"In summary, the Romans were opposed to tyranny in any form; and the feature of government to which they gave the most thought was an elaborate system of checks and balances"
About this Quote
The line reads like a civics-class mic drop, but its real work is ideological: it drafts ancient Rome into a modern argument about power. Welch’s “In summary” signals a neat wrap-up, yet the summary is doing a lot of selective smoothing. Rome wasn’t “opposed to tyranny in any form” so much as obsessed with who got to wield coercion and under what rituals. The Republic built offices, vetoes, term limits, and divided authority not out of abstract devotion to liberty, but from a hard-earned fear of any single faction or general consolidating the spoils.
That’s why “elaborate system of checks and balances” lands so forcefully: it’s an anachronism with purpose. The phrase is the American founding’s comfort blanket, a modern constitutional ideal back-projected onto Rome to make today’s institutional skepticism feel timeless and battle-tested. Welch’s intent is less to illuminate Roman political complexity than to canonize a principle: concentrated power is the permanent enemy; procedural friction is the permanent cure.
The subtext flatters the reader into a lineage of vigilant republicanism. If Rome fell when checks failed, the implication goes, contemporary society is always one shortcut away from Caesar. It’s a clean moral geometry: tyranny versus safeguards. What gets left offstage is how Roman “anti-tyranny” often coexisted with empire, slavery, and class domination - forms of tyranny that didn’t threaten the Senate’s internal balance. Welch’s Rome is a mirror angled toward the present, not a window onto the past.
That’s why “elaborate system of checks and balances” lands so forcefully: it’s an anachronism with purpose. The phrase is the American founding’s comfort blanket, a modern constitutional ideal back-projected onto Rome to make today’s institutional skepticism feel timeless and battle-tested. Welch’s intent is less to illuminate Roman political complexity than to canonize a principle: concentrated power is the permanent enemy; procedural friction is the permanent cure.
The subtext flatters the reader into a lineage of vigilant republicanism. If Rome fell when checks failed, the implication goes, contemporary society is always one shortcut away from Caesar. It’s a clean moral geometry: tyranny versus safeguards. What gets left offstage is how Roman “anti-tyranny” often coexisted with empire, slavery, and class domination - forms of tyranny that didn’t threaten the Senate’s internal balance. Welch’s Rome is a mirror angled toward the present, not a window onto the past.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
More Quotes by Robert
Add to List




