegai
TheAssegai
  falconflight
April 19, 2021 10:32 pm

Thanks, I did not want to be uncomfortable with my language. Cis gendered is a new word for me, I guess I am old school and was not aware that one needed to re-affirm being a boy or girl. I did find a short video explaining it, though it may take me some time to figure out what a cis gendered asshole is.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  TheAssegai
April 19, 2021 10:44 pm

You have a dick or a hole, done. Pull down your underwear and look. What the fuck.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  ILuvCO2
April 19, 2021 10:49 pm

She’s just pissed cuz she’s never gonna get laid.

falconflight
falconflight
  ILuvCO2
April 19, 2021 11:57 pm

I dunno, plenty of betas and omegas across the rotting fruited plains…

Tabernac
Tabernac
  falconflight
April 20, 2021 8:20 am

Chickens don’t penetrate, they just kiss assholes

Thersites
Thersites
April 19, 2021 8:32 pm

” future leaders will be just as uninterested in learning from history as past leaders”
On the contrary, it is not ignorance. These “leaders” look to Orwell’s “1984” as an instruction manual and not as a warning.

Ken31
Ken31
  Thersites
April 19, 2021 9:08 pm

Just to expand on your idea: Those “leaders” always assume they will survive the consequences of their actions. I think they usually do know their history, but they do not care. Even if they don’t it is a form of willful ignorance. Professionals are expected to know the history of their craft.

Quiet Mike
Quiet Mike
April 19, 2021 8:34 pm

Now that the Chauvin jury has begun deliberation I’ve taken the unusual precaution of loading all weapons and placing them in various rooms. If that’s being “wrapped too tight” then that’s what it is.

Ken31
Ken31
  Quiet Mike
April 19, 2021 9:10 pm

We are starting to talk about our garage sale here.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  Quiet Mike
April 19, 2021 10:31 pm

If you live near or in a Democratic Shithole City, I can understand keeping pistols and shotguns within reach.

Ken31
Ken31
April 19, 2021 9:05 pm

That is all interesting. Now do one about an empire that was entirely usurped by subterfuge.

Machinist
Machinist
April 19, 2021 9:51 pm

“How Empires End”
Gradually at first, then suddenly.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  Machinist
April 19, 2021 10:32 pm

Our empire has been dying for 60 years. The last few years is when everything goes crazy.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Coalclinker
April 19, 2021 10:46 pm

60? Since 1913 at least.

Georges S
Georges S
  ILuvCO2
April 20, 2021 12:32 am

Already in 1933 hollywood was making globalist type movies: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0024044/
Of course the bad guy is a republican that becomes good when he turn demonrat.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  ILuvCO2
April 20, 2021 4:45 am

that was a major step in the setting in of rot at the top, but the empire was still strong then. these things happen in phases. Confusing the matter is that there are two broad categories of ‘reasons for collapse of empires’ and one of them is internal dysfunction – corruption and degeneracy among the ruling class, incompetence and parasitic bureacracies and cliques running side-scams all sucking the blood of the society at large, etc. Diminishing returns on complexity. Internal senility and dysfunction.
But there is another category of ‘reasons for collapse’ which is external- and i dont mean barbarians attacking etc – thats not really by itself a reason for collapse, and in fact a healthy empire might lose a war and be conquered, and in that case often the conquering power merely takes over the administration of the empire and the empire continues existing, albeit under new management. collapse though, can also be the result of exhaustion of resources. Often in reality these things all go together and each merely makes all the other problems that much worse, but even an empire or civilization otherwise keeping its house in order, can simply exhaust its landbase and slip into overshoot. The first really great collapse was of this sort: the late Bronze Age civilization was not marked by any complaints of degeneracy or social decay, there were dozens of political powers all tied together by trade and certainly not all in the same state of health or corruption anyway, but the whole ‘world’ economy at the time was in overshoot having deforested and degraded the fragile near eastern and eastern meditrerranean ecologies they lived in. The number one resource that pushed everything else into economic decline : wood.
Only after scarcity and economic collapse started to work its way through the system, did large entities fracture into competiting factions and parasitic breakaways begin plundering the bigger polities. Those things accelerated collapse but in that case, it was a resource collapse first and an internail failure second.
In our empire, the resource collapse is unquestionable, but it might have been made even worse by the fact that the internal corruption started out while we were still young and strong.
Usually in resource collapses, the extra stress separates those entities which have maintained internal integrity, from those which have been rotting internally. Things will resettle at lower levels of complexity compatible with the reduced resource availability – and those polities which had kept integrity will be more likley to adapt and wipe out the rotted ones.
maybe that’s russia today.

Coalclinker
Coalclinker
  Coalclinker
April 20, 2021 6:13 am

I say 60 years because by the early ’60s, major industries such as shoes and sewing machines were already about gutted in this country and no one lifted a finger to do anything about it.
Now here we are and nothing is made in America, and people wonder why salaries have been stagnant for the last 40 years.

Auntie Kriest
Auntie Kriest
April 19, 2021 10:26 pm

Some with a bang others with a whimper.

anonymous
anonymous
April 19, 2021 11:54 pm

Those who learn from history are doomed to watch those who don’t, repeat it.

falconflight
falconflight
April 19, 2021 11:58 pm

#11 obvious now.

Austrian Peter
Austrian Peter
April 20, 2021 3:11 am

The Chinese know this. I am in contact with people in China and get regular updates countering the propaganda in the West. It is revealing how they view the world and geo-politics. I have posted some of their information on occasion.

Today, they are reporting that China is ready to challenge Biden on Taiwan and in the South China Sea. These guys are clever and subscribe to Sun Tzu. Underestimate them at your peril:

“If you know the enemy and know yourself you need not fear the results of a hundred battles. To fight and conquer in all our battles is not supreme excellence; supreme excellence consists in breaking the enemy’s resistance without fighting. He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight.”

Remo
Remo
April 20, 2021 1:16 pm

“Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny.”

This is exactly why the founders expected us to have revolutions every few decades to keep the government in check.