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6/16/2025, 12:38:20 AM
The Long Knives of the Republic
July 28, 1011
Socialists? Gone!
Harmonists? Out!
Dissidents? No more!
President-Marshal Kemerskai acted fast with his newfound powers. He first focused on removing socialist sentiment from the country. Once tolerated as a fringe element under the broad tent of republican discourse, their time has come to an end. Some might argue socialism is a distant cousin to republicanism, just the next phase of it, but under new laws such arguments are not only wrong but illegal to declare in public. The Republican Guard, efficient and unsparing, swept through party offices and printshops, rounding up known agitators and closing down publications sympathetic to the cause.
After the Republican Guard rounded up the socialists, they went for the harmonists. Though their message of unity and spiritual concord once drew limited support among rural civiliangriffs, the harmonist movement has now been classified as dangerously ambiguous. Its invocation of “harmony” was seen as a veiled rejection of the rigorous discipline and virtue demanded by republican civic life. They, too, have been silenced.
The anti-Kemerskai demonstrations across the Republic have increased, but most of the country appears to agree with the President-Marshal. The nation is stable, the civiliangriffs have jobs, and the economy has boomed in the last two years as poverty has been reduced and literacy rates improved through government measures. New industrial centers are rising from the snow, and state-run education programs have reached thousands in rural regions. Civiliangriffs have food and direction.
The enemies of the Republic have been removed. In their place, a single vision remains: one Republic, united, marching under the iron will of the President-Marshal.
The revolution, it seems, is entering its next stage, not with compromise, but with clarity.
July 28, 1011
Socialists? Gone!
Harmonists? Out!
Dissidents? No more!
President-Marshal Kemerskai acted fast with his newfound powers. He first focused on removing socialist sentiment from the country. Once tolerated as a fringe element under the broad tent of republican discourse, their time has come to an end. Some might argue socialism is a distant cousin to republicanism, just the next phase of it, but under new laws such arguments are not only wrong but illegal to declare in public. The Republican Guard, efficient and unsparing, swept through party offices and printshops, rounding up known agitators and closing down publications sympathetic to the cause.
After the Republican Guard rounded up the socialists, they went for the harmonists. Though their message of unity and spiritual concord once drew limited support among rural civiliangriffs, the harmonist movement has now been classified as dangerously ambiguous. Its invocation of “harmony” was seen as a veiled rejection of the rigorous discipline and virtue demanded by republican civic life. They, too, have been silenced.
The anti-Kemerskai demonstrations across the Republic have increased, but most of the country appears to agree with the President-Marshal. The nation is stable, the civiliangriffs have jobs, and the economy has boomed in the last two years as poverty has been reduced and literacy rates improved through government measures. New industrial centers are rising from the snow, and state-run education programs have reached thousands in rural regions. Civiliangriffs have food and direction.
The enemies of the Republic have been removed. In their place, a single vision remains: one Republic, united, marching under the iron will of the President-Marshal.
The revolution, it seems, is entering its next stage, not with compromise, but with clarity.
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