Helping with Adventurer Party Management

Episode 635: Political Season

"Okay. Just talk to each other. In a few days, we'll hear it again."

Tell him to decide on the village chief, but he has nothing to name.

Perhaps there's something lurking that I don't see right now.

Unless you fix that, there 'll just be another problem if you make the right decision here.

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After leaving the villagers, gather your insides and discuss the current measures.

Anyway, I'm more familiar with the rookie management guys who were going back and forth to develop a development plan for the territory when it comes to this village, and it might make up for things I don't realize myself.

"So I want you to be free to point out what you've noticed"

"Somehow, we weren't all well, were we? It felt like we were eating properly."

"True, it didn't feel like bone and skin. I guess you did well in church around there."

Looking back at the villagers at Sarah's point, they weren't that thin.

Hasn't it successfully eased and compensated the terrible taxes and politics of the original lord in the Church?

If so, it would be nice if you could just thank me a little.

"Right. It was Kenji who kicked out the awful deputy, so I hope he appreciated it!

"Well, you can't. Indeed, it must have been the small captain who kicked out the original deputy, the deputy who wasn't, because he wasn't face-to-face at the scene of distributing the wheat. It's always hard to thank a church nearby, but, uh, it's hard to thank a deputy."

Kilik says something pretty good about Sarah's anger.

It's the one thing that moves humans: emotions and emotions, more than logic and reason.

"I just think church measures have something to do with villagers' reactions as well. Wasn't the eviction of the village chief clan a shock to the villagers as well"

Opinion from a different point of view as Paperino, who was checking church handover materials, turns a bunch of parchment paper.

"That's troublesome. I want the villagers to do their autonomy and politics properly."

A community in which people come together and operate needs politics.

The deportation of the village chief and his clan may have created a political blank zone in this territory.

"Isn't that what Kenji, the deputy, should do?

"I'm going to decide on a big policy, but I don't want to talk about details. I get too busy."

Speaking only of this territory, I am the supreme power.

If so, the best solution would be to act like a dictator if you wanted to run your territory efficiently.

And maybe the villagers expect that as well as those here.

But I don't want to do it that way.

Because a dictator is so busy.

The definition of what power is will vary, but what power is for bureaucracy is the size of the budget and authority.

A dictator is a profession that consists of standing at the apex of a bureaucracy and embracing all its powers on its own, so that the performance of the organization will be the dictator's maximum ability to handle business in equals.

If you're a hero who gives his life for the nation, you'd be happy to play the role of dictator, but I'm not.

"But who are the people in the village who can be trusted and who can't?

What Sarah points out is the weakness of tenure agents like us.

It also has the advantage of being difficult to adhere to or corrupt, but it really neglects local circumstances.

Originally, I have an explanation when they take over.

"At the end of the day, you meet individually with the main faces of the village first. So do you want to do a village inspection and a door visit"

"Uh, I mean?

"Visit the house with souvenirs, have a cup of tea and talk, and wait for your mouth to slip."

If we launch a dramatic and ground-breaking policy, the villagers will fall for charisma, etc., there is no good story.

First of all, it stinks of mud, and we just have to make an agreement on our feet.