Nice! Good job, Mozilla!
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Nothing in particular, except the terms generally used to describe models of governance - cronyism etc. - tend to have greek rather than latin roots.
"...And conclusively proves that there are no pedophiles in the GOP. Also that the Democratic Party is run by reptillian aliens from Alpha Centauri, which I really think we ought to focus on instead. Why are you laughing? This is serious, people!"
Bawdy barber shop band.
Russian/Scottish fusion folk. It's an acquired taste.
Sedate Death Metal.
I'm insufficiently educated to figure out how to render "Rule by Golden Fat-tip Pen" in Greek, but whatever it's called, the model has proven unsurprisingly ineffective so far. Maybe it's best if we don't name it and just forget about it. Forever.
The US Supreme Court and "light" versions of anything edible.
Everything tends towards the absurd if taken too far. That is doubly true for bureaucracy.
"Anything to declare?"
"Yeah, I hereby declare that I just survived going to the moon and back strapped to the tip of a humongous explosive tube and that I need a shower, my wife and a fluffy bed in that order. As you're none of those things, you can piss right off."
"But, we were highly trusted in Ancient Sumeria, honest!"
"Your grasp of metalworking and material science looks like it belongs in 3000 B.C. too."
I suppose the next batch of marks have now learned why some of us don't trust Microsoft any further than our noodly coder-arms can throw them.
You're not going to believe this, but I've got an even better suggestion! Easy to remember too: it's just one word, and it happens to be the same the previous advice started with.