Seriously, I never thought I would have to actually make a post dedicated to this, but school is harsh for me and so is time. So far the bloggers I’ve recruited are mainly real life friends and well, they also have a lot of trouble with school and such. My time is currently growing smaller and smaller so I can’t do everything I planned to do […]
Announcement: Recruiting Bloggers
Political Institutions and the fall of a despot.
Posted by Veto on July 14th, 2008 at 9:54 PM
When in the course of domestic events, it becomes necessary for the people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a descent respect to the opinions of mandkind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to seperation.
This anime is based in a village where it is exempted from the authority of the government, where the ultimate authority lies in the village chief. Everyone is expected to obey the chief due to his ceremonial power. However, why does he have that power? The fact that he is the head of the village does not alone, give him the powers to rule the people within his domain. Rather yet, his powers are derived from the consent of the governed, and when the chief becomes too despotic, it is the right of the tyrannized to abolish or alter it.
Kohinata Hayami, as depicted in the image above, whose parents behaved as tyrants, were overthrown by the Kagura family and the villagers. Their governors’ base was destroyed and themselves killed. Years later, when a new direct democracy was instituted, a new tyrant has arised, and a new thinking. The old tyrant’s child, is the only living posterity and is currently treated with loathsomeness. That’s why you see her getting socked in the photo.
