Jefferson was quite prepared, in a matter-of-fact way, to equate the terms Federalist, aristocrat, monocrat, and Tory. |
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The monocrat is the product of democracy, to which monocracy seems to be the rising counterpart and fulfillment. |
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One might think that the political monarch and the social monocrat belong together. |
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Moses ceases to look like a monocrat, and seems instead to be the head of a collective leadership. |
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A scramble in which many innocent people are liable to suffer is said to be the prospect when a monocrat loses his position of personal tyranny. |
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The monocrat increasingly hears only what the weak think he wants to hear. |
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The actual weight of power exercised by a monocrat may fluctuate within a wide range, and the effective scope of a monocrat's authority may also be constitutionally limited in various ways. |
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If any institution or governmental body succeeds in promoting its interests in a particular sphere, we must first examine to what extent the monocrat tried to attain his own aims in that sphere. |
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The central importance of a monocrat to government frequently does not lie in the weight or scope of his effective power, but rather in his legitimizing function. |
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The monocrat comes to power on a polycratic basis, supported by conflicting groups that paralyze each other, and he maintains his power by ruling polycratically. |
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Ben Greenberg plays guitar in the Brooklyn band Zs, but he is also the monocrat of Hubble, a project of one. |
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It is the Monocrat who is forcing communal ownership as the counterpoise to himself, and is destroying the last vestige of the old doctrine of laissez-faire. |
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In discussing the distribution of property, Snider devised the Monocrat, a person whose basic function was to allocate the world's goods equitably and intelligently according to society's will. |
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