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GunnerJ
Aug 1, 2005

Do you think this is funny?
Yall, this is just a game, relax.

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QuoProQuid
Jan 12, 2012

Tr*ckin' and F*ckin' all the way to tha
T O P

Patter Song posted:

The joys of running a thread on FPTP logic: Socialists got 45.5% of the vote here and get to run the show.

Just like a real country!

this is exactly why the socialists are against democratic reforms

GunnerJ posted:

Yall, this is just a game, relax.

i DEMAND this fake video-game country be governed in accordance with my Very Serious irl political views

Demon Of The Fall
May 1, 2004

Nap Ghost
Lol we’re gonna get rolled when war breaks out, good job everyone

Danny Glands
Jan 26, 2013

Possible thermal failure (CPU on fire?)
Well, it was nice being a sovereign country while it lasted.

QuoProQuid
Jan 12, 2012

Tr*ckin' and F*ckin' all the way to tha
T O P

Demon Of The Fall posted:

Lol we’re gonna get rolled when war breaks out, good job everyone

lol if you don’t think the sultan is going to exploit growing public resentment of and military opposition to the unelected socialist government to launch a coup

Slaan
Mar 16, 2009



ASHERAH DEMANDS I FEAST, I VOTE FOR A FEAST OF FLESH

Danny Glands posted:

Well, it was nice being a sovereign country while it lasted.

In before the Frangleterran/Morrocan-initiated purges

MaxieSatan
Oct 19, 2017

critical support for anarchists

QuoProQuid posted:

lol if you don’t think the sultan is going to exploit growing public resentment of and military opposition to the unelected socialist government to launch a coup

Like he's not gonna try and do that anyway.

Also, isn't the voting public's ideology breakdown usually pretty close to the upperhouse? Proof the system works.

Patter Song
Mar 26, 2010

Hereby it is manifest that during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man.
Fun Shoe

MaxieSatan posted:

Like he's not gonna try and do that anyway.

Also, isn't the voting public's ideology breakdown usually pretty close to the upperhouse? Proof the system works.

Not a bad point:



Looks like the population's ideology (lower pie charts) is basically 1/3rd Socialist, 1/3rd Liberal, 1/3rd everything else. Thread vote is something like 45% Socialist, 40% Liberal, 15% everything else. Biggest difference is that Conservatives are a much bigger chunk in the AI than they are with us.

SlothfulCobra
Mar 27, 2011

From all I've wound up learning about fascism in the last year, isn't it particularly odd for such a traditional position of power to drive the rise to fascism? Especially what with how throughout Al Andalus's history the sultans have traditionally been the moderating force steadfastly refusing to suppress the cultures that the Majilis kept legislating against.

Al Andalus is either going to slip and fall into the Great War with no planning or allies, or it's going to go through its own crazy civil war. Again.

420 Gank Mid
Dec 26, 2008

WARNING: This poster is a huge bitch!

Hashim posted:

and even then, there's no guarantee that a fully Communist nation will like us at all

Quien nos Traicionó?

Los Socialdemócratas

ThatBasqueGuy
Feb 14, 2013

someone introduce jojo to lazyb


SlothfulCobra posted:

From all I've wound up learning about fascism in the last year, isn't it particularly odd for such a traditional position of power to drive the rise to fascism? Especially what with how throughout Al Andalus's history the sultans have traditionally been the moderating force steadfastly refusing to suppress the cultures that the Majilis kept legislating against.

Al Andalus is either going to slip and fall into the Great War with no planning or allies, or it's going to go through its own crazy civil war. Again.

I mean the Northern Italian industrial barons and (I believe) the landed aristocracy of South Italy both supported Mussolini as a counterweight against the left. Doesn't seem too crazy that an old guard with a well established and highly skilled propaganda/secret police arm would astroturf a similar movement that feeds into their power base.

Dance Officer
May 4, 2017

It would be awesome if we could dance!

SlothfulCobra posted:

From all I've wound up learning about fascism in the last year, isn't it particularly odd for such a traditional position of power to drive the rise to fascism? Especially what with how throughout Al Andalus's history the sultans have traditionally been the moderating force steadfastly refusing to suppress the cultures that the Majilis kept legislating against.

Al Andalus is either going to slip and fall into the Great War with no planning or allies, or it's going to go through its own crazy civil war. Again.

Fascism, Nazism and AFAIK all of the forms of communism that the Soviets went through fit poorly into the left-right spectrum. I wouldn't bother trying to make sense of them in that way.

Flavius Aetass
Mar 30, 2011

SlothfulCobra posted:

From all I've wound up learning about fascism in the last year, isn't it particularly odd for such a traditional position of power to drive the rise to fascism? Especially what with how throughout Al Andalus's history the sultans have traditionally been the moderating force steadfastly refusing to suppress the cultures that the Majilis kept legislating against.

Al Andalus is either going to slip and fall into the Great War with no planning or allies, or it's going to go through its own crazy civil war. Again.

I would think it would be more like Tojo-era Japan or Franco-era Spain, where essentially fascist strongmen use the monarch to bolster obedience.

It's not so much that conservatives naturally align themselves with fascism, but that conservatives naturally align themselves with the reaction against leftism.

Ralepozozaxe
Sep 6, 2010

A Veritable Smorgasbord!
I'm putting my money on pure anarchy. Al-Andalus will just be a Mad Max style wasteland.

Patter Song
Mar 26, 2010

Hereby it is manifest that during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man.
Fun Shoe

Flavius Aetass posted:

I would think it would be more like Tojo-era Japan or Franco-era Spain, where essentially fascist strongmen use the monarch to bolster obedience.

The Italy comparison works quite well. Victor Emmanuel III was an effective symbol for the nation early on in fascist Italy, but as the years went on, he basically fell into a golden-cage house arrest and barely ever left the palace except to be photographed with Mussolini occasionally. King was still on the throne, but was completely irrelevant.

RabidWeasel
Aug 4, 2007

Cultures thrive on their myths and legends...and snuggles!

Patter Song posted:

The Italy comparison works quite well. Victor Emmanuel III was an effective symbol for the nation early on in fascist Italy, but as the years went on, he basically fell into a golden-cage house arrest and barely ever left the palace except to be photographed with Mussolini occasionally. King was still on the throne, but was completely irrelevant.

It's almost like everyone who thought that they could co-opt fascists of all shades or compromise with them was completely loving wrong, what a novel concept :thunk:

Patter Song
Mar 26, 2010

Hereby it is manifest that during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man.
Fun Shoe

RabidWeasel posted:

It's almost like everyone who thought that they could co-opt fascists of all shades or compromise with them was completely loving wrong, what a novel concept :thunk:

If we go fascist, we'll probably have General So-and-So become Field Marshal and Regent So-and-So, and the Zulfiqar family will be forcibly secluded "for their own protection" into luxurious obscurity.

Pakled
Aug 6, 2011

WE ARE SMART

Patter Song posted:

If we go fascist, we'll probably have General So-and-So become Field Marshal and Regent So-and-So, and the Zulfiqar family will be forcibly secluded "for their own protection" into luxurious obscurity.

I dunno about that, our brand of Fascism is spearheaded by the Sultan himself, and our Blackshirts are loyal to him personally. As long as he's alive, I don't think we'll see fascism get co-opted by anyone else.

habeasdorkus
Nov 3, 2013

Royalty is a continuous shitposting motion.

Pakled posted:

I dunno about that, our brand of Fascism is spearheaded by the Sultan himself, and our Blackshirts are loyal to him personally. As long as he's alive, I don't think we'll see fascism get co-opted by anyone else.

He's a hopped up opium dandy. Some ambitious Colonel named Qaddafi is going to off him and blame it on the socialists.

Patter Song
Mar 26, 2010

Hereby it is manifest that during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man.
Fun Shoe

Pakled posted:

I dunno about that, our brand of Fascism is spearheaded by the Sultan himself, and our Blackshirts are loyal to him personally. As long as he's alive, I don't think we'll see fascism get co-opted by anyone else.

Nah, all power to the Sultan is the result of going Reactionary. Fascist has to be the Sultan getting puppeted. It's the only way to distinguish the two.

Crazycryodude
Aug 15, 2015

Lets get our X tons of Duranium back!

....Is that still a valid thing to jingoistically blow out of proportion?


Like habeusdorkus said, the Sultan is a total failson who's completely zonked out of his mind on opium 80% of the time, no way is he going to suddenly morph into a steely-eyed fascist demagogue. There's someone actually competent behind the movement and he's just the figurehead.

(It's a cabal of capitalists. It's always capital supporting fascism when it looks like the left might be a threat.)

Crazycryodude fucked around with this message at 06:09 on Nov 20, 2018

Rody One Half
Feb 18, 2011

Remember how we voted for 30 years of liberalism strictly for boats (which we only needed at all because we went liberal and colonized) and for political reforms (which we didn't get)

Imperialism: not even once!!!

fucking love Fiona Apple
Jun 19, 2013

samus comfy so what

I like how we spent literal decades creating a colonial empire in Africa, only to completely piss it away in one vote.

Rody One Half
Feb 18, 2011

It was a colonial Empire we never needed, never properly controlled, and shouldn't have made in the first place!

pinchofginger
Nov 7, 2009
Fallen Rib

Rodyle posted:

Remember how we voted for 30 years of liberalism strictly for boats (which we only needed at all because we went liberal and colonized) and for political reforms (which we didn't get)

Imperialism: not even once!!!

Revisionist history at its finest. We needed the fleet to gently caress Morocco, and to guard against being hosed by Morocco.

RagnarokZ
May 14, 2004

Emperor of the Internet

Rodyle posted:

It was a colonial Empire we never needed, never properly controlled, and shouldn't have made in the first place!

Just like he French!

Oh no, we're just like loving French.

Dance Officer
May 4, 2017

It would be awesome if we could dance!

Rodyle posted:

Remember how we voted for 30 years of liberalism strictly for boats (which we only needed at all because we went liberal and colonized) and for political reforms (which we didn't get)

Imperialism: not even once!!!

Mind you that the imperialists couldn't pass reforms because literally no one wanted them. 30 years of socialism would have accomplished the same result.

habeasdorkus
Nov 3, 2013

Royalty is a continuous shitposting motion.
The one advantage socialists would have had is less stability due to cheesing off reactionaries and probably getting stomped on a couple wars. That might have gotten some additional social reforms passed.

I still think liberals got hosed in being too successful to implement political rights, you can be a fascist and still support portions of the welfare state so long as it's only provided to the ingroup. Meanwhile, civil rights are antithetical to any fascist political scheme.

MatchaZed
Feb 14, 2010

We Can Do It!


pinchofginger posted:

Revisionist history at its finest. We needed the fleet to gently caress Morocco, and to guard against being hosed by Morocco.

Yuuuuuup.

Imperialists not really for colonization, it's just they're the only one with boats. Just like modernizersates and trains.

Ralepozozaxe
Sep 6, 2010

A Veritable Smorgasbord!
It's funny how Al-Andalus' problem has always been not enough boats.

paragon1
Nov 22, 2010

FULL COMMUNISM NOW
I tried to get the boats built and keep them up to par in EUIV. But they just. kept. exploding. :negative:

hashashash
Nov 2, 2016

Cure for cancer discovered!
Court physicians hate him!
Chapter 18 - Stately Quadrille - 1904 to 1909


The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were unstable and shaky, with the Great Powers jostling for influence and land in a carefully-balanced concert, one that was designed to prevent the escalation of tensions, to avert the eruption of crises, to avoid the outbreak of world-spanning warfare. And since the late 1880s, that system had actually worked, with the Peace of Narbuna reigning across the width of Europe.

With the formation of Germany, however, the fragile peace immediately gave way to a scramble for allies and supporters - and thus begins the Stately Quadrille, a tenuous dance between empires as they fortify their borders, expand their arsenals and prepare for the war to come.




By the twentieth century, Germany had been ravaged by invaders and infighting for decades, forced to capitulate and disarm in a string of conflicts that stretched back to Tirruni Wars. But those same kingdoms and duchies had weathered through the storms, and with the defeat and annexation of the SGU, the Republic of Germany suddenly dominated vast swathes of Central Europe. And without hesitation, it immediately began to test its newfound strength.

A scant few weeks after unification, North German troops crossed the Alps in an undeclared invasion of Italy, ostensibly to “secure their new border”.



The neighbouring empires were still taken aback by the sudden disruption in the balance of power, but they quickly responded in kind. The Dual Monarchy launched an invasion of Lorraine - one of the most populous, richest and peaceful nations of Europe - to secure their own border with Germany, claiming that the mere existence of Lorraine put their empire at risk.



At the same time, war was being waged behind closed doors. Diplomats were dispatched from Hanover - the new capital of the German Republic - in March of 1904, travelling to the Archbishopric of Liege with an offer to join their union, with the diplomats claiming that the Dual Monarchy was planning an invasion of the Low Country.

The Archbishop wouldn’t hear a single word from the emissary, however. It was bad enough that this new “German Union” was a republic, but a republic dominated by protestants, that was simply too far.




Ambassadors from Paris and Smolensk arrived at Liege a few weeks later, guaranteeing the Archbishopric’s sovereignty against the warmongering Germans. And it didn’t end there, with both nations reaffirming their own alliance in a public ceremony shortly afterwards.

Envoys were also dispatched to Marrakesh, inviting Morocco to re-join their alliance bloc. The Almoravid Sultan immediately accepted the offer, keen to regain his standing on the international stage, and thus re-establishing the Congressional Coalition of Morocco, Russia and the Dual Monarchy.



Emboldened by his recent victories and backed by his new allies, the Sultan of Morocco began exerting his influence across the Mediterranean once again, negotiating pacts and forging alliances for the first time since the Continental War.



The reformation of the Congressional Coalition meant that the newly-formed Republic of Germany was surrounded by enemies in the east and west alike, not the best strategic position to be in. So the Germans sought to retaliate by forming their own alliances with other Great Powers - and first on their list was, inevitably, Al Andalus.



In fact, Al Andalus had many nations courting her for alliances and trade deals and friendships. The world still remembered the vicious battles fought during the Continental War, when the Andalusi had single-handedly repelled the combined forces of Morocco, Russia and the Dual Monarchy, forcing them to sign their carefully-crafted Treaty of Narbuna in a resounding military and diplomatic victory. Al Andalus had been quiet and isolationist since then, but they would still make a mighty ally in the wars to come, there was little doubt about that much.

All of these offers of alliance were rejected, however. The Andalusi themselves had other ideas.




The past decade had been difficult on Al Andalus, with four Grand Viziers elected, consecrated and assassinated in the space of five years. The old guard were not taking to socialism very easily, that much was apparent to see.

But even after the death of their most ambitious and capable leader yet - Grand Vizier Rajul Majnun Mujamad - the reds refused to keel. After a brief period of infighting, another figure rose to dominate the Reformed Socialists, using his charm, wealth and family name to wheedle his way into the upper ranks of the government. And on the summer solstice of 1904, Mahmud Majnun Mujamad was proclaimed to be the new Grand Vizier of Al Andalus.



Mahmud was distantly related to his predecessor, Rajul Mujamad, but that was where their similarities end. Rajul and Mahmud had very different visions as to the future of socialism in Al Andalus, with the former advocating a hardline stance, demanding an end to imperialism and striving for social reform. Mahmud was much more flexible in his ideals, preferring to make concessions and forge alliances with other parties in the Majlis, and this often put him at odds with his elder cousin. Mahmud’s speeches had always gone ignored, however, nobody gave a whit about policies or legislation. Until now.

The Red Vizier had enjoyed his days in the sun, but he was dead and buried now, and it was Mahmud’s time to shine.



An even before taking office, the new Grand Vizier had crises to tackle and fires to quench. The first of these fires was the Indian Uprising, a mass rebellion that saw millions of Indians mutiny against commanders, resist colonial authorities, launch political assassinations, instigate riots and provoke confrontations and incite melees. Before anyone knew what had happened, the Andalusi Raj was engulfed in the flames of revolution.



The response from Qadis was turgid and slow, owing to the political troubles at home, but Mahmud wasted no time in dispatched an expeditionary force to quell the uprising upon being declared Grand Vizier. A large force numbering around 20,000 trained and tried soldiers, almost entirely Andalusi in composition, landed along the banks of Jessore in the dying days of 1904.

And within minutes, they were surrounded by thousands of Indians, screaming and shouting and shrieking in a dozen different tongues as they swarmed across the sands and seized the beachheads.



The battle of Jessore would rage for two weeks, interrupted only by feigned retreats and mock surrenders, with any real attempts at mediation quickly descending into brawls and skirmishes. The Andalusi were outnumbered almost 5 to 1, but they were also better trained and better armed, with the Indian militias wielding outdated guns for the most part, or even scythes and swords amongst the lesser ranks.

And after fortifying the beaches and repelling the first attack, the Andalusi were able to gradually gain ground on the enemy, slowly pushing them northwards and seizing a string of nearby fortresses and encampments. When the signal for mass retreat was finally given, tens of thousands of Indian corpses littered the battlefield of Jessore, their blood staining the sands a brilliant shade of crimson - one that would not wash away anytime soon.



This was just the beginning of a campaign that would stretch across years and cost millions in lives, however. And with the Andalusi distracted by the struggle to retain their colonies, they were forced to pull their troops back from neighbouring native powers, allowing their colonial rivals to quickly expand their influence in Gondwana, Delhi, Orissa and the Bengal.



The socialists didn’t intervene or protest when the Moroccans and Japanese sent their own troops to garrison Delhi and Nagpur, they couldn’t care less, and they wouldn’t have been able to do much about it even if they could.

Why? Because the Indian Uprising wasn’t the only battle that they were fighting, it wasn’t even the most important, not when there were enemies threatening to topple them in the very streets of Qadis - the Communists.



For a brief period during the reign of the Red Vizier, the left-wing organisations and unions were united under common leadership. That unity disintegrated with the assassination of Rajul, however, and the gulf between socialism and communism in Al Andalus had widened to cavernous depths since then. Blows between the two blocs became increasingly frequent as Mahmud’s ineptitude became apparent, with the communists and radical socialists claiming that the Reformed Socialists had “betrayed the ideals and standards of socialism, instead preferring to walk on the backs of workers and labourers all across the country as they traipse about high society”, according to a prominent underground newsletter that was making the circuits.

And it wasn’t completely untrue. It hadn’t happened overnight, but the Reformed Socialists were steeped in corruption and hypocrisy, so it wasn’t much of a surprise when thousands of socialists abandoned the party and defected to illegal communist organisations.



Desperate to curb this tide of defections, Grand Vizier Mahmud immediately began acting against this radical branch of socialism, banning and forbidding the mere mention of Communism as a legitimate political threat. The Grand Vizier knew that fear was not enough to maintain his rule, not after the recent string of political assassinations, so he also announced his intention to launch a new series of reforms, starting with the legalisation of state-controlled labour unions.




Whilst the Grand Vizier struggled against the rising tide of radical sympathies, the wars - or skirmishes, to put it more accurately - in Europe came to an end. As expected, both the German Republic and the Dual Monarchy quickly crushed any resistance to their invasions, with the former annexing the German-speaking parts of Italy, and the latter absorbing Lorraine in its entirety.




Germany and the Dual Monarchy now shared a border that stretched almost four hundred miles of cavernous valley and rushing river and immense mountain, from the Archishop’s seat of Liege in the north to the turbulent city of Bern in the south.



Back in Iberia, meanwhile, the instability and volatility that had engulfed the peninsula did little to stem the surge of technological advancements. In fact, if anything it fuelled them, with a number of Andalusi pioneers rising to global prominence as they devised and patented a series of extraordinary inventions, from telephones to automobiles to zeppelins.





This was the Age of Inventions, and the Andalusi were at the forefront of it. Amongst the most famous of these innovations was undoubtedly the aeroplane, with two brothers from Tulaytullah devoting years of research and funds to the design and construction of the Firnas, the first aircraft to sustain heavier-than-air flight.

This astounding achievement would spark an aviation frenzy all across Europe, with the two brothers staging a series of dazzling demonstrations that culminated in a flight across the Straits of Gibraltar, captivating and awing commoners and politicians alike.



Grand Vizier Mahmud, on the other hand, continued to tread flimsy ground as he struggled to appease the moderates and curtail the radicals in his party. His promised reforms were brought to a screeching halt by a Moderate-Royalist-Sultanic coalition in the Majlis al-Shura, but the Grand Vizier was able to continue the development platform espoused by the Reformed Socialists by approving the construction of several hundreds of miles worth of railway in northern Iberia, along with several diesel-powered locomotives to run the lines between León and Qattalun.



And a few months later, he proudly the announced the completion of another line of expensive fortifications, this time dubbed the “Pillars of Gibraltar”. The Pillars featured a continuous ring of fortresses that stretched along the banks of the Straits, armed with colossal artillery and coastal batteries, manned by thousands of volunteer soldiers, and all but impregnable to invasions from the south.

At long last, Mahmud insisted in a speech to the viziers and nobles of the Majlis, the security of Al Andalus was assured.



For every enemy that threatens Andalusia’s borders, however, three more look to topple the government from within. Despite the Grand Vizier’s best efforts, the communist movement was quickly gaining traction amongst the masses, with the rabble-rousers and demagogues now openly calling for coordinated rallies and demonstrations, for the intimidation of capitalists and aristocrats, for the overthrow of the Reformed Socialists and Majlis al-Shura — by any means necessary.



Across the width of the world, meanwhile, the campaign in Andalusi India had gradually gained ground over the past few years. Despite several early losses to the Indian militias, the Expeditionary Force was able to seize and fortify the Bengal Delta after a series of bloody battles along the banks of the river, and once reinforcements arrived from Africa (armed and trained by the Khedive), they were able to push out and begin recapturing their lost territories.

After four years of asymmetric warfare and scorched-earth tactics, the fighting finally culminated in the battle of Rajshahi in the early hours of a winter morning, deep into 1907.



The Andalusi were massively outnumbered, but that wasn’t out of the ordinary, with their superiority in arms and professionalism overwhelming the Indian advantage in numbers thus far.

The rebels had fortified Rajshahi in anticipation of the battle, but they emerged from the city as the Andalusi marched on it, intent on finally halting their advance. Immediately upon sighting each other, guns exploded and bullets were exchanged, with bodies dropping to the mud as the two armies clashed beneath the medieval walls of the city. The battle raged in a great semi-circle around the northern half of Rajshahi, featuring heroic charges and assaults in some parts, devolving into hand-to-hand brawls in others, and famously witnessing the suicide of thousands of rebels as they blew themselves apart in the hope of taking the Andalusi leadership with them.



This was their last stand, this was where the entire remaining strength of the Indian Uprising stood, the remnants of a continent-spanning revolution that had begun as a minor demonstration in the streets of Rajbalhat.

And this is where it was ended, with hundreds of thousands killed or wounded below the walls of the city.



Three months after the battle of Rajshahi, order was finally restored to the Andalusi Raj, with the commanders dispatching telegrams carrying word of their victory to Qadis. Before it even reached the metropolis of Al Andalus, however, the victory was tempered by unwelcome news…



Whilst the Andalusi were struggling to maintain their hard-won colonies, Morocco and Japan had been conspiring to expand their own. Diplomats from the two empires met in a series of meetings over the course of 1907 to finally partition the remaining North Indian principalities amongst themselves, eventually reaching a settlement whereby Japan annexed the highly-lucrative basin of the Ganges and Yamuna rivers, whilst Morocco was granted free rein to invade Gondwana and Orissa.

By the dying days of the Indian Uprising, the papers were all signed and dusted, without even the slightest acknowledgement from Al Andalus.



The socialists might not care much about colonial politics, but the other parties of the Majlis were immediately up in arms, roaring and bellowing in protest of the humiliating isolation enforced by the Reformed Socialists. Before the Grand Vizier could respond or retaliate, however, more news arrived from across the Mediterranean, where Serbia had defied expectations and repelled both Greece and Bulgaria.



More than that, the radicals had actually defeated the Greeks and Bulgarians on the battlefield, launching counter-invasions of their own, counter-invasions that were markedly more successful than their antecedent. Despite the constant influx of money and guns from the Congressional Coalition, the Serbian communists managed to capture Athens and Sofia in the fall of 1908, bringing the First Struggle to a decisive conclusion.




With their forces crushed and capitals fallen, the Greeks and Bulgarians were forced to surrender unconditionally. Diplomats were dispatched to negotiate peace settlements with the Serbs, but to the surprise of the vanquished kings and prime ministers, those same diplomats were expelled without an audience.

Instead, the Serbs supervised the abolition of private enterprises and bourgeoisie operations, conducted the organisation of democratically-elected councils, and personally installed a renowned revolutionary as the “Dictator of the Proletariat”.



The radicals were there to stay, it would seem.



The Great Powers of Europe were left dumbstruck and paralysed, with the communist victory immediately inciting the outbreak of a wave of mass riots and rebellions all across the continent.

And the victorious leadership of Serbia only further fanned these flames, with the voices of a hundred communists broadcasted across Europe as they called for workers and labourers to take to the streets, to overthrow their capitalists oppressors, to topple their governments and seize the means of production and achieve socialism through the only means possible — revolution.



And that was precisely what happened.

In the months that followed, a series of riots and confrontations escalated in cities dotting Iberia, with demonstrations and protests turning violent more often than not. It was becoming increasingly clear that these socialists weren’t taking their orders from Qadis, not anymore, they were listening to the words that surged forth from Belgrade, listening and obeying and acting.

The Grand Vizier refused to surrender to these radicals, but he had already lost the support of the poor, quickly followed by the workers and labourers, along with the unions and guilds shortly afterwards, before finally being abandoned by his own party. And in the winter months of 1908, he was finally relieved from his esteemed office when a gang of radical communists surrounded, kidnapped and murdered him in the very streets of the capital.



And with that, the tinderbox was well and truly set aflame.




“Peace, prosperity and plentifulness.”

The irony of those words only becomes clearer as rebellions and revolts erupt all across the peninsula, with the Sultanate of Al Andalus descending into its most divided and fractured years in almost a century. Martial law is declared and the army is mobilised, but unbeknownst to the astute viziers and charming politicians of Qadis, this is only the beginning.

Fresh from their victory in the First Struggle, as the Serbian communists would later call their wars against neighbouring Balkan powers, the communist leadership proudly announce the organisation of a grand conference in Belgrade. This conference would host hundreds of left-wing parties and organisations from dozens of nations across Europe and the Near East, seeking to unite the divided and disenfranchised masses into a single powerful league, one that would ignite terror in powers great and small alike. The Red Vanguard has been forged, and is ready to march to war.



The International League of Socialists and Anarchists would lay the foundations for a political and military alliance that transcends borders and boundaries, with the revolutionaries joining forces against a common enemy and uniting under a common flag. The words of the revolution ring in the streets and alleyways of Europe, sung in thousands of loud and hopeful voices, by tens of thousands of workers marching to break their shackles.

A red sun is rising, and when it sets on the world, it will be one forever changed.


World map:

Erwin the German
May 30, 2011

:3
:)

GSD
May 10, 2014

by Nyc_Tattoo
:ussr:

Slaan
Mar 16, 2009



ASHERAH DEMANDS I FEAST, I VOTE FOR A FEAST OF FLESH
Socialists!!!!! :argh:

Archaeology Hat
Aug 10, 2009
You Andalusi sure are a contentious people

Crazycryodude
Aug 15, 2015

Lets get our X tons of Duranium back!

....Is that still a valid thing to jingoistically blow out of proportion?


ChaseSP
Mar 25, 2013



mcclay
Jul 8, 2013

Oh dear oh gosh oh darn
Soiled Meat
:ussr: :ussr: :ussr:

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paragon1
Nov 22, 2010

FULL COMMUNISM NOW
Hey look, a political reform! :toot:

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