"If the world were the world, it would have been a lawmaker on the side of the peasants suffering from debt."

With that in mind, it's no wonder this room isn't in court.

However, by way of thought, the emergence within the Church of young bureaucrats with idealistic aspects like Paperino may save more peasants in the future.

"You mean when the debt problem is cleared up, just let those people earn it so hard!

A lively exchange of views began on how to proceed with their treatment and future territorial development, either because of some prospects for the debt problems of the earning farmers.

In that case, it's good to watch one step back without pinching an extra mouth.

If you listen carefully, we have quite a balanced argument.

"But how do you make money in this narrow territory? Even if we plow the farmland, we're way ahead of the money."

"Because there's church support there."

"But it's not free, is it? If that makes me more in debt, I won't come along."

"That's right... but what about bringing forward plans for territorial development? Construction of the mill hasn't started yet, but could it be as good as landscaping?

"Well, that's not a bad idea."

"I'm a little concerned about that. I want those people to farm, and I want them to get along with the villagers. If you let them work very differently, they might feel stronger than they do now."

"Indeed, if you let people who were farmers until yesterday pay cash to do civil works, you might find objections from the original villagers. I was wondering why we didn't get a cash job going around us."

"Sure, the people in this village don't look like they've got any money."

There is something to see in the idea of having public works and working the farmers out there.

"You want another idea. Mill construction is not so easy to move"

If you really want, you can let them work on the roads and mills, but we don't even know when they'll call us back to the city, and if they dig back the roads and leave us halfway, it's a waste of budget.

Anyway, it's a huge construction that has asked many expert instructions about the work plan.

You can't move it that easy.

Did the two people involved in the plan figure that out, and they all put their arms together and started twisting their heads?

"What ideas do you want?

Sarah asks me if I gave up worrying all the time.

"If possible, I'd prefer a way to spread the flutter and influence so that when you hit one hand, the next card collapses"

In this territory, there are not enough resources to do anything.

If this is where we have a large number of excellent ministers in the Great Territories, we should try to solve each and every problem carefully, but if we are going to achieve results in a small number of people and in a short period of time, we will need a policy that will make the focus clear.

The so-called ripple effect.

"For example, yes... you're a bean first"

"Beans?" Sarah inquired.

Yes, let's start the village development with beans.

◇ ◇ ◇ ◇

Before the blackboard in the office, start explaining the territorial reconstruction plan starting with the beans.

"As a specific policy, I would like to distribute beans in the lord's mansion for planting in the farmhouse yard of the territory. That should solve quite a few problems."

"Uh, it would be helpful if you could explain a little more."

Paperino raises a question.

"Right. This policy is aimed at multiple effects.

One, I can make contact in the form of giving from the lord to the peasants. It has the effect of publicity that I'm not a lord to take away, I'm a lord to give away.

One, you can now plant beans in the garden of your house, which is just enough to make it known that the law has changed with the previous lord. It's a change that looks easy to understand.

One thing, if the farmer's food problem improves, he can afford it, and his aversion to the extra people coming to the village will diminish. Again, if you can't afford a meal, your mind can't afford it either.

One, I'm going to ask the peasants who make money to expand the bean fields of each farmer to do their job. I'll pay for it and send it here. Earning farmers earn cash income and farmers get fields and crops in their homes. If both sides gain, the opposite will be less, and if we face each other at work, we'll talk about it. It will also be a face-to-face opportunity. If it also serves as an opportunity to distribute cash to the village, the economy will also rise.

If we're going to build a field, it's a job that can be done by the earning peasants, and we'll have a job in sight before we get back to the city. The fields won't be abandoned. "

In explaining it, it has seemed like an effective policy for the sake of simplicity.

Start with the beans. That could also be interesting as a way of doing this little territory.

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