Why this word is great
KAKOCRACY — [Noun] A system of governance in which the least qualified or most morally bankrupt individuals hold power. From Ancient Greek κακός (kakós, "bad") + -κρατία (-kratía, "rule, power"). Unlike "kakistocracy" (which suggests institutionalized ineptitude) or "kleptocracy" (which narrows to theft by elites), kakocracy is the blunt fact of rule by the unworthy. It is the dull-eyed bureaucrat rubber-stamping cruelty, the demagogue whose lies outpace his wit, and the slow rot of institutions when stewardship falls to those who neither understand nor care for their purpose—a reminder that power, like nature, abhors a vacuum, but not for long.