Hello all,
Best hanging judge poll is in May...lol.
Of the top three vote receivers (not counting Martin) I don't see how anyone could vote for Napoleon. The temptation to view him as a national paragon of shining glory may be understandable, but when more thoroughly examined he was a typical self-glorying conqueror who finally buried whatever real democratic promise might have come out of the "Revolution". The code Napoleon may have made all classes equal, but it also promoted firm patriarchal dominance in the same way the Romans did and was more or less an updated form of old Roman Law. Napoleon did not even participate in forming it, though he did review and revise it.
As a military genius he matches up well with Hannibal, Alexander, Caesar, and Genghis Khan. But as a great man of the people, meaning what he really achieved for or contributed to his country and the well-being of the people, he fails. Any benefits the legal and governmental reforms generated under him may have had, they were subverted by his willingness to take power for himself, go to war and the economic and human price of it. Whereas Washington stopped the army from seizing control of the government Napoleon used his grenadiers to seize it.
At least William the Conqueror never killed off the chance of democracy. There wasn't any. He brought order, stability, and unified law...though ruthlessly to support his own power and keep it for himself and his progeny.
Unlike the other two the benefits of Pasteur's life work are incontestably positive and for all human kind...rather than being necessary for maintaining the power of an individual over all subjects. Countries and people should be proud of his kind...not conquerors. I'll never understand why so many feel pride in those who take lives and destroy promise over those who enhance both.
Just my view...Go Louuuuuis,
Merlot
I can't believe I'm not nominated...
Best hanging judge poll is in May...lol.
Of the top three vote receivers (not counting Martin) I don't see how anyone could vote for Napoleon. The temptation to view him as a national paragon of shining glory may be understandable, but when more thoroughly examined he was a typical self-glorying conqueror who finally buried whatever real democratic promise might have come out of the "Revolution". The code Napoleon may have made all classes equal, but it also promoted firm patriarchal dominance in the same way the Romans did and was more or less an updated form of old Roman Law. Napoleon did not even participate in forming it, though he did review and revise it.
As a military genius he matches up well with Hannibal, Alexander, Caesar, and Genghis Khan. But as a great man of the people, meaning what he really achieved for or contributed to his country and the well-being of the people, he fails. Any benefits the legal and governmental reforms generated under him may have had, they were subverted by his willingness to take power for himself, go to war and the economic and human price of it. Whereas Washington stopped the army from seizing control of the government Napoleon used his grenadiers to seize it.
At least William the Conqueror never killed off the chance of democracy. There wasn't any. He brought order, stability, and unified law...though ruthlessly to support his own power and keep it for himself and his progeny.
Unlike the other two the benefits of Pasteur's life work are incontestably positive and for all human kind...rather than being necessary for maintaining the power of an individual over all subjects. Countries and people should be proud of his kind...not conquerors. I'll never understand why so many feel pride in those who take lives and destroy promise over those who enhance both.
Just my view...Go Louuuuuis,
Merlot
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