someone elected to government noble enough to avoid cronyism, and allow citizens to prosper
(portmanteau combining these French terms, used in English):
1. Noblesse oblige: Whoever claims to be noble must conduct himself nobly.
2. Laissez-faire: transactions between private parties free from state-intervention --------> 3. (my neologism)
People running for office -- as wealthy as Ross Perot, Mitt Romney, and John Kerry -- would ideally be uninfluenced by lobbyists' money, level the playing field by the principle of "noblessez-faire".
Keeping your computer browsing protected in both directions: not revealing your identity to other sites, and not accepting other sites' cookies into your computer.
evolved from "incognito", which is old and Latin, and not as explicit and current as "incookienito"
"I don't want ads following around my Internet-browsing path, so I will just open Google Chrome "incookienito" "