Suetonius ruins his credibility at the end of this work, beginning with his rant against Livia. Regardless of her role in the several deaths of Augustus' descendants, to claim she taught the Romans familial murder is a ludicrous charge. (Romulus and Remus, for example?) Suetonius further has difficulty deciding whether to paint Tiberius as a depraved, rabid tyrant, or as a poor victim of circumstance, who finds himself thrust into the midst of royal intrigue when he truly wants nothing more than the quiet life of a private citizen.