What was his tax policy?
10% flat tax
>>82972249
>flat tax on a population made of 95% farmers who don't draw a real income
>>82972326
At least read wikipedia, you fool.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tithe
>>82972175
I don't know, probably pretty high because Gondor was always calling for foreign aid
>>82972175
9-9-9
>>82972175
>Okay so they saved middle earth, fine.
>But how did the hobbits reallocate their 401k's?
Here you go, courtesy of me.
But what do you guys have against auditors? Seriously making me rethink going into the business.
>Aragorn II Elessar was the first High King of the Reunited Kingdom, known both for restoring the authority of the state and for the brutality of his methods.
>Aragorn banned alcohol, tobacco, and coffee in Minas Tirith. He ordered execution for breaking this ban. He would reportedly patrol the streets and the lowest taverns of Minas Tirith in civilian clothes at night, policing the enforcement of his command by casting off his disguise on the spot and beheading the offender with his own hands. He would sit in a kiosk by the water near his Osgiliath palace and shoot arrows at any boat man who rowed too close to his imperial compound. He restored the judicial regulations by very strict punishments, including execution, he once strangled a minister for the reason that the official had beaten his mother-in-law. Historians report that even though he was a ruthless supporter of alcohol prohibition, Aragorn was a habitual drinker himself.
>Aragorn's reign is most notable for the war against Rohan. Aragorn himself commanded the invasion of Rohan and proved to be an outstanding field commander. During the siege of Helm's Deep, the fortress withstood the siege for forty days, but was compelled to surrender, and the bulk of the population were butchered by the conquerors, in spite of the promises which they had made to spare them. It is said that the officers of Aragorn arranged a sort of tableau, in which the heads were struck off one thousand captives by one thousand headsmen at the same moment, and that Aragorn enjoyed the sight.
>He devastated Rohan, killed 60–70,000 Rohan peasants, and deported between 130,000-200,000 captives to Gondor. After having fully secured the region, he executed the rebellious Eomer and later had Eowyn, who had been sent to Aragorn as a negotiator, tortured to death in an act of revenge. Rohan lost two-thirds of its population in these years through deportation or to a lesser extent being killed.
>Aragorn was renowned for his excessive cruelty. Among his alleged atrocities is cannibalism: he was said to have eaten suckling babies. In his Brazen bull, the tyrant's victims were shut in and roasted alive by a fire kindled beneath while their shrieks represented the bellowing of the bull.
>During his lifetime, Aragorn was the object of a literary reinvention whereby he came to be seen as a humane leader who was a patron of philosophy and literature. This new reputation was due to a defense of his character attributed to Meriadoc Brandybuck and Peregrin Took.
>>82972175
>Sells 110 billion worth of weapons to orcs