2. It only needs to last long enough to unite the people, and probably will last longer just fine.Ultratwinkie said:SoopaSte123 said:snip
2. Except the Legion culture is toxic.
3. Except without benefiting people with education, and reconstruction you're not doing anything good. The NCR rebuilds, and educates.
4. Yes it will. Its documented in an ending where Lannius lead the Legion to its death by throwing massive numbers at well armed factions like the Enclave. Caesar recruited tribals, so they act like it. They have no intelligence, strategy, or common sense. They just want military chest pumping. Lipstick on a pig doesn't make it a classy lady.
5. And Caesar lives forever? He is an old man with shitty strategy. Once he dies, human nature will take its course. The legion will devolve into tribes vying for control of the Legion. Progress takes centuries, not decades. Hell, the Rome he based his tribal confederacy on is more in tune with NCR than the Legion. NCR can take care of its civilians in civilized space, but the Mojave is a war zone. Do we blame America when civilians died during battles in WWII? No. Why should we blame the NCR when battles inevitably catch civilians in the crossfire. That is how battles work, and that is how they will always be.
3. That's viewing things too short-term. Education and reconstruction will happen after all the factions are united. Trying to do it first is like trying to put ointment on a wound before stitching it up.
4. You say Caesar recruited tribals so they act like it, but that's his army. When he recruits the members of, say, the Followers of the Apocalypse or the Brotherhood of Steel, the Legion will then gain intelligent, educated members, by your logic.
5. He won't live forever, but if you read my previous posts you'll understand he doesn't need to. And no, NCR is not like Rome, but more like a wanna-be USA, one that doesn't have the resources or manpower to control what they have. Democracy works best in times of peace, not times of horrible struggle and war. You need strong leadership and structure to improve, and then later you can stagnate with your democracy, much as Rome did.