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Chapter 389 - Chapter 383: Affordable Public Rental Housing Plan

On the matter of relocating the factories to the outskirts, Georges Ossman and Jerome Bonaparte saw eye to eye.

As a Bonapartist more orthodox than Jerome Bonaparte, Georges Ossman favored ruling the city with authoritarianism.

In other words, Georges Ossman preferred to act as a "strict father" in front of the people of Paris, giving candy to the obedient "children." The disobedient would receive strict punishment.

In his view, the most obedient children in Paris were the petite bourgeoisie, diligent in their work and not causing trouble to society.

The troublesome children were the proletariat of Paris, also known as the sans-culottes.

The root of all revolution began from them and their nests that bred radical ideas—the factories. As long as the factories were moved out of Paris, the revolution would also vanish from Paris.

In other words, in Georges Ossman's ideology, as long as there were no poor people in the urban areas of Paris, music and dancing could continue.

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