American Reform – On the Forms of Government, the Absurdity of Representative Government and the Best Regime — Zigliara, 1910

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“John Locke, in the book he wrote On Civil Government, laid the foundations of constitutional, or representative government as to its substance. For he taught that legislative power belongs not to the ruler but to the people: which doctrine supposes popular sovereignty […] These principles however are altogether absurd and antisocial, as we have demonstrated elsewhere.”>“Whence the best ordering of rulers is in some city or kingdom, in which one (the Monarch) is set over all according to virtue, who presides over all, and under him are some ruling according to virtue: and yet such a rulership (Monarchy, namely, tempered in this manner) pertains to all, both because all are able to be elected from all (who are appointed to rule according to virtue under the monarch), and also because all elect them.”


Originally published in The Journal of American Reform. Read original article