Restarkism: Difference between revisions

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===Judicialism (governance rights)===
===Judicialism (governance rights)===
Judicialism, sometimes rendered as the power of governance or statism, asserts the rights of the state. This can be defined as creating an "edifice" of the state: although the rights of the state are based off of republicanism's popular sovereignty, popular sovereignty must allow the state to exercise its rights to do ''justice''. In practice, judicialism defines a balance between the political rights of the people and the rights of the state. The Restarkist state can therefore be molded by the politics of the nation, although it cannot be overcome or toppled by politics. Judicialism therefore enshrines the creation of a strong state structure defined by an apolitical {{wp|civil service}}, an independent judiciary, a system of {{wp|checks and balances}}, a professional {{wp|military}} and the enshrinement of the {{wp|rule of law}}.  
Judicialism, sometimes rendered as the power of governance or statism, asserts the rights of the state. This can be defined as creating an "edifice" of the state: although the rights of the state are based off of republicanism's popular sovereignty, popular sovereignty must allow the state to exercise its rights for a state to even exist. In practice, judicialism defines a balance between the political rights of the people and the rights of the state. It gives the state the ''judicial'' role of being the arbiter of the people, using the power the people have granted it in all spheres to defend and construct the nation. The Restarkist arbiter-state can therefore be molded by the politics of the nation - but in the same way the state cannot overcome the people's political rights, the state's own rights cannot be overcome or toppled by political rights. Judicialism therefore enshrines the creation of a strong state structure defined by an apolitical {{wp|civil service}}, an independent judiciary, a system of {{wp|checks and balances}}, a professional {{wp|military}} and the enshrinement of the {{wp|rule of law}}.  


The power of governance also asserts a responsibility of governance in the Restarkist philosophy. The edifice of the state must protect the rights of an individual as guaranteed by the Fundamental Statutes of the Constitution. It must also prevent the {{wp|tyranny of the majority}}, and therefore defend itself and its institutions whenever they are threatened, from without or within. Kalma gave this role to the military, which has invoked it in multiple {{wp|Coup d'état|coups d'état}} when it perceived that political organizations were undermining the state.
The power of governance also asserts a responsibility of governance in the Restarkist philosophy. The edifice of the state must protect the rights of an individual as guaranteed by the Fundamental Statutes of the Constitution. It must also prevent the {{wp|tyranny of the majority}}, and therefore defend itself and its institutions whenever they are threatened, from without or within. Kalma gave this role to the military, which has invoked it in multiple {{wp|Coup d'état|coups d'état}} when it perceived that political organizations were undermining the state.
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