1028 The Great Punctuation Revolution (Part 2)(2/2)
With this confidence, Guo dared to strike a full-scale attack on scholars, or even physically eliminate them, destroy, transform and forcefully solve the entire group.
With this confidence, even if tens of thousands of people were killed for this, and to the point where blood flowed into rivers and corpses piled up into mountains, Guo still had to complete this crucial punctuation revolution.
For this reason, Mr. Guo had already made preparations silently.
First, take all the grassroots villages into your own hands.
Create a new grassroots regime, bypass the traditional three levels of prefecture, county and county, and fully grasp the more basic regime at the rural and rural levels.
Let the imperial power go directly to the local area, take root in the local area, and control your own basic foundation.
With the countryside in hand, the basic foundation is there, and Guo can stand firm, and even in the extreme state of military control across the country, it can maintain the existence of a regime for a period of time.
The scholar class did not have an official position at the rural level.
There is no real one.
The noble scholars disdain to contact the humble and dirty mud legs. In their eyes, the second-level rural regime is the pigpen for the mud legs and the private land.
No matter what happens, these two levels are stable.
Since the rural regime has stabilized, Guo has taken the countryside as the foundation and has constantly arranged for poor children and civil officials from the Imperial Academy to attack upwards and serve as an auxiliary official in the county-level regime.
This is the greatest right that Mr. Guo has won for civil officials so far.
It allows them to enter county-level governments to serve as auxiliary officials.
After the establishment of the Wei Empire, local officials were restricted by Guo's authority to call for the summons. A considerable number of the auxiliary officials of the main local administrative officials were appointed by the Central Ministry of Personnel, rather than local officials who called for them themselves.
This created an opportunity for Mr. Guo to mobilize these people to seize the dominance and voice of county-level regimes.
The second-level rural regime alone is not enough.
This is also what the county-level regime should do.
Chapter completed!