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«12. . .86,50586,50686,50786,50886,50986,51086,511. . .92,19092,191»

Nosautempopulus wrote:Sisuvia
Diwi

Senpai's Assemble! o>o

Hello A27 ^-^

Nosautempopulus and Diwi

Nosautempopulus

Sisuvia wrote:Hello A27 ^-^

I will fight to stay up a lil bit longer! o>O

How you been? :3

Sisuvia

i've been in this region since i was thirteen wtf

Nosautempopulus, OsivoII, and Erarwati

Nosautempopulus wrote:I will fight to stay up a lil bit longer! o>O

How you been? :3

I've been good, I need to work on the Church of the North ^-^

How about you?

Nosautempopulus

Nosautempopulus

Sisuvia wrote:I've been good, I need to work on the Church of the North ^-^

How about you?

Doing good too, been playing Fallout 4 all evening lol

I can't wait to see that! I gtg now though, goodnight! ^-^

Sisuvia

Nosautempopulus wrote:Doing good too, been playing Fallout 4 all evening lol

I can't wait to see that! I gtg now though, goodnight! ^-^

Goodnight ^>^

Nosautempopulus

I want to increase the number of women in Denmark-Norway's armed forces

They've been allowed in combat positions, and several served in both Rwanda and Albania, but it is still overwhelmingly men

The way I see it, getting women who can fight to join in greater numbers means more soldiers and staff that are rather necessary

And with 4.6% unemployment if I start recruiting from there and offering more incentives to join I can kill two birds with one scone

Diwi

Sisuvia wrote:And with 4.6% unemployment if I start recruiting from there and offering more incentives to join I can kill two birds with one scone

o>O

*immediately spits out the scone I got from the Danish Bakery*

I won’t be killed by your poisonous scones you filthy Dane! ->-ᕗ

Sisuvia

Bayern kahla

You live in Mainland Europe so you are best person to ask o>o

Is the water at restaurants in Europe free? <_<

Diwi wrote:o>O

*immediately spits out the scone I got from the Danish Bakery*

I won’t be killed by your poisonous scones you filthy Dane! ->-ᕗ

Hey, it's the saying PETA wanted

Or was it feed two birds with one stone?

Don't worry, the scones aren't poisoned, just the danishes

Diwi

https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/25/media/the-office-netflix-leaving/index.html

https://youtu.be/Xr8BHdC6X0c

Actually this won't affect me, I'll be gone by 2021

I have just read through 16 pages of Alzarikstan-The Shining Purple Light conflict bc I wanted to know what this whole thing was about. Damn, that was def an unique read.

Antillian

Erarwati wrote:I have just read through 16 pages of Alzarikstan-The Shining Purple Light conflict bc I wanted to know what this whole thing was about. Damn, that was def an unique read.

i'm sorry for your loss

Erarwati

    中国

THE REVOCATION OF THE ONE-CHILD POLICY

GREAT HALL OF THE PEOPLE, XICHENG DISTRICT, BEIJING, PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA

    MAY 1997

The problem of China’s missing generation of women is one of the greatest threats to the economy and demographics of modern China. In 1996—the most recently passed year—for every 100 female infants that were born in the People’s Republic of China, 111 male infants were born. Such a disparity between genders on a national level was certainly not natural, but was instead the result of a catastrophic array of factors that is set to leave tens of millions of Chinese men bereft of any women to marry and a future generation with stunted rates of childbirth. How, then, has such a disparity between male and female children come to be?

The cause of the significant gap between male and female births is, evidently, due almost entirely to mass selective abortions of unborn females by the Chinese populace. A “son preference” has always been pronounced in Chinese culture, but such a preference intensified when the Chinese government incentivized and rewarded one-child families in its “one-child policy” that began in 1979. Many Chinese families, it seems, sought for their single child to be male and consistently aborted female children solely for their gender. The problem of female children in China is worsened by the fact that hundreds of thousands of them have been abandoned for their gender even after birth to make way for one-child families with a single son. However, the grievous sexism against female children in many Chinese families is not only a moral problem, but a demographic one. As was previously mentioned, China’s population is increasingly male, with fewer women to bear children. In a nation whose demographic growth is already throttled by its birth restrictions, this presents a major issue: an insufficient replacement generation for the presently aging citizens.

The revocation of the “one-child policy” that had been so calamitous for Chinese women, therefore, seemed to have the potential to decrease the birth gender disparity, improve replacement generation populations, and significantly decrease the abandonment of predominantly female children—and although the policy would surely have been revoked for those reasons within two decades, a newfound global pressure brought it to a sooner demise.

In the spring of 1997, Iranian royalty arrived in Beijing for the negotiation of closer political collaboration between the People’s Republic and the Iranian Empire. For Beijing’s party bosses and functionaries, it only magnified Iran’s recent Beninist influence. Across the globe, the persecution of women had been brought to light by modern movements for women’s equality—movements championed by Iran’s egalitarian Elysia Benin, who most recently helped the struggle of women in Bokoro and who has influenced “Beninist” women’s movements as far away as Québec. This global surge of egalitarian pressure starkly contradicted the Chinese female eradication inspired by the one-child policy. That pressure—comprising not only the influence of Iran, but so too the rest of the modern world at large—coupled with the looming demographic and economic effects of a continuation of the policy, led to the subject of revocation being brought forth by paramount leader Jiang Zemin himself at a Politburo summit only weeks after the Iranian Empress’s visit—and the paramount leader’s word was all it seemed to take.

On May Day, 1997, a special convention of the National People’s Congress successfully passed a three-year-plan to gradually relax and finally revoke the one-child policy by the turn of the century, intending to “to improve the balanced development of population”—an obvious reference to the gender disparity. It seemed that even China had been touched by the global equality movement, and had acknowledged the demographic damage it had self-inflicted.

Rutannia, Arcanda, Bomoko, Paseo, and 11 othersNevbrejnovitz, Nosautempopulus, Enchanted Oasis, Valijun, Liberalina, Imperial nalvetland, Sisuvia, Erarwati, Diwi, Not xav, and Ranponian

Well, I think joining a Red Dead Online server with a bunch of roleplayers is something I regret.

Never again, will I walk into an abandoned house with two players RPing the incestous couple from the single player campaign.

Astarina wrote:Felix: "Somehow I doubt that..."

Soma: Do you have a kind of woman you want in life Felix?

Soma asked out of curiosity.

July 1958
The Malayan Emergency

British Forces Exit Malaya — Communist Party of Malaya Proclaims a People’s Republic!

18 JULY — The flags of the Communist Party of Malaya (CPM), consisting of a golden hammer and sickle on a red background fly high on top of the nation’s capital. With the exit of the last of the defeated British forces from Malaya after the Peace of Malacca, achieved after a 10-year long guerilla war against the British Empire and its Commonwealth, a new republic was declared in the nation’s capital; a People’s Republic. The party’s leader, Chin Peng, alongside his trusted deputies, secretaries and heads of the party’s various wings delivered his maiden speech in front of the “Government Offices” which housed the British administration in Malaya;

Chin Peng, Secretary-General of the CPM and Chairman of the Council of Ministers “Our war, comrades, the people’s war against colonialism, imperialism, and comprador-capitalism has been won! But our war to once and for all bring an end to capitalism in Malaya is still ongoing! Throughout the 10-year long war of liberation, we have been betrayed by our national-bourgeois allies in the fight against imperialism and colonialism, and our fire, the fire of revolution nearly extinguished, but today as we stand here triumphant over our enemies that fire has consumed this Peninsula and we burn brighter than ever before and with the proclamation of a People’s Republic of Malaya, we are ever closer towards achieving a socialist and eventually a communist society! In accordance with the proclamation of this new republic, founded on the principles of Marxism-Leninism and Maoism, all privately owned modes of production and land shall be confiscated and nationalized by the state and aptly redistributed to the workers and peasantry. In the newly liberated areas previously under British control, and where socialist reforms of agricultural collectivization have yet to become reality, the newly established National Institute for Agrarian Reform (IKPA) led by comrade Abdullah shall institute and enforce such reforms through re-distributing farmland previously owned by the land-owning bourgeoisie to its workers as cooperative-farms or as state-run farms. The factories of the bourgeois shall be revitalized and transformed into state-owned factories, a temporary measure not without its reasons. The industrialization of the People’s Republic of Malaya through proper state-led economic planning is of the utmost importance in order to transform ourselves into a self-sufficient society able to provide for our own, and thus the factories must be put under the control of the state before they are re-distributed to the proletariat, to the workers of the factories. But a socialist and communist revolution cannot be fully realized without the modernization and implementation of new and themselves revolutionary democratic systems to replace the representative parliamentarian system of the bourgeoisie, which is nothing more than instruments used to promote the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie and to protract the exploitation of the proletariat and peasantry. The only way to end such exploitation is to implement the ‘System of Threes’; the system of people’s congresses, democratic centralism and people’s democracy, systems which shall be implemented in due time. I realize that some of you will ask, Why wait? Why can we not have the democracy we fought for now? Comrades, here is your answer; even though we have won the Malayan Emergency against the colonial and comprador-bourgeois forces, the influences of the bourgeoisie both external and internal continue to subvert our great People’s Republic, influences that shall corrupt and tarnish the pure systems which we seek to implement. That is why during the time between the establishment of the People’s Republic and the implementation of the ‘System of Threes’, we must work to eliminate all bourgeois influences both external and internal through a ‘Cultural Revolution’, a revolution that will dispose of the cultural mindset of the old which continue to hold back modernization and development of Malaya, eliminate false consciousness within the ranks of the proletariat that continue to oppose the Communist ideology, and to educate the bourgeoisie of their exploitation of the proletariat and enlighten them to the Communist ideology.

Long Live the People's Republic of Malaya!
Long Live Marx, Lenin, and Mao!
Long Live the Communist Revolution!”

Amsterwald, Valijun, Liberalina, Ranponian, and 1 otherZanbala prz

Set in 1958 so don't get all uppity

Erarwati

Bomoko wrote:Soma: Do you have a kind of woman you want in life Felix?

Soma asked out of curiosity.

Felix: "I'm not sure, to be honest. I guess I haven't put a lot of thought into it until now."

| The addition of "until now" at the end of his sentence hinted that Felix had recently been thinking about girls... |

I didn't really proof-read that and I'm not much of a speechwriter, so don't expect much.

Kiger wrote:I didn't really proof-read that and I'm not much of a speechwriter, so don't expect much.

So are a democratic socialist Malaysia (hence the cooperation with France) or a Marxist-Maoist Malaysia?

Astarina wrote:Felix: "I'm not sure, to be honest. I guess I haven't put a lot of thought into it until now."

| The addition of "until now" at the end of his sentence hinted that Felix had recently been thinking about girls... |

Nhi: I think he’s saying that, the girls over in Luxembourg weren’t enough to turn his head to think about girls.

Nhi said with a laugh. Soma would giggle.

Soma: Do you think Indochinese girls are beautiful Felix?

Bomoko wrote:Nhi: I think he’s saying that, the girls over in Luxembourg weren’t enough to turn his head to think about girls.

Nhi said with a laugh. Soma would giggle.

Soma: Do you think Indochinese girls are beautiful Felix?

| Felix blushed lightly. |

    Felix: "I've seen quite a few pretty girls around...m-maybe it's the exotic factor..."

Astarina wrote:| Felix blushed lightly. |

    Felix: "I've seen quite a few pretty girls around...m-maybe it's the exotic factor..."

Soma: What do you mean by exotic?

«12. . .86,50586,50686,50786,50886,50986,51086,511. . .92,19092,191»

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