
…does not mean you should.
The Athenian siege of Melos in 416 BC was not merely an act of war. It was an exhibition of raw, unrestrained power and one of history’s clearest warnings about what empires become when they mistake strength for license. Thucydides captured the conceit of the age in the Melian Dialogue: “The strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must.” This is brazenly similar to “We’re a superpower. …we are going to conduct ourselves as a superpower.”
Athens, the superpower of its time, invaded the neutral island of Melos and demanded the islanders’ unconditional surrender and tribute. The Melians refused, choosing doomed resistance over submission and the loss of independence. Melos ultimately fell; the Athenians barbarically executed the men and enslaved the women and children.
Tiny Melos did not, by itself, destroy mighty Athens, but it exposed the corrosion already at work within Athenian power. It showed what happens when a state ceases to ask whether it should act and asks only whether it can. That is the disease of empire: power untethered from discipline, morality, and self-command.
That is why Melos still matters. The world remains anarchic. States still justify coercion, domination, embargoes, seizures, and war in the language of necessity. Weak and loud leaders still confuse capability with legitimacy. Political realism may explain how power operates, but it does not absolve its abuse.
Superior military strength is not proof of superior intellect, judgment, morality, or civilization. A nation reveals its character less by the force it can project than by the restraint it exercises. When violence becomes the first instrument rather than the last, decline has already begun, even if power still looks impressive from a distance.
In the end, Athens won Melos but lost something greater. Its empire decayed not merely from external enemies but from the arrogance and brutality that hollowed it from within. That is the enduring lesson: the misuse of power does not secure greatness. It poisons it. Our perceived superiority in the world is being supplanted by those who fill the vacuums we have created by our own choices. Our world dominance is forever affected, and if we are not careful, the fate that followed Athens may not be ancient history at all. NeverFearTheDream simplebender.com
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