Man, I keep coming back to this thread and these two posts keep pissing me off, because it's simply not true
you're rationalizing too
If by "rationalizing" you mean "considering it rationally", then yes. I'm not saying that they're pleasant, by any stretch of the imagination, but saying that they're cookie-cutter evil is simply
wrong. You can disagree with them, for sure, but the fact is that as a faction, with their own motivations and a solid philosophy, they are far deeper than, say, the Sith or the Empire of Star Wars (outside the expanded universe) or any depiction of would-be "nazis" in modern-day popular propaganda.
they're rapists, slavers, murderers
And some are, I assume, good people.
"we burned them alive because they were degenerates", and you think that makes sense
It absolutely makes sense, especially in the post-apocalyptic wasteland that is the Fallout setting. Them coming down like a hammer on Nipton was arguably entirely warranted, and it's destruction was a long-term good and a necessity for progress. That entire place was a cesspit full of vipers and degenerates, and the Legion did what they felt was genuinely best, while also capitalizing on it to the best of their ability. It's a harsh-ass wasteland, man, and this army is very much made up of slavers and murderers that have been whipped into shape in order to serve a civilization-building purpose.
But that's just Caesar's point. That's
all they are. They're an army, and on it's own,
that has no purpose.
NCR is closer to a modern democracy, which entails infighting, bureaucracy, corruption, etc.
You say that like it's a good thing, and not a massively corrupt and decadent conglomerate of favor-currying and diseased bickering, all the while people die on imaginary fronts only so that it can expand further, and like the NCR aren't just rebuilding the exact kind of diseased system that lead to the apocalypse to begin with.
that's still preferable to a "society" of slaves (both literal slaves and the assimilated tribes, not to talk about the women)
First of all,
what about the women? In the Legion lands, they are likely valued much like the wives of Sparta, or at least there would likely be an attempt at that. And in the Legion lands, they do not risk being raided and raped by slavers. By everything we know, the Legion lands are materially harsh and technologically backwards, but fundamentally safe. Meanwhile, the NCR is divided by plutocrats that couldn't put their collective minds to a cause even if their heads were all up the same ass.
in the words of good ol' Marcus: "Caesar thinks he can change human nature. Most of the Legion is following Caesar, not Caesar's ideals. When he's gone, it'll crumble."
It's quite literally like you didn't read the post you're responding to. Caesar's goal was to actually conquer the NCR and create a synthesis. The Legion as the sole existing hierarchy was meant to
die from it, and become a standing army to a literal empire. Lanius was never intended to become Caesar, and it's ridiculous to think that Caesar wouldn't have known that the Legion itself would crumble without him, unless he actually conquered the NCR before he died.
as Ulysses points out, without the NCR, the Legion would aslo turn on itself. Like the Roman empire, once there were no more enemies to conquer, it all crumbled, because the internal fighting took the place of the "external" fighting for expansion.
First of all, again, The Legion was not intended to be the government of a conquered NCR, but more importantly, have you ever even opened a history book?
The Roman Empire hardly
turned on itself, and under the Empire, Rome enjoyed it's longest period of uninterrupted peace and prosperity, for 200 years. The internal strife of Rome was not primarily military or a matter of violent unrest, and it sure as hell wasn't because of the legions turning on themselves. Rome fell due to a combination of subversive cultural influences (Christianity, primarily, eroding the old order), ethnic migration & change (primarily from the north and from slave liberalization) and violent foreign pressure (partially from the north, but Germanic invaders actually supplanted the ruling class but maintained the Empire; southern and eastern invaders did not, but relentlessly engaged with the Empire).
If anything, that's the point of this scenario in Fallout; that the NCR represents the corrupt and failing Roman Republic, with it's infinite fronts and it's poor management, trying to relive lost glories, whereas Caesar is the proverbial Caesar that crosses the Rubicon to return to his home, to dispose of the incompetent elite. And despite Caesar explaining this to you in detail, you're sitting here, pretending like the real-life historical Caesar went into Rome and established a complete military dictatorship for 200 years, where his soldiers were free to pillage forever, as if this constituted some perpetual front-line. It's absolutely absurd.