Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - The ancient emperor was threatened by powerful ministers. Why didn't he kill the courtier with a sword?

The ancient emperor was threatened by powerful ministers. Why didn't he kill the courtier with a sword?

If the emperor is the happiest occupation in ancient times, then correspondingly, the puppet emperor should be the most unfortunate occupation. Although you are a statue of the Ninth Five-Year Plan, you have no power at all, and you have to be insulted and threatened by powerful ministers. If the power and ambition of the powerful minister are big enough, the result is that life is worse than death. Therefore, since the power minister raised the emperor, the emperor, as the master of the world, killed the power minister with a dagger. Isn't it peaceful? Why should the emperor be cautious? Today Song Anzhi will talk about it. Generally speaking, the emperor is the master of the world, which can be described as "territory rather than minister". On the surface, he has absolute power and control over the following officials, but in essence, power comes from the obedience and cooperation of subordinates to superiors, and then it is passed down from level to level.

Generally speaking, the emperor is the biggest representative of vested interests or ruling groups, and the basis of his rule is to gain the support of this privileged group. If the powerful minister steals the support of some or most of them, it is equivalent to the biggest representative in fact. The emperor is naturally overhead, and it is even more impossible to skip the ruling group and actually control the country. The powerful minister became the largest representative of the ruling group in fact, which not only cut off the subordinates' obedience and cooperation with the emperor, but also became the biggest distributor of interests, that is to say, he had the right to appoint personnel, which meant that he could use this power to continuously consolidate his position and reuse his cronies, thus representing huge interests.

Which minister is not a party member all over the world, or a key department of the imperial court, so even the emperor should be careful. At this time, it is not a question of decapitation, but a question of how to deal with this interest. Because if you can't appease or pacify this interest group, even if you kill the powerful minister, you can't solve the fundamental problem. As long as interest groups are in one day, they will fight back crazily. It is not that all interest groups are loyal to the powerful minister, but that since they stand on the side of the powerful minister, they will stand on the opposite side of the emperor. When the powerful minister dies, he is naturally afraid of being driven out, thinking that if he doesn't fight back, he will die next.