/u/grapp's posts
I watched an interview with Richard Wolff, he said the kind of economic imbalances that cause recessions, didn't exist in the middle ages, & before, because kings & lords had much more control over the production of goods, than capitalist era governments do. Would you agree or disagree with that?
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In the alternate history novel I'm reading there's a sub-plot about someone falsely accusing someone else of being a jew to get back at them for something. did people do that in Nazi Germany in real life?
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from mid 297 to early 298 Egypt was in rebellion against Rome. would have caused food shortages in the capital, or would the grain coming in from Carthage have been enough to maintain the bread part of "bread and circuses"?
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Modern democracies set up systems that allow military personal aboard to vote remotely, if you were a roman (citizen) soldier was there any way for you take part in the elections back in Rome while you were on campaign, or did people back then just view that as a logistically impossibility?
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