I can boil it down to:Okeefenokee wrote:BjornP wrote:Increased centralization always results in inefficiency in governance, as well as in business. Worse, it also results in... I'd call it "statistical dehumanization", but there might be a better, pre-existing word. The meeting between state and citizen should not only ever occur in the exchange of paper forms, where the state gets to know their citizens only through answers in boxes the state put on the paper for the citizen to check.That's all I can make of that.apeman wrote:the discrete analysis of factor-forms against the stark backdrop of indicators strongly suggests that the subject is not a factor but an indicator, yet the under-studied field of opinion variance leads us to conclude that the indication is not equivocal
More centralized government is more indifferent government.