ooc: @Hermi: I have a sneaking suspicion that you are perturbed that all pretence to equalitarianism and democracy is being snuffed out under a wholehearted embrace of the games fundamentally aristocratic premise. But you aren't being very clear about what you're worried about so that's merely an impression I'm getting.
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IC: Lord Kislimu speaks with wisdom when he says: "We must not forget the things we do in these councils. How we do things in these councils. We shouldn't learn again what Babylon has already mastered." and it is in the spirit of these words that under our rule the traditions of Babylon and Atlandiz have been exalted and held up in their rightful place as the touchstone to which all consideration must refer. For profane and sacrilegious, and ignorant too, is the nation that forgets the past in pursuit of every novelty and innovation and forgets with impious haste the wisdom of the ages and the legacy that has been entrusted to them from the ancestors. Do not we Babylonians too have the most ancient of traditions, being the true scions of the Empire of Atlandiz of old, and the sons of a thousand years of rule by the great Nebuchadnezzid Kings.
Yet Lord Kislimu we think errs in his conclusion that the constitution we have proposed, and which numerous Lords have affirmed renders unlawful the counselling of the Emperor. Indeed is it not so that the sixth duty of Kings is to sit in council together at the Emperors summons? Is it not so that the Kings in council have the right to chastise the Emperor and veto his decisions with regards to foreign powers, or his judgement over a King. Is it not most certainly true likewise that the imperial powers are justly restricted that Kings might in accordance with tradition govern their cities freely and to their peoples own temperament, and that they might have the liberty to oppose a tyrannical emperor should he seek to ascend beyond what the constitution allows. All this is so, and has been enshrined in the constitution we have proposed, a constitution which undoubtedly lifts up high the vaunted traditions of our fathers and of thousands of years of hallowed monarchy, and many years more of the tradition of civic independence and dignity.