I'm already a dead man, might as well shoot my shot
Submitted 8 hours ago by
Grumpus_Maximus@thelemmy.club to historymemes@piefed.social
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Submitted 8 hours ago by
Grumpus_Maximus@thelemmy.club to historymemes@piefed.social
https://thelemmy.club/pictrs/image/be7ec021-0a67-4214-b592-4452fa444a7c.gif
PugJesus@piefed.social 6 hours ago
Explanation For Those Wondering: Under the Qin, the first imperial dynasty of China, many laws were created in light of the philosophy of Legalism, as expounded upon most famously by Lord Shang. Rather than meaning “The rule of law”, it means something closer to “People from the highest to the lowest are dissolute dogs who must be kept in line by fear and unshakable autocracy.” While Confucianism would take the dominant philosophical role in later Chinese dynasties, Legalist thought never entirely died out.
Unfortunately, the idea that only utter terror can keep people in harmony with the collective welfare can have some… nasty consequences. Namely, that the most reliably terrifying punishment - death - is also one that can’t really be ‘improved’ much upon. So when mid-ranking officials had a fuck-up punishable by death - like being late to their troop muster because of the weather, or losing track of prisoners - oftentimes they would just throw in their lot with a full-fledged rebellion or total banditry. Also both punishable by death, but if you win, it’s not rebellion; or if you’re never caught, you never get the punishment.
Liu Ban was the first Emperor of the Han Dynasty which succeeded the Qin. Liu Ban only defected after some prisoners escaped from his oversight - a ‘crime’ punishable by death regardless of fault.
If your choices are certain death or uncertain death… most people will take the latter. Roll the iron dice!