I was not ready for these sorts of facade, you can't pressurise me in my midlife, like a crisis in crime, to understand your beliefs in enlightened absolutism in general is purely a forced labour camp for me.
Not to mention the way you treat and test your own people under your governance system in commerce.
I am, on the other hand, a private despot for you where if not for the resistance, there would be an absolute power and the leader could drift away into the realm of benevolent despotism.
Irony, if not for the resistance of someone's desire to 'rather do it this way' new ideas might not be tested and be accepted in my way of work.
It has been said by a wise man that a benevolent despotism is the best possible form of government, smiling as silently as Dalil could then added again.
Your policy of enlightened absolutism was successful only in those countries where the bourgeoisie was in a comparatively on an early stage of development.
Even in these countries, the period of enlightened absolutism was brief enough to limits its existence to explore and expand.
You know that don't you Lyaan then smiling again while hiding his face towards the sea and Lyaan is standing on his back.
They were arguing about their new projects. Dalil was trying to make Lyaan a leader of his part of areas.
Dalil can't stay any longer here, he has to leave, it will take more than 3 to 5 years.
Before he is leaving him and Elizah, Dalil has to make Lyaan understand Dalil's position and his way of authority.
Lyaan is not ready to take the pain of losing him, Dalil who is a leader of all his projects in Lyaan's city and Lyaan is just his assistant the follower of his leader.