United Republics

The United Republics, fully the North American Union of Socialist Council Republics (NAUSCR, usually contracted as the Union of American Socialist Republics or UASR), or more commonly America, is a in, bordered by Mexico in the south with maritime proximity to Cuba in the same direction. The country shares coastlines with the Pacific and Atlantic oceans to the west and east respectively. Accounting for both its mainland and overseas territory, the total area of the country is at XXX km2 making it the X largest country in the world, spanning X time zones and bearing a total population of XX million. The high level of ecological and biological diversity in the country has allowed it to be identified as a.

The subcontinent was initially home to multiple  which entered the region about 12,000 years, most notably the , the , the , , the  and the. Colonization by the Europeans (particularly the and the ) commenced in the 16th century, where it was also a key area in the. However, due to the events of the of the, disputes with the metropole, particularly on taxation, escalated into the  which established the United States in America.

The issue of slavery in the country was concluded in the Slavers' War between the pro-slavery and the anti-slavery  which ended with the latter's victory. The ensuing expanded and concentrated both economic and political power to capitalist elites in the country. Exacerbated due to the government's pro-business policies (by United States president William McKinley and onwards) prompted the rise of a militant Socialist and Labor movement, which eventually gained positions in. Despite this, the social and economic aftermath of the Great War due to the United States' worsened living conditions and increased authoritarian crackdowns of social and political dissidents under president Thomas R. Marshall prompted a political conflict that would have the long-term effect of flaring into full-on civil war between the American labor movement and the United States government following a right-wing coup d'etat. By the end of 1933, with Soviet aid, the victorious socialists would successfully establish the United Republics, with the rump putschist United States government fleeing and occupying Cuba.

The United Republics is a Socialist Federation of XX republics and communes working under a system. It currently is a key member of the Third Communist International and one of its two leading powers, after the Soviet Union.

Etymology
The name America came after German cartographer Martin Waldseemüller's 1507 world map who named the continent after Italian explorer Amerigo Vespucci.

The full name of the state is North American Union of Socialist Council Republics, with Union of American Socialist Republics being its official short form.

Due to the length of the official names, the name of the state is commonly referred as United Republics.

Prehistory
A long time ago, in a continent far away, some natives thought of a good idea to cross the land bridge that connected Russia with Alaska...hence you now have free real estate in the Americas.

Pre-Columbian history
Tribes were formed, people fought, food was plenty, life was good until...

European colonization and settlement
Long ago, the native Americans lived together in harmony(kinda of). Then, everything changed when the Fire Nation Europeans attacked

War of Independence and expansion
The British Empire exploited too hard on its North American colonies, and because of it they got their buttoms whooped. And that is how the United States of America was formed...oh they expanded by kicking out the natives and Mexicans in the name of "Manifest Destiny"

The Slavers' War
North and South states had an argument about whether we should have slavery, the south lost the debate...

Gilded Age and the Great War
Along with the in the South, which ultimately failed to provide true social emancipation for the African-American population and saw a reactionary backlash against civil rights, the years and decades following the Slavers' War also saw a large-scale expansion in industrialization and economic growth. Railroads were built across the nation, and mining and manufacturing boomed, on the backs of immigrant labour. In absolute terms, wages grew more than anywhere else in the world at that time. However, wealth was not evenly distributed, and inequality between workers and business owners became ever more visible and extreme. This period would come to be known as the "Gilded Age", metaphorically refering to a thin layer of gold being placed over an unjust society.

The socialist movement began to grow during this period, with the forming of groups such as the Socialist Labor Party, the and the Industrial Workers of the World. Socialism would find a particularly large constituency among the large population of European migrants who found themselves working in America to seek a better life, only to find hardships.

1877 would see the, the world's largest strike at any such point up until that time. The period marked the rise of America's "", seeing the bipartisan dominance of the Republican Party and Democratic Party on a federal level up until the 1900s. Corruption became rampant, with many major scandals involving business and bribery. Westward expansion of the United States continued, with the later "Indian Wars" of the 19th century seeing further loss of territory to White American settlers, with officially-designated "Indian Reservations" having their recognized land gradually eroded away, and their ceded territory being utilized for mass agricultural activity, dovetailing into America's capitalist growth.

By 1912, following the gradual incorporation of Western territories as new States, the U.S. now comprised a total of 48 states. On the international stage, the United States grew to rival the old European empires among the world's great powers, even developing a colonial empire of its own in the Pacific and Carribean, taking territories from Spain (most notably the Philippines) in the. The US would soon have the largest economy in the world, but popular discontent was rife, and with Progressive reformists in both of the major parties ultimately proving unsuccessful, serious levels of class conflict had begun to emerge by the 1910s. Involved in the complex series of diplomatic alliances between the Great Powers of the time, the United States would be drawn into the Great War at an early stage, taking a devastating toll on a generation of men for little gain.

Second Revolution and establishment of Socialist Republic
Following the Great War, the Old United States entered a period of deep internal division and civil strife. Coming off the heels of an anti-war movement that had come to embrace revolutionary defeatism during the Biennio Rosso (Italian, "two red years"), the country went through the painful process of demobilising its war economy. The massive spike in unemployment and collapsing commodity prices in 1919 led to the formation of soviets in a dual power arrangement, widespread strikes and factory occupations. This revolutionary upsurge reached its peak in the Red Summer of 1920 in a dress-rehearsal of the revolution to come.

With the federal government working to contain the worst effects of demobilisation, and General Leonard Wood bringing the establishment towards a more conciliatory stance towards the working class, open conflict abated. While Wood promised reform and amnesty to war resisters, class-conflict continued on new trajectories during the "Roaring Twenties", a period of economic growth and social change. Old pillars of Americanism broke down as society pillarised along a class divide. Long deferred problems of institutional racism were challenged by both radical forces on the ground as well as by progressives in the federal government.

The boom did not last. With mounting private debt, deflationary monetary policy, and declining profit rates, the world economy entered into a crisis period. After several false starts, the bust in the New York Stock Exchange on 6 February 1930 ushered in the era of the Great Depression. With the American communist movement embracing a return to the tactics of the Red Summer in line with the Comintern's Third Period policy, the Depression became an insurrectionary battleground between the establishment and the working class. With the U.S. reaching peaks of 25 to 30 percent unemployment, widespread evictions and foreclosures, the Workers' Communist Party was able to achieve a decisive victory in the 1932 elections, with nominee Norman Thomas winning a decisive electoral win against incumbent Herbert Hoover and a divided slate of bourgeois candidates.

During the four-month long "lame-duck" period between the election and the seating of the new government, reactionary forces under the leadership of then Lieutenant General Douglas MacArthur conspired to overthrow the liberal state and impose reactionary rule on the country. The MacArthur Putsch on 1 February 1933 succeeded in decapitating much of the leadership of the WCP and imposing military control on much of the country, but failed to prevent revolutionary uprisings in the nation's industrial heartland.

In the ensuing Second American Civil War, the U.S. Army under the control of the fascist National Salvation Front began an offensive into the revolutionary strongholds of the Midwest. After initial gains, the offensive stalled as the revolutionaries mobilized an effective Red Army constituted of anti-Putsch reservists, Great War veterans, and new conscripts, equipped from the U.S. Army reserve depots. Following the defeat of General George C. Marshall's forces in the Battle of Chicago, the tide turned in favor of the revolutionaries.

In tandem with the Red Army going on the offensive, the political leadership of the anti-fascist forces abandoned the defensive struggle to restore the constitution, declaring the formation of a socialist republic on 1 May 1933. The Red Army inflicted a string of costly fights on the White Army as popular uprisings spread through the western half of the country. Red victory was fait accompli by July, following the liberation of Washington, D.C., and the destruction of much of the remaining White Army. MacArthur and other White leaders who escaped capture would begin a long fighting retreat south, finally evacuating to Cuba under the protection of the British Royal Navy.

Following the civil war, the new government was now tasked with rebuilding the nation. The United Republics' first elections were held in April 1934. The parties supporting the establishment of the UASR, the WCP, Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party and Democratic-Republican Party had formed a coalition called the United Democratic Front, with the election effectively deciding the balance of power within this grouping. The WCP proved dominant, and following the reconvening of Congress, the new government, for the time being, opted to adopt an economic model centering co-operatives and restricting private enterprise to small, limited businesses. Although this model was not without criticism from the left of the WCP, it was ultimately passed and accepted, and became known as "state socialism". Additionally, in December 1933, the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen, bill of rights, was enacted. While the WCP were more committed to genuinely democratic government than the Bolsheviks had been in Russia following the revolution, America was still a state emerging from civil war, and fear and paranoia of counter-revolution was prevalent. The Secretariat for Public Safety, headed by bourgeois turncoat J. Edgar Hoover, was tasked with suppressing counter-revolutionary activity during America's "Red Terror", a period that remains controversial both within the United Republics and abroad to this day. While they would target terrorist groups such as the Sons of Liberty and Ku Klux Klan, "legitimate" political groups would also be subject to surveillance and infiltration, such as the True Democrats, a political party founded from anti-Putschist elements in the Democratic Party who were nonetheless opposed to the Red May Revolution.

The post-war era also saw the First Cultural Revolution, a massive wave of sweeping social change within American society. While it is often disupted by historians as to wherever it primarily began at a grassroots level or from the policy of the government and WCP, what is undisputed is its impact on the newborn Republic. Laws against public nudity, homosexuality and obscenity were repealed, and family planning and birth control would become the norm. Women would enter traditionally male roles in sectors across the economy, military and government and communal living became commonplace as the government sought to build a greater sense of working class solidarity through social bonds. The South would see a policy of "De-Planterization", as public monuments to the Confederacy were removed, places were re-named and school textbooks were rewritten. The autonomous African National Federal Republic - better known as New Africa - was established from territory formerly part of the states of Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and South Carolina. However, the South would still see continued attacks from white reactionary groups through the 1930s, until the remanants were gradually defeated by local cross-racial militias.

In spite of the radical changes that reshaped American society during this time, many elements of the old bureaucracy, economic system and power structures remained and the disconnect had not gone unnoticed. This was in part due to compromises made within the United Democratic Front, but there were also degrees of corruption within the new political class. Unlike previous instances of discontent in the old United States however, dissent came from within sectors of the ruling party itself. In Detroit in 1937, public demonstrations against the proposed demolition of a section of public housing to make way for a new highway coagulated into a large movement demanding improved living and working conditions, a curtailing of privileges for political officials and new municipal elections. These events became known as the Revolt of the Cadres and spread across Michigan, with similar protests and action taking place nationwide. Following political resignations, the central government intervened, nationalizing sailor fleets in the Great Lakes and taking care to address safety concerns. Authorities in Michigan and Detroit would finally back down following the intervention, and recall elections for both municipal and republican-level governments were held in July. The recall elections saw massive gains for left-communist factions of the WCP in the region, and had nation-wide consequences as the balance of power within the party shifted. However, the aftermath of the Revolt of the Cadres would see a further fraying of relations with the Soviet Union - then under the authoritarian government of Iosif Stalin - for the remainder of the decade, with Stalin and the Communist Left sharing a mutual disdain and suspicion of one another.

Cold War to Present
The tensions between Third Communist International and the countries of the Alliance of Free States led to the global ideological and geopolitical rivalry between the former allies, which became known as the Cold War.

"Warming Period"
Towards the end of the second decade of the twenty first century, relations between the Alliance of Free States and Third Communist International have begun to deterioriate once again over lingering issues in the global south and an upswelling in the election of more confrontational politicians within the Alliance of Free States over the eruption of the third Burkinabe revolution, the knock on effects of it and the Third Bush War, and the unusually prolonged Champa War between the Kingdom of Thailand and Indochina from 2015 to 2017 (with skirmishing threatening to reignite the conflict in 2019 before Chinese and Indian diplomatic intervention). With many believing that this means the end of the "long detente", the more-hawkish Liberation Communist Party has made an electoral comeback. With anthropogenic climate change being listed as an increased worry, many within the Comintern no longer wish to wait for the Social Ecology movement and Ereists' promised death knell of capitalism and have once again looked to more confrontational politicians again.

This is commonly cited as one of the primary reasons that the incumbent government of Premier Alix Olson of the Social Ecology Union was unseated by Dina Gilio-Whitaker of Liberation; a native American professor turned politician and activist who campaigned on the idea that the Earth cannot afford to wait for the Cold War to end of its own accord when the spectre of irreversible climate change such as the potential end of the glaciation of the polar regions looms overhead. While not moving towards all out conflict short of open warfare as her predecessors in the 1980s did, Dina's central executive council has endeavoured to intensify class struggle in conflict regions and substantially accelerate plans to transition towards cleaner industries and power sources, including an unparalelled push for Fusion energy.

Government
The United Republics operate under a  system. Under this model, serve as the basis of democratic representation from the community to the entire country, rendering the United Republics more a political and economic "union" of otherwise fully autonomous states than a formal federation (cf. ).



While the constitution invests supreme de jure power in the All-Union Congress of Soviets, the operations of government are conducted by devolved institutions. The Congress elects a Presidium to serve as both its Speaker as well as the head of state. Most day-to-day legislative and executive functions Functions are conducted by the Congress' steering committee, the All-Union Central Executive Council (CEC).

In its original form the CEC had a bicameral division of duties into a body representative of the union republics (Council of the Republics or CR) and one representative of the American people (Council of People's Deputies or CPD). Additionally, the Central Committee, responsible to the whole body, served as the cabinet, and was comprised of the chairs of the major governmental departments, the People's Secretariats.

Constitutional reforms have streamlined this process; the Council of the Republics has been reorganized as a separate institution from the CEC. The unicameral Central Executive Council governs the affairs of the whole union, with the separate Council of the Republics regulates the federal division of powers.

The Congress has devolved judicial power to the Supreme Revolutionary Tribunal (SRT), and a system of lower tribunals. Tribunes are appointed to terms not exceeding ten years by the Presidium, subject to the consent of the CEC, giving the judiciary a measure of independence from the government. The courts can exercise judicial review over other devolved institutions, but have no substantive power over the organic laws passed by the full Congress of Soviets.

The governments of the union republics follow a similar format, though streamlined due to its smaller scope. Each republic has a Congress of Soviets, comprised of delegations from the district soviets, and elects a dual executive/legislative steering committee to conduct the day-to-day affairs of government.

Parties
In the years following the Revolution, politics in the United Republics was normally dominated by the Marxist-DeLeonist Workers' Communist Party, which had been the primary party of the left during the pre-revolutionary period. It was typically but not always necessarily partnered with the agrarian and Christian socialist Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, while the market socialist Democratic-Republican Party and anti-communist True Democrats represented right-wing opposition. The WCP would eventually split in the 1950s over the issue of policy in the Horn War, ending the first party system of the UASR.

Today, the political spectrum roughly from left-to-right is represented as follows:


 * Social Ecology Union
 * Liberation Communist Party
 * Communist Labor Party
 * Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party
 * Democratic-Republican Party
 * True Democrats

In addition, there are a number of parties and groups representing specific minority groups, such as the African National Congress, Jewish-American Labor Bund and the Native Peoples' League.

Administrative Divisions


As for the immediate period after the revolution, the American was divided into the Integral Union Republics, encompassing the territories of the old states, and Autonomous Union Republics.

List of political divisions:


 * Alaska
 * Arkansas
 * Arizona
 * Apache
 * California
 * Chicagoland
 * Colorado
 * Connecticut
 * Dakota
 * Delaware
 * Florida
 * Hawai'i
 * Idaho
 * Illinois
 * Indiana
 * Iowa
 * Kansas
 * Kentucky
 * Louisiana
 * Maine
 * Maryland
 * Massachusetts
 * Metropolis
 * Michigan
 * Minnesota
 * Missouri
 * Montana
 * Nebraska
 * Nevada
 * New Afrika
 * New Hampshire
 * New Jersey
 * New Mexico
 * New York
 * North Carolina
 * Ohio
 * Oklahoma
 * Oregon
 * Pennsylvania
 * Sequoyah
 * Sioux
 * Tennessee
 * Texas
 * Utah
 * Vermont
 * Virginia
 * Washington
 * West Virginia
 * Wisconsin
 * Wyoming

Foreign relations
The United Republics is one of the leading members of the Third Communist International. The country shares a southern land borders with Mexico, which along with other members of the Panamerican Union, is a close ally. It is also a major ally of the other Comintern superpower, the Soviet Union, in spite of socio-cultural differences. On the other hand, the state is at odds with the Franco-British Union - the traditional primary power of the capitalist Alliance of Free States - the remaining AFS powers in the far north of the American continent, such as Newfoundland and Labrador, and the American exile regime in Cuba - which claims itself to be America's legitimate government and claims all of the Former United States' territory as of 1933. As part of the Cold War, the UASR has also been involved in several proxy wars with capitalist-aligned forces in Africa and Asia.

Geography and environment
The continguous United Republics constitutes the bulk of the North American continent, from former Canadian provinces in the north to the Rio Grande river along the border of the Texas SR with Mexico. There are also a number of other non-continguous territories, enclaved from the rest of the Union by land or ocean. These include Alaska in the far north-west, the islands of Hawaii in the Pacific Ocean and Puerto Rico, Haiti and the Dominican Republic, three Associated Socialist Republics with a constitutional right to unilateral secession. It is the second largest country in the world by total area, behind the Soviet Union.

Due to the UASR's vast geographic range, it is home to a diverse range of climates, ranging from alpine in the north-western Rocky Mountains to tropical in southern Florida within the continguous United Republics alone. In general, the northern regions tend to be more temparate and southern regions more subtropical, and much of the west, especially the western interior, is dominated by arid desert and semi-desert. The north-western interior is dominated by the Rockies, whereas the Great Plains, a vast prairie region, lies directly to their east, encompassing land from the former Canadian provinces of Alberta, Sakatchewan and Manitoba, extending as far south as parts of Texas.

Economy
Initially market-socialist/mixed economy, moved towards labor vouchers in line with comintern policy

Infrastructure
The primary transport network in most cities consist of a light rail system, a bus system, and rail stations connecting cities together in tandem with freeways. Cars and Bikes are popular, but are often sidelined in favor of rail networks.

Demographics
The United Republics is a multicultural and multiethnic society, encompassing a vast land area and many waves of migration. Most Americans today are descended from migrants who settled in the country post-colonization, with indigenous peoples, such as Navajo, Cherokee, Lakotah and Alaskan Natives only making up a minority of the population. The largest population group today are White Americans of European descent, who are not limited to the descendents of early colonists, but often later migrants, fleeing persecution or hardships in their homelands, many of whom were instrumental in making up the early 20th century working classes that were responsible for the Revolution in 1933. Even within the White population, there are many distinct groups, such as Ashkenazi Jewish-Americans, Pennsylvania Dutch, Hispanaphones of Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban and Latin American origin, Francophones concentrated in regions such as Quebec, Lousiana and Acadia, and German-Americans, many of whom still speak German as their native language.

One of the other most significant groups are African-Americans, largely descended from slaves captured by Europeans and brought to colonies on the American continent during the Trans-Atlantic slave trade. As one of the most visible historically oppressed groups in American society, their status and liberties have played an important role in American history, from the First Civil War leasing to the abolition of slavery, to the role of black communists in the Deep South challenging segregation and fighting in the Second American Revolution.

Asian-Americans are another major group, with large numbers first arriving as migrant labourers in the mid-to-late 19th century and then increasing substantially with the abolition of immigration barriers targeted at Asia (particularly east asia) and encouraging of asian immigration to provide replacement labourers during the great war for the large numbers of white and black Americans leaving the country for military deployment. The Asian community spiked again during the Second-Sino Japanese war as large numbers of Chinese refugees sought safety elsewhere in the face of invasion and renewed civil strife in China, and once more after the war as many sought to take the opportunity to come to a country not devastated by war. Afterwards migration from East and South-East Asia has continued from parts of the Comintern that have been less developed until recent decades (a trend which has also seen more recent arrivals from Africa, the USSR and Eastern Europe, among other TCI states) at a punctuated equilibrium that follows a regular trend, spikes in times of crisis then gradually slowing down once conditions improved.

The number of Americans of mixed racial ancestry (including Hispanic Americans of Mesitzo descent) is also growing as a result of increasing integration. Much of the hispanic community can also trace its roots to the expansion of immigration programs dating back to the first world war to ensure that the factories remained staff despite the large numbers of men being sent overseas for military roles.

One of the largest temporary migrant populations within the UASR are students seeking education in the highly prestigious tertiary education facilities within the UASR, often regarded as some of the best within the Communist International. This population includes not merely the typical university aged young adults but also older revolutionaries or revolutionary hopefuls seeking a greater foundation in sociopolitical theory as well as foreign military officers looking to be educated in American military theory to pass onto their home armed forces. Technical and specialist forms of education such as the Rubidium School of Animated Arts also attract a substantial number of foreign students, even from the Alliance.

The United Republics today has an aging population, with birth rates having decreased significantly in the decades following the Revolution in 1933. The average birth rate has generally stabilised at between two and three children per person with the decline in birth rate as part of the so called "Baker curve", where the improvement in access to childcare, guarantees of child education, provision of daycares, parental support, and decreased financial stress eventually cancels out effects of higher living conditions, ready access to birth control, acceptance of non-heteronormative sexuality and singleness, and female labour participation at roughly 2-3 children per adult woman. As such the population continues to increase at a largely steady rate. Birth rates are largely homogenous across all ethnicities within the UASR with the primary exceptions being recently settled emigres from outside the Comintern, traditionally refugees settled within the UASR displaced by violence and persecution.

Culture and Society
American culture has been shaped by the legacy of European colonialism and the waves of immigration to the continent. Although European culture can be considered "dominant", or the "base" of today's American society, it is also strongly influenced by African, indigenous, Asian and Latin American peoples and their respective cultural pedigrees. Other than English, many other languages are widely spoken in the United Republics, such as German, Spanish, French, Chinese, Yiddish and Native American languages. In spite of this, there is a strong "core" American identity, dating back to the times of the First Revolution against the administration of the Thirteen Colonies from London. This culture, however, would undergo a period of upheaval, change and transformation in the years following the Second Revolution. This period was known as the First Cultural Revolution, and saw the rise of secularism, libertine social norms, communal living and ethnic and gender equality.

Cinema and television
Much of the UASR's film industry is centered in Hollywood, a district of the city of Los Angeles, California. Hollywood's status dates back prior to the Revolution, to the early stages of the development of cinema as a mass entertainment medium in the 1910s. Following the Revolution, Hollywood retained its status even as the industry was reorganized under the newly formulated Eisenstein System, and as many capitalist film enterprises fled to Cuba, Canada or the UK. The Breen Code, a self-censorship system of guidelines and regulations issued by the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America, was repealed and replaced with the Eisenstein Code, which encouraged contribution towards the American socialist project. Restrictions against depiction of sexuality, miscegenation, blasphemy and anti-capitalist themes were lifted. Some of the most popular and acclaimed films in the early United Republics included King Kong (1934), Les Miserables (1935), Ten Days that Shook the World (1936), The Good Earth (1937), A Day at the Races (1937), Snow White and the Seven Dwarves (1937) and Commander Columbia (1938).

Religion
With the Second Revolution having emphasized ideals of laicitie and the separation of church and state, the majority of the American population today is irreligious, but in spite of this, freedom of religion is upheld and the country is home to a diverse range of different faiths. The largest single religious group in the United Republics is the Trinitarian Church, a Christian denomination that was formed in the 1930s as American Catholics split from the church due to the Roman Catholic church's policy at the time of strict anti-communism, and also absorbing many socialist-aligned Protestants. Other Christian denominations with significant numbers of adherents include the Episcopalian Church, the Church of Latter Day Saints (Mormons) and Mennonites.