Avatar of Captios
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    1. Captios 10 yrs ago

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Conlanging whoo.

History is really fun and making up worlds is the best.

Can I do architecture?

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Economic collapses are distinct from a elimination of intellectualism. I'd imagine that it would be hard for people to simply lose or forget about prevalent, important technologies (as military technologies usually are). Not to mention the globalization of technology and research, it would be difficult to imagine the rolling back of technology levels in our modern society at all.
Meh, Poland hasn't experience much immigration in recent centuries. That 94% probably excludes the variety of Golden Liberty minorities in Poland. I can imagine a substantial sum of Sorbs, Kashubians, Silesians, and likely 'larger' supranational ethnic groups like Belarusians and Lithuanians would also be particularly prevalent and not particularly as discriminated against by the Soviet-aligned government as other notable ethnicities.
I thought I'd let you all know for your convenience that my character sheet shall arrive by the end of this week (though most likely on Thursday or on the morrow).

And I thought I'd let you know this for your amusement as well, for as I was working on this and a multitude of other things in tandem late last night, I had somehow, completely on accident, combined this CS with an app for an NRP and flavour text for another NRP in its very own Word document.

I curiously ended up describing, in Article XI of the Fundamental Processes of the Hungarian Republic, that the Peoples' Federation of the Crimea and Its Associated Territories is centred in Bakhchysarai and that this Crimea-in-Hungary is also apparently home to some fusion-fission manipulating guy. I'm guessing that in my exhausted stupor this whole mixup had to do with multiple Word files open and the nation of Hungary itself.

So look out for it when this is all done sorted out. :C
BB said
I went with religion, considering that's fairly easy to justify and an objective of a fair bit of people in that part of the world nowadays.


Even in your more reasonable case does there exist a chance to expose 'subfactionalism', as we may call it, within the Middle East. Obviously the grand Sunni-Shia split and their various branches, but also the case of the Bahá'í Faith, Mandaeism, the Yazidis that we hear so much of nowadays, Ibadi Muslims in Oman, the whole Wahhabi bunch of shenanigans, the status of Israel and the Jewish state.

Not to mention the dual-denominations of Christianity in the Balkan peninsula and the Greek peninsula and insular territories.

And I'll conclude this by noting that nigh all historical 'superstates' if they can be called such exploited superfactionalism above nationalism or religious factionalism to maintain their power and control. Take, for example, the case of the Habsburg supremacy in Austria, the policies of the Sublime Porte in the Ottoman Empire, the whole states' rights vs federal power in the USA, cult-development and hyperstatism as well as oppressive policies in the USSR and to some extent the latter Yugoslavia, ethnic classism in various Chinese dynasties, indeed, even in my own Crimean state here does there exist a cohesive federal ideology centred about sometimes forceful national disregard and oft-violent 'enforcement' of socioeconomic equality. All of these examples highlight the importance of controlling factionalism in a superstate.
duck55223 said
Onto the super-states thing, I feel as if disastrous conflict tends to make nations more unious. After-all it was WW2 and the end of it that brought about the EU.


Not quite. It is shared-ideal factionalism that unites peoples and nations into even somewhat cohesive entities. The problem I have with much of these conglomerate superstates is that it is nigh impossible to conjure up an ideology or factional identity that would bind these peoples and nations together.
Rare said
You might piss the Allies and the countries that want your land off.


A more eloquent display of Magyar presence in traditionally Magyar lands as opposed to arbitrarily blatant revanchism against Hungary's neighboring states should do the trick. Not to mention that the growing violent insurrectionism in Hungary would make the Principal Allied Powers far more willing to accept a less harsh and more carefully thought out peace.

Maps and sweet talk make everything better.
Time to make Trianon never ever happen.
Meh, if we're ignoring this amount of sense, I think I'll be able to snag a bit more of Ukraine. Perhaps Moldova as well.
For a 'torn world', having such arbitrarily blobbed nations is incredibly odd.

Work in progress.

Name of Nation: Peoples' Federation of the Crimea and Its Associated Territories

Territories:



Government Type:

The Peoples' Federation is a close federal state consisting of the following non-sovereign states:

The Grand Crimean Republic, with its capital in Sevastopol

The Free State of Adygea, with its capital in Myequape

The Kuban People's Republic, with its capital in Krasnodar

The Autonomous Don State, with its capital in Rostov-na-Donu

The Donetsk People's Republic, with its capital in Donets’k, which is a constituent Republic of the Federal State of Novorossiya

The Lugansk People's Republic, with its capital in Luhansk, which is a constituent Republic of the Federal State of Novorossiya

The Dniprozvychayna Free State, with its capital in Dnepropetrovsk

The South Buh Republic, with its capital in Mykolaiv

The Autonomous City and Territories of Odessa, with its capital in Odessa

The Dunayhirlo Region, with its capital in Izmayil

Military: The Crimean military is an instrument of the Federal government in Bakhchysarai, and not of one of the States of Crimea. The Crimean army is small, well-trained, and entirely volunteer-based. The Crimean navy is where the bulk of Crimean military spending goes. The Crimean airforce is similarly well-funded, but on a much smaller scale. More later.

Economy: Crimea operates a massive trade economy, connecting east and west. In addition, it maintains traditional Russo-Ukrainian industry and mining operations in Dniprovychayna, Kuban, and the Don Basin.

Foreign Policy: Official foreign policy of non-belligerism, though not neutrality.

History: WIP

Foes: TBD

Population: 12,016,724

Other:(Anything else)
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