Weren't we calling her, Sweetheart?
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Weren't we calling her, Sweetheart?
Did someone call my daughter a sweetheart?
Isn't she a sweetheart?
Would I say anything less?
What other names do you have for her?
Do you think it's nice to be calling her names?
Shall we just call her m'am?
Why don't we just call her an angel
Since ma'am is indicative of a married woman, wouldn't mademoiselle be more age appropriate?
Can't we just call her by her name?
Is that not still a name?
I'm confused, what were we talking about?
Should we call her Frances sweetheart angel Mary Cat burglar?
Do you think that enough names?
If she would be a redneck, would it be near enough?
Ouch... Why would one call her that?
Is there anything wrong with being called that?
Why are we into name calling anyway?
Are the games over?
Am I that fun a game?
What do you want to hear?
What should we talk about next?
why don't we talk about you?
Isn't there much more interesting topics?
Doesn't Bien fascinate us all?
Who can deny this?
Can I deny it?
Are you boring?
Is that really a question that one could answer for their self?
Why can't you answer that?
Is it a matter of national importance?
Which Nation?
Would you like a technocratic nation?
What is a technocratic nation?
Would you prefer a different kind of nation?
What's wrong with a simple republic?
Isn't that too commonplace?
A technocracy is not so much a government as an economic system similar to the guild system where an appointed leader (or guild master) has providence over a specific area of the economy. In the 1930s, there was a strong technocracy movement because the nation thought that Government interfering with the economy destroyed it and that instead appointed leader should rule over sectors of the economy based on their area of expertise, IE, an appointed doctor over the medical field. The term technocracy derives from the Greek words tekhne meaning skill and kratos meaning power. Your skill power will determine what position you are in the economy in regards to ruling over a sector. Henri de Saint-Simon is an originator of this theory. Edward Bellamy and Thorstein Veblen originated the idea in the USA and William H. Smyth advocated Technocracy starting in 1919. At the end of 1919, Howard Scott founded the Technical Alliance in the USA.
Technocracy would prevent the government from meddling in the economy, and allow a free market, but the inherent bureaucracy in a technocratic economy also presents problems. However, it is a very interesting concept.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technocracy
Hasn't it worked for centuries...millennium even?
Any government system would work if idiots didn't run it. Technocracy is compatible with a Democratic Republic.