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| | '''Links''' |
| * The [[Lone Star Republic]] | | * The [[Lone Star Republic]] |
| | * The [[Lone Star Indian Territories]] |
| * The [[United States of America]] | | * The [[United States of America]] |
| * The [[Confederate States of America]] | | * The [[Confederate States of America]] |
| * The [[Free American Republic]] | | * The [[Free American Republic]] |
| | * [[North America]] |
| * Complete [[World Timeline]] | | * Complete [[World Timeline]] |
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| | ==John's work==: |
| | ===Work mostly completed=== |
| | [[Lone Star Republic]] |
| | ===Work in progress=== |
| | [[Lone Star Indian Territories]] |
| | [[World Timeline]] |
| | ===Work remaining=== |
| | [[North America]] |
| | [[American Union]] |
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| '''Unsorted Notes''': | | ==Susan's work== |
| | ===Work mostly completed=== |
| | ===Work in progress=== |
| | ===Work remaining=== |
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| Kansas is the Poland of North America.
| | ==Ian's work== |
| | ===Work mostly completed=== |
| | ===Work in progress=== |
| | ===Work remaining=== |
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| Cuba is the Switzerland of North America.
| | ==Erin's work== |
| | | ===Work mostly completed=== |
| Little oil outside of the LSR: retards the use of automobiles in North America.
| | ===Work in progress=== |
| | | ===Work remaining=== |
| The American Alliance is forged during WWII to send aid to allies in Europe.
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| New Jersey is the movie capital of North America.
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| Largest media organizations are located in the FAR.
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| Slang terms: Wankees (Yankees), Cons (Confederates), Greasies (Texians), Farts (Farites)
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| Map of "America" during 1864: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ElectoralCollege1864-Large.png
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| '''Representation Party''':
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| OF DOLLARS AND VOTES: A Statement of Principles for
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| the United States Representation Party
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| "All power residing originally in the people..." "All
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| political power is inherent in the people..." "All
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| power residing originally in, and being derived from,
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| the people..." "...and all free governments are
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| founded on their authority..." "...and they have the
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| right to alter or reform it..." "...deriving their
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| just powers from the consent of the governed." So it
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| echoes throughout the constitutions of the United
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| States. The power of our governments is derived from
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| the Power inherent in each of us. All governments, to
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| one extent or another, mediate and wield this Power.
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| For better or for worse, that is the defining function
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| of government. In our country, we almost universally
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| share the ideal that government should wield this
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| Power for the good of its citizens, including the
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| protection of certain freedoms. The countless,
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| important details which must follow from that notion
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| are not the focus of the Representation Party.
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| Freedom and representation are not the same thing; you
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| simply can't have one without the other. It is the
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| truly neglected potential of representation to which
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| the attention of this party is devoted. Its
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| membership is sure to have vastly differing views
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| about every political issue imaginable. We only
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| resolve to agree upon certain principles, certain
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| ideals, regarding the way in which the wills of a
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| people are represented in its government.
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| How do dollars and votes figure into this? They are
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| both tokens redeemable for some measure of the Power.
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| They are cornerstones in the way our form of
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| government aims to mediate that Power. Now that we
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| have abstracted dollars and votes into one idea, we
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| must ask ourselves anew how they are actually
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| different.
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| It is no secret that money represents a kind of power:
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| wealth. Ideally, one generates wealth and exchanges
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| it for money. Now that one has money, one can
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| exchange it for other kinds of wealth that other
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| people generate. While we may all have different
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| ideas about the right type and amount of government
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| regulation of money, citizens must be free, at least
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| in some part, to choose how to spend their money and
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| exchange their wealth. In this way, some of the power
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| inherent in individuals is reserved for those
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| individuals. That's what freedom is.
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| If money represents ALL of the Power, however, a
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| problem arises. The problem arises from two facts.
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| The first is that not everyone has the same amount of
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| money and wealth. This is not, in and of itself, a
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| problem. The second fact is that one aspect of the
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| Power is the ability to change the way money itself
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| may be exchanged. The rich get richer and poor become
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| powerless. Without the social and economic mobility
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| curtailed by the combination of these two facts, the
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| first fact IS a problem.
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| That first fact is not true of votes. In theory at
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| least, all voters are granted the same amount of power
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| through votes. We can solve the aforementioned
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| problem, then, by attaching the power of regulation
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| not to money, but to votes. With all citizens equally
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| represented in legislature, the power that money
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| represents may be checked and balanced with the
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| freedom it represents.
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| Government mediation of Power need not be only of
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| dollars and votes, but they are an important example
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| of the reciprocal relationship between freedom and
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| representation. With this in mind, it is imperative
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| that the differences between them be preserved. Votes
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| must not become currency. All voters must be
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| represented in the government equally. Requirements
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| for eligibility to vote must be fair and uniform.
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| These all seem obvious conclusions, but most Americans
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| seem to be unaware of how pervasively some these
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| prerequisites of freedom are being denied in our
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| country. They are unaware even when they are,
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| themselves, the disenfranchised. The mission of the
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| United States Representation Party is to raise
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| awareness about what is wrong and what is right with
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| our systems of representation, to propose solutions,
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| and to enact those solutions with the support of the
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| people. All planks in the party platform as well as
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| all activities of the party shall grow naturally from
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| that mission.
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