P800:3, 71:1.1
The state is a territorial social regulative organization, and the strongest,
most efficient, and enduring state is composed of a single nation whose people
have a common language, mores, and institutions.
P800:4, 71:1.2
The early states were small and were all the result of conquest. They did
not originate in voluntary associations. Many were founded by conquering nomads,
who would
swoop down on peaceful herders or settled agriculturists to overpower
and enslave them. Such states, resulting from conquest, were, perforce, stratified;
classes were inevitable, and class struggles have ever been selective.
P800:5, 71:1.3
The northern tribes of the American red men never attained real statehood.
They never progressed beyond a loose confederation of tribes, a very primitive
form of state. Their nearest approach was the Iroquois federation, but this
group of six nations never quite functioned as a state and failed to survive
because of the absence of certain essentials to modern national life, such
as:
P800:6, 71:1.4
1. Acquirement and inheritance of private property.
P800:7, 71:1.5
2. Cities plus agriculture and industry.
P800:8, 71:1.6
3. Helpful domestic animals.
P800:9, 71:1.7
4. Practical family organization. These red men clung to the mother-family
and nephew inheritance.
P800:10, 71:1.8
5. Definite territory.
P800:11, 71:1.9
6. A strong executive head.
P800:12, 71:1.10
7. Enslavement of captives -- they either adopted or
massacred them.
P800:13, 71:1.11
8. Decisive conquests.
P800:14, 71:1.12
The red men were too democratic; they had a good government, but it failed.
Eventually they would have evolved a state had they not prematurely encountered
the more advanced civilization of the white man, who was pursuing the governmental
methods of the Greeks and the Romans.
P801:1, 71:1.13
The successful Roman state was based on:
P801:11, 71:1.15
The embryonic state was made possible by the decline of the blood bond in
favor of the territorial, and such tribal federations were usually firmly
cemented by conquest. While a sovereignty that transcends all minor struggles
and group differences is the characteristic of the true state, still, many
classes and castes persist in the later state organizations as remnants of
the clans and tribes of former days. The later and larger territorial states
had a long and bitter struggle with these smaller consanguineous clan groups,
the tribal government proving a valuable transition from family to state authority.
During later times many clans grew out of trades and other industrial associations.
P801:12, 71:1.16
Failure of state integration results in retrogression to
prestate conditions
of governmental techniques, such as the
feudalism of the European Middle Ages.
During these dark ages the territorial state collapsed, and there was a reversion
to the small castle groups, the reappearance of the clan and tribal stages
of development. Similar
semistates even now exist in Asia and Africa, but
not all of them are evolutionary reversions; many are the embryonic nucleuses
of states of the future.