It's hard to say. On the one hand, he's definitely an ambitious man.
...on the other, starting a war with Yan on purpose would have been a risky move. He'd recently taken the right to command the army from a general whose family he felt had too much power, so plunging the country into a situation where we were at war - and constantly losing battles, which is what happened when he wouldn't let General Lin fight - didn't work in his favor. He ended up having to give the right to command the army back to him, which wasn't what he wanted.
How in the world do you establish your leadership that this should be the case? Such positions should only be held by those whose people entrust them with the honor, and such honors ought to be revoked if, stars forbid, it should prove necessary.
It usually starts with one ruler who did earn the right to rule. But then the ruling power passes from that person to their children, to their children's children, and so on... unless they don't have any, or unless they die before they can have heirs. Then the succession is a little more complicated.
What reason is there in simply passing rule from one individual to their offspring-- there certainly is no guarantee that child will be the one best suited to it, or that their own talents are not better applied elsewhere.
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...on the other, starting a war with Yan on purpose would have been a risky move. He'd recently taken the right to command the army from a general whose family he felt had too much power, so plunging the country into a situation where we were at war - and constantly losing battles, which is what happened when he wouldn't let General Lin fight - didn't work in his favor. He ended up having to give the right to command the army back to him, which wasn't what he wanted.
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[not someone who can be counted on to make the most appropriate decisions, as they ought to.]
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...I can't say I'm altogether impressed with the imperial family.
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[empire? he doesn't know her.]
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They don't have empires where you're from, do they.
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It usually starts with one ruler who did earn the right to rule. But then the ruling power passes from that person to their children, to their children's children, and so on... unless they don't have any, or unless they die before they can have heirs. Then the succession is a little more complicated.
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There are rebellions.