Callac Cananach: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
Text replacement - "Coribus" to "Maristella"
m (some quotes)
m (Text replacement - "Coribus" to "Maristella")
 
Line 56: Line 56:
In June of 1892, Cananach struck a deal with the Free Faneria Press, an underground federalist and Jacobin publishing group, to print and distribute a remastered and greatly expanded version of ''Crown of Bayonets'' titled ''Republican Ideals and Their Application in Northern Levantia''. This work would become a central piece of Republican literature in Faneria, running through a range of grievances with the State and the Fhainnin monarchy and detailing several types of republicanism, including federalism, centralized republics, and hybrid systems and summarizing the advantages of each. The work also covered state powers, individual rights, notes on public welfare and numerous other topics relating to the various ways a republic could be designed. ''Republican Ideals'' would become the seminal work for Cananach's ideology, as many of the ideas he would incorporate into his later governance were introduced, albeit alongside other options, in the book. It also became a bestseller despite attempts at censorship by the [[Throneswatch]], which tasked several agents with tracking the author as a potential revolutionary.
In June of 1892, Cananach struck a deal with the Free Faneria Press, an underground federalist and Jacobin publishing group, to print and distribute a remastered and greatly expanded version of ''Crown of Bayonets'' titled ''Republican Ideals and Their Application in Northern Levantia''. This work would become a central piece of Republican literature in Faneria, running through a range of grievances with the State and the Fhainnin monarchy and detailing several types of republicanism, including federalism, centralized republics, and hybrid systems and summarizing the advantages of each. The work also covered state powers, individual rights, notes on public welfare and numerous other topics relating to the various ways a republic could be designed. ''Republican Ideals'' would become the seminal work for Cananach's ideology, as many of the ideas he would incorporate into his later governance were introduced, albeit alongside other options, in the book. It also became a bestseller despite attempts at censorship by the [[Throneswatch]], which tasked several agents with tracking the author as a potential revolutionary.


{{Blockquote|The Throne is, in practice, the largest welfare recipient in the nation. While It maintains thirty-three palaces, a personal security force able to ignore conventional law, private colonies abroad for its profit and in the case of Coribus and Eilada as personal resorts, and a great many businesses and privileges besides, these are paid for at the expense of the layman; whereas the stipend for the unemployed is nothing and too little is left over for the widowed to afford the base amenities of life. The entire nation has been arrayed to provide comfort to a few dozen persons at the expense of all else.}}{{Blockquote|The Latin civilization is great in and of itself, but it is not ours. Any one of us can nowadays take a train to view authentic cities and taste authentic foods, but the desperate importation of culture in the place of our own buildings and art is both an abandonment of our heritage and produces an inferior copy.}}
{{Blockquote|The Throne is, in practice, the largest welfare recipient in the nation. While It maintains thirty-three palaces, a personal security force able to ignore conventional law, private colonies abroad for its profit and in the case of Maristella and Eilada as personal resorts, and a great many businesses and privileges besides, these are paid for at the expense of the layman; whereas the stipend for the unemployed is nothing and too little is left over for the widowed to afford the base amenities of life. The entire nation has been arrayed to provide comfort to a few dozen persons at the expense of all else.}}{{Blockquote|The Latin civilization is great in and of itself, but it is not ours. Any one of us can nowadays take a train to view authentic cities and taste authentic foods, but the desperate importation of culture in the place of our own buildings and art is both an abandonment of our heritage and produces an inferior copy.}}


fit in first meetings with Kalma here somewhere
fit in first meetings with Kalma here somewhere

Navigation menu