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sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.


a bad enough dude posted:

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Marquis de Lafayette, Commander-in-Chief of the National Guard

While I firmly believe in the abolition of slavery, I agree with our brothers in America that bowing to the savage insurrectionists in St Dominigue by granting them independence is rash indeed. We can both end slavery and maintain the colonial authority. The plantations cannot be allowed to burn - instead let us put down this rabble and restore the natural order through a tenant system, where the Negro is paid a fair wage (and must pay a fair rent) for his labor in the cane fields. For this gracious offer a debt shall be levied against each freed man equal to his former market value, to be paid to his previous master. Liberty will be his, and so he will have no reason to take up arms against France, while the inherent right to property will be respected.

I humbly advise our Majesty to deploy the Reglement to deal with Toussaint's bandits.

Agreed.

Gantolandon
Aug 19, 2012



Louis XVI, By the Grace of God, King of France and Navarre

The crown cannot in clear conscience support so-called Franco-Mysorian Treaty of Friendship And Mutual Assistance. Right now our army is in terrible state and the fleet is pitiful. If the British were to declare war right now, we wouldn't survive it. Even if this act passes, it will be vetoed.

We also can't agree to the Emigre Divestment Act. Such matters should be investigated by the courts. The Assembly is not the body that should give judgement against anyone, especially someone whose testimony haven't even been heard.

All other acts will be signed if they are passed. Even General Suffrage, which we do consider a terrible mistake.

As for the St Dominigue, before we can consider abolishing slavery, the bandits who burn plantations and kill landowners should be swiftly dealt with. We will approve a military intervention there.

EccoRaven
Aug 15, 2004

there is only one hell:
the one we live in now


Jean Raussut, a member of the Legislative Assembly who is notorious for being sympathetic to the goals of the Haitians, sent a letter to the King's counsellors. Here is an excerpt:

Your Majesty, if it may be permitted to say, Toussaint Louveture actually was responsible for safely evacuating many white landowners from the island, and has, in numerous cases, sought to control the rabble that are the revolutionaries, holding them off from rioting. While the revolution has its unsavory elements, M. Louveture has done much to turn his fighters from brigands to professionals. ...
Likewise the main opposition of the revolution is not to France itself but the colonial administration and the institution of slavery. French soldiers would likely only antagonize the revolutionaries further and, should the revolution prove victorious, spoil any chance we Frenchmen would have to reconcile our relationship with the island.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




The Most Virtuous and Secret Diary of Robespierre

...the King refuses to understand the Haitian situation. Does he not realize that the vast majority who now take up arms against the colonial administration do so to rid themselves of the chains of slavery? Does he not realize the benefits, both tangible and intangible that would come from ridding them thus? I fear he is too nearsighted in this matter.

At the same time, an abolishment of the colonial administration is exceedingly hasty. An independent Haiti would be incapable of self-sufficiency and easy prey for the first colonial power to set their eye upon it...

...And he refuses to appropriate the property of the enemies of the Revolution who have fled! Perhaps we will have to approach the problem from another direction...at least he sees reason on the matter of the franchise.

YF-23
Feb 17, 2011

My god, it's full of cat!



From a personal letter from Napoléon Bonaparte to an old friend

"[...] I was informed today that the King authorised a deployment to Haiti. Blessed may he be, for I doubt I could have in good conscience continued my service for a country that would let the Haitians go and not also grant the Corsicans the same treatment. Some consider Haiti a lost cause, but victory there is vital in more ways than one. France cannot afford to lose morale by conceding defeat without putting up a proper fight, and its armies need vital experience. [...]"

Viral Warfare
Aug 4, 2010

~~a n d I a m c a l m~~

Turns are due in an hour. Get them in if you haven't already! If you command a faction in the Assembly, let us know how you want your members to vote on the proposals currently up for debate (if you haven't done so in the thread already). You're also free to do this if you aren't in the Assembly, you might sway independents to vote one way or the other.

OscarDiggs
Jun 1, 2011


Nicolas Luckner



From the private Journals of Nicolas Luckner.

-utter shambles! Why didn't I listen to Mama and Papa when I was younger? I could have been an Actor! Now I'm the head of a ship with no crew, no sails, no steering wheel and no hull! And those bastards in the assembly expect me to fight a war for them? The only way we can hope to win is if we drown the enemy in the blood of our own slaughtered men! The only ray of light is my plan; the Prongs! They'll save me... I hope they save me. I spent all the time I had spare from my various drunken stupors working on the Prongs! I just pray something will come out of it.

-upstart bastard! That damnable Napoleon is at it again. “You shouldn't drink so much! Why don't you try giving a speech! Please stop looking at me like that!” Who the hell is he to tell me what to do?! He's a nobody, and always will be a nobody! But why the hell does he have to have such beautiful hair?

IPlayVideoGames
Nov 28, 2004

I unironically like Anders as a character.



Antione Barnave

Though the hour grows late, I still must make one final plea. In the rigors of debate, I notice that the topic of the current famine has been pushed aside. This is unconscionable. I applaud those who support a budget for improved investments in the nation's agriculture, but the current state of famine makes relief from such expenditures a distant prospect.

I would again propose to his Majesty and to the Assembly that funds be spent for immediate food relief for those struck by shortages and crippling prices. If a nation can not feed its people in emergencies, then a nation has failed its people.

Vote yes for the Food Relief Act of 1791.

Dieu bénisse la France. Dieu guide l'assmebly. Dieu bénisse le roi.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.


IPlayVideoGames posted:


Antione Barnave

Vote yes for the Food Relief Act of 1791.

Dieu bénisse la France. Dieu guide l'assmebly. Dieu bénisse le roi.



Where are the funds to come from? While I am certainly sympathetic to those starving (and have already taken steps to alleviate their suffering), I believe that the entire costs of feeding Paris should fall upon the Aristocracy and Monarchy. After all, France fed them for 400 years. It is time for them to feed France!

(Will enter this as The Amended Food Relief Act.)

Gantolandon
Aug 19, 2012



sniper4625 posted:

Where are the funds to come from? While I am certainly sympathetic to those starving (and have already taken steps to alleviate their suffering), I believe that the entire costs of feeding Paris should fall upon the Aristocracy and Monarchy. After all, France fed them for 400 years. It is time for them to feed France!

(Will enter this as The Amended Food Relief Act.

The crown already took action to take care of the starving people. This king will not abandon his subjects in time of hunger.

a bad enough dude
Jun 30, 2007

APPARENTLY NOT A BAD ENOUGH DUDE TO STICK TO ONE THING AT A TIME WHETHER ITS PBPS OR A SHITTY BROWSER GAME THAT I BEG MONEY FOR AND RIPPED FROM TROPICO. ALSO I LET RETARDED UKRANIANS THAT CAN'T PROGRAM AND HAVE 2000 HOURS IN GARRY'S MOD RUN MY SHIT.

I was bored, made prints translucent for some reason


Robespierre


King Louie


Barnave


Brissot


Luckner


Hector



Napoleon


Bachmann


Toussaint


Archbishop


Babeuf


Saint-just


guess


talleyrand


Duport-Dutertre


Comte de Provence, Kings lil bro


brit ambassador


American ambassador


Tuffin


Armand Marc


Comte de Rochambeau


Citizen Equality

whew. if you're not included and want me to make it just ask, though for some I couldn't find a print.

Friar John
Aug 3, 2007

Saint Francis be my speed! how oft to-night
Have my old feet stumbled at graves!

sniper4625 posted:

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Where are the funds to come from? While I am certainly sympathetic to those starving (and have already taken steps to alleviate their suffering), I believe that the entire costs of feeding Paris should fall upon the Aristocracy and Monarchy. After all, France fed them for 400 years. It is time for them to feed France!

(Will enter this as The Amended Food Relief Act.)

Georges Cadoudal

You would starve the provinces to feed the hellish maw of Paris. You have no love for the people, only a desire to see your own power grow!

Freudian
Mar 23, 2011



Jacques Pierre Brissot

Girondins in the house

You will of course pardon me for being late - I was unfortunately detained by a rather unpleasant and unusual incident involving my bathroom, a young woman, and a knife. Unusual in that it was unpleasant, that is.

I see you have all made a splendid start at legislation, and so it falls to me to lend my humble support:

Budget: De Sade is, as always, a visionary. I applaud his efforts.

Proposals

The General Suffrage Act and The Citizen-Soldier Act: I refuse to lend my support to a half-measure of freedom such as the Citizen-Soldier Act endorses. Representation doled out under such stringent regulations cannot be called liberty! General Suffrage or nothing.

Ending Slavery: We have moved past the Colosseum, we have ceased to sacrifice lambs to our gods, we no longer peer into the guts of birds to see the future. Why, then, do we cling to this relic of ancient times? Slavery must be abolished.

Emigre Divestment Act: I would divest them only of their titles. If this gains no support, then I reject the act in its entirety.

The Colonial Independence Act: Our colonies should only be confirmed in their independence when they are no longer dependent on France. I do not feel this time has come.

The Saint Domingue Act: I support the creation of a daughter nation in Saint Domingue, along the same lines of reasoning as above.

The Matter of Mysore: I support such an endeavour.

To all other acts, I offer no opinion one way or another. Vote with your conscience - assuming such a thing as a conscience is permitted in the Assembly. Perhaps next session it will not.

tatankatonk
Nov 4, 2011

Pitching is the art of instilling fear.


Thanks for the portraits, A Bad Enough Dude!


Comte d'Esting

Whichever version of Suffrage the Legislature and King decide to pass, whether it's through Service, General, or Universal, women are going to be allowed to vote, right? Right???

Viral Warfare
Aug 4, 2010

~~a n d I a m c a l m~~

JOIN AS WHOEVER! ALWAYS OPEN! TURN DUE WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14TH AT 6:00 PM EST to qu0pr0quid001@gmail.com AND vanhelsing420@gmail.com

News for Autumn 1791 - Turn 1

NEWS FROM THE 1ST FRENCH ASSEMBLY:

- King Louis XVI appoints the Marquis de Sade as Controller-General of Finances, who resigns from the Legislative Assembly to take the post. On the same day, the comte de Narbonne-Lara is dismissed as Minister of War and replaced with Nicolas Luckner. The comte is bitter about the dismissal and the loss of personal prestige, but he is sated by a mansion, as a gift from the King himself.

- With support from the Montagnards and the Feuillants in the Assembly, the Citizen-Soldier Suffrage Act passes and is signed into law by the King, over the opposition of the Enragés and the Girondins. As word of the bill spreads, membership in the French Army increases, drawing in many from among the poor and lower middle class. A Jew is caught attempting to join in Bordeaux, and despite his protests, is locked in a prison to await judgement.

- A fierce debate in the Legislative Assembly over the budget breaks out, with the Feuillants winning many independents to their side as they stress moderation. The Jacobins fight tooth and nail to force the Girondins into a coalition but for the length of a week it looks as though they will abstain. Finally, in a command decision, Jacques Pierre Brissot instructs his faction to vote with the Jacobins. The budget of the Marquis de Sade passes.

- The Food Relief Act of 1791 is met by legislative gridlock and fails to garner a majority of votes either for or against. It is still on the floor, should the legislature want to try again.

- The French-Mysorean Friendship Treaty passes the legislature but the King refuses to sign the bill, citing the risk of war with Great Britain. The King may change his mind at any time.

- The Montagnard-sponsored Emigre Divestment Act fails to pass due to a lack of Girondin support, being decisively struck down in the Assembly.

- Due to the lack of a single unified vision on the abolition of slavery, and fierce resistance from independents, the various slavery proposals are shot down and tabled. Supporters vow to try again by Christmas.

- The General Suffrage Act fails to pass, with opposition from the Feuillants and many independents. The idea of integrating Saint-Domingue with metropolitan France or granting it and the other colonies independence is laughed out of the Legislative Assembly by most of the legislators.

DOMESTIC NEWS:

- A sizable force of 4,500 soldiers from the French Army departs for the Caribbean, with approval granted by the King. Several precautions are taken against disease.

- In late September, Father Jacques Roux and François-Noël Babeuf hold a rally in Paris down the Champs Elysée. There, they and several hundred supporters, calling themselves the “Enragés”, make loud speeches in support of universal suffrage and the redistribution of wealth. The group is able to reach the Place de la concorde and burn an effigy of the King thanks to the non-interference of the Parisian National Guard, hoping to prevent a massacre. The event alienates all but the urban poor, who find the two endearing, albeit a little misguided.

- The event quickly spirals out of control with the arrival of the Marquis de Sade, who in a fiery speech steals the momentum from Roux and Babeuf and leads the crowds to the gates of the Palais du Luxembourg, where the few guards are overwhelmed and murdered. The Duc de Brissac - one time governor of Paris - and his family are captured, with de Sade turning the Palais into his own personal prison complex. Over the next day, mock trials are held for their new prisoners on trumped up charges of tax evasion, with most “mercifully” being spared the death penalty and instead becoming the Marquis’ “guests”. Rumors of torture abound. Many moderates demand the Marquis de Sade’s immediate removal from office, and cries of “Où a été Lafayette?” become common among the aristocracy.

- This does not stop the two displaced radicals from forming the Enragés faction, a far left political club advocating popular democracy, price controls on food, and the immediate trial of the King. The new faction attracts poor Parisian workers and a handful of disillusioned petit bourgeois. Roux and Babeuf also form a Revolutionary Guard, a militia consisting of about 200 irregulars.

- Jacobin clubs spring up in Marseilles and Lyon at the instigation of Saint-Just, spreading the ideals of the Revolution beyond the gates of Paris. Mere shadows of the Parisian organization, they look to Robespierre for guidance.

- Reforms are undertaken in both the army and the navy. A new middle-class based command structure, the first of its kind in Europe, is promulgated in the French Army. Based on the “Luckner method”, it involves a heavy cooperation between all branches of the military and an apprenticeship system for junior officers. Many of the remaining aristocratic officers dislike being forced to tutor the sons of bank clerks on strategy, and a slow trickle of desertion leads many away from the army. The middle-class officers of the artillery corps fill the void, most prominent among them the young Napoleon Bonaparte, who receives a promotion to colonel.

- His new command in Corsica soon earns a reputation for the twin virtues of discipline and innovation, with training exercises conducted nearly every day into the late hours of the night over a wide variety of terrain. Though drawn from lower-class stock, the men soon become as organized as the old Garde Royale. When not with his men, Bonaparte shuts himself into his quarters, pouring over maps of Hispaniola.

- A Naval Bureau is formed with Charles Hector as the head. The organization is divided into an Atlantic division, based in Brest, and a Mediterranean division, based out of Toulon. Construction begins on a French ship-building and timbering network, but these efforts are slowed by a lack of adequate funding to the navy. Charles Hector further retires his three oldest ships so they can be used for training purposes in a Naval Academy. Again, though, France lacks the funds to staff an adequate academy, with the vast majority of the naval officer corps being royalists.

- The Cathedral of Notre Dame celebrates All Saints’ Day, with the Archbishop of Paris taking the opportunity to implore the people of France to abstain from violence in the wake of the March on the Champs Elysée. He reminds them of the words of the Holy Father, and quietly condemns the act of swearing an oath to the state. Notably absent from the mass is the rector of the Cathedral, a notable juring priest who had been one of the first to sign the Civil Constitution.

- Autumn of 1791 will be later known as La Guerre de Journaux, with various political parties creating their own personal newspapers in an attempt to win over the French public. Pamphlets advocating greater worker’s rights appear on the streets of Paris while the words of Antoine Barnave spread into middle class drawing rooms through a new paper called L'Ami de la France. De Sade forges his own radical and risque paper, with Babeuf appearing as a notable contributor. Leaflets on the role of the nobility from Saint-Just are spotted in salons. The sudden spark of publications leads to increased debate across France on the future of the nation. Literacy sees a minor increase.

- In more serious literature, Saint-Just publishes his treatises on the French government, entitled The Spirit of the Revolution and the Constitution of France. The publication is ignored by most of the French public, either due to illiteracy or political leanings. A translation is published in the United Kingdom, where it sees limited popularity.

- The King and his family are seen in almshouses throughout Paris, leaving large donations in their wake. During one of these visits, Queen Marie Antoinette remarks, "Qu'ils mangent de la brioche" which will be used as a rallying cry by Royalists for generations. Many Parisians grow more fond of the royal family. Members of the nobility are less impressed, despite being implored to participate. They refuse to associate with the common peasantry and admonish the King for forgetting his station.

- Otherwise, the King is largely kept under lock and key by the National Guard, who escort him everywhere. This leads to some tensions with the Swiss Guard, who accuse the National Guard of trying to usurp their position. Nonetheless, most admit that the risk to the king is greatly diminished with Lafayette’s protection.

- A delegation from Saint-Domingue arrives in November, appearing before the Legislative Assembly and describing in vivid detail the wholesale slaughter of the whites in the colony. They beg for assistance in maintaining the now endangered plantation economy.

- Babeuf, in his seminal “Pour la Défense du Travailleur”, is the first to cement the idea of the “trade union” in social thought: an organization of workers and laborers formed for the purpose of collective bargaining. He goes so far as to encourage the citizens of France to form them. This runs in direct opposition to both the law and popular opinion, and wins him few friends in the country.

- The National Guard is purged of undisciplined recruits during a month-long series of robust training exercises and drills. 5,000 largely unqualified men abandon the organization, returning to their homes and hanging up their weapons, but those who remain see their cohesion increase somewhat. Morale lowers, however, with many sad to see their friends and brothers-in-arms depart.

- Rumors spread in the Breton departments, catching on like wildfire. Not only does the French government intend to triple taxes on Bretons, it also plans to cut out the tongues of Bretons for its own sadistic pleasure. The veracity of the rumors goes unconfirmed, but the name “de Sade” is attached to all of them, and he becomes a boogeyman among the Bretons, so much so that several half-naked wicker men resembling the Controller-General are burnt throughout the region.

- Georges Cadoudal travels across Brittany, giving a series of robust speeches in dusty taverns and quiet homesteads, calling for the complete cessation of payment in tax to the French government. He finds that many of his pamphlets have come before him, making him a household name and a local hero. In light of de Sade’s recent tariff proposals, which would lead to mass starvation among the Breton lower class, many find solace in his words, including the administrators. The Breton departments stop paying taxes altogether in protest.

- Moving south, Cadoudal makes connections among the non-juring clergy and parishioners in the Vendée, who offer him shelter, supplies, and an information network in the region, though few are willing to directly oppose the government.

- The French Swiss Guard requests highly trained soldiers from their headquarters in Bern after several men disappear in Paris. They are sent 30 further guardsmen. Due to deals with both Savoy and Prussia, the Swiss government can spare no more.

- Brittany begins storing what foodstuffs they produce rather than export them into France. The precautionary measures are primarily the designs of a cabal of Breton nobles led by Charles Tuffin. Tuffin himself even offers some of his own personal store to that of a poor cattle-rearing village on the coast, winning their extreme gratitude. His speeches, always in Breton, win him the admiration of the people.

- Nicolas Luckner sends 450 soldiers to reinforce the Swiss Guard. The men sent are mostly royalist or moderate but integrate poorly with the strict protocol enforced by the Guard, many lax in discipline. Attempts to train the new men take up much of the Oberst’s time but yield few results.

- A pamphlet-orchestrated push for a Breton march on Paris fails to materialize, with Breton administrators cautioning their charges not to risk angering the government more than they already have. "Save your ire for de Sade, not the King," is a common mantra. Seizing the chance, a group of Breton nobles led by Tuffin organize a small militia, the "Ar Diebiñ Bretoned".

- The former French nobility, upon hearing of proposed tax hikes, start fleeing in greater number. Most of them cross the border into the Austrian Netherlands, heading for the court of the King’s younger brother, the comte de Provence. The bourgeoisie are driven into a mad panic by the émigrés, demanding the French government prohibit travel abroad for all aristocracy. Lafayette, in a desperate speech at a banquet, pleads for order and stability, but is ignored.

COLONIAL NEWS:

- The Haitian rebels establish an operational headquarters at Cabre House, a vast plantation resting comfortably in the Plaine-du-Nord. This plantation, with its back against a mountain range and its face toward the coast, serves as the perfect training ground and recruitment center for the rebels. Here, Toussaint Louverture tries to begin training soldiers, but he is largely incapable of doing so en masse due to a lack of qualified instructors.

- Spain continues to provide the former slaves with muskets and supplies, much to the protest of the French government. Arms flow freely over the border in a loose alliance that is becoming more and more formal.

- Two letters are sent to other powers, scrawled in Toussaint’s own hand: one is sent to the British asking for aid. Upon the recommendation of the British Ambassador to France, Parliament votes to send an old cannon to the rebels from nearby Jamaica, complete with munitions and ramrod. It soon reaches Toussaint’s camp. Another letter, sent to New York, is met with harsh laughter and dismissal, although George Washington himself remains silent on the issue.

- Throughout central Saint-Domingue, bands of black men wielding muskets and farming tools become a common sight. The makeshift militias formed by the plantation owners are continually caught by surprise as hundreds of negroes descend on them from the mountains. In the most decisive of these engagements, at a large plantation outside of St. Marc, several prominent white leaders and their men are slaughtered. White morale collapses while 8,000 more slaves take up Toussaint’s banner.

- The bulk of the rebels, though, lay siege to le Cap Français, keeping the population from leaving by foot, but their efforts are rendered useless by the local port, which allows for the city to import supplies from the French Antilles. Still, the population within do not move to break the siege, terrified of another St. Marc.

- The French Army arrives at Jacmel in southernmost Saint Domingue in late November, setting up a command post just outside the town. Precautions taken against disease minimize losses on the trip over, but some three hundred men still die. Their presence does not go unnoticed, and the reinforcements stabilize the whites on the southern half on the island. They make no moves against the slaves for the time being, instead preferring to consolidate their position.

FOREIGN NEWS:

- Louis Stanislas, the comte de Provence and the King’s younger brother, declares himself regent of the Kingdom of France and Navarre from his refuge in the Austrian Netherlands. He claims the King is a prisoner in Paris and incapable of exercising his duties, and makes well known his intent to invade France with an army of émigrés at his back.

- The Emperor makes vague promises of support to Stanislas but keeps himself distant, citing a letter from the King himself. Prussia, on the other hand, eagerly announces its recognition of the Comte as the regent of France.

- French diplomats in the Dutch Republic fail to convince the banks there that the government is stable. The chair of the Bank of Amsterdam points to the so-called “Regent of France and Navarre” planning an invasion from Brussels.

- The first signs of discord begin to show in the new American government as William Short petitions the Washington administration for munitions, money, and officers that might go to the French. Alexander Hamilton and his Federalists oppose the request openly, while Thomas Jefferson, the Secretary of State, rallies behind the ambassador. After threatening resignation, Jefferson manages to secure a delegation of officers from the President, who are promptly sent to the Marquis de Lafayette in Paris.

- The whole of the British garrison at Coimbatore surrenders to native forces after a sustained siege, being taken prisoner to a man. The fall of the fort represents a tremendous setback for the British in the Third Anglo-Mysore War.

- Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart dies after a long period of illness. Music fans across Europe mourn the end of an era.

quote:

La Nation, la Loi, le Roi- A France NationSim

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Country: Royaume des Français (Kingdom of the French), established 3 September 1791 by the ratification of the French Constitution by King Louis XVI
Foreign Relations: Good relations with the United States of America, poor relations with the Holy Roman Emperor and the Kingdom of Prussia, extremely poor relations with the Kingdom of Great Britain. Declaration of Pillnitz by Austria and Prussia a standing issue.
Population: 28,000,000
Year: Winter 1791 (turns represent 3 month seasonal cycles)

Metropolitan France

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Saint-Domingue
1547x1136


=Economy=
-
=Economic Sectors=
Agriculture: 72%
Manufacturing: 20%
Trade: 8%
Growth Rate: -3%
=
Unemployment: 21%

=Government=

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The Constitution of 1791 severely limited the nobility's authority. The King reserved some rights, such as the royal veto, but the ability to exercise this right seriously undermined the King's popularity in government. The writers of the Constitution struggled to balance royal power with popular sovereignty.
-
Popularity: Mediocre
System: Unitary Constitutional Monarchy

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King: Louis XVI de Bourbon/Gantolandon (gantolandonsa@gmail.com)
    Popularity: Low
    Laws of Succession: Agnatic Primogeniture
    Heir Apparent: Louis-Charles de Bourbon (unplayable)

Legislative Assembly: 745 Seats (165 Feuillants, 330 Jacobins, 250 Independents)
Elections: Members of the Legislative Assembly are elected every two years. 247 are chosen from each department, 249 are elected nationally and 249 are chosen on the basis of tax revenue.
Suffrage: All men who pay annual taxes equal to or greater than the local wages paid for three days of labor, over the age of 25. Soldiers are exempt from all requirements but age after two years service. For National Guardsmen, similarly, but six years service.

=Cabinet=
The choice and dismissal of Ministers appertains solely to the King. The members of the Legislative Assembly may not be appointed. All powers exercised by the King must be signed by at least one minister before it can take effect.

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Minister of Foreign Affairs: Armand Marc, comte de Montmorin/Rincewind (blriley@gmail.com)
The Minister of Foreign Relations is tasked with maintaining relations with foreign nations and the protection of French citizens abroad. He is nominally considered to be the Prime Minister.
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Minister of War: Nicolas Luckner/OscarDiggs (oscardiggssa@hotmail.co.uk)
The Minister of War has total control over the French Army and is responsible for the protection of French border provinces. Given international hostility toward France, the execution of this duty may be difficult.
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Minister of the Marine: Claude Antoine de Valdec de Lessart/Brillo_Pad (tripleultima@gmail.com)
The Minister of the Marine has jurisdiction over all seafaring French vessels and the colonial territories. It is his duty to ensure the protection of trade.
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Minister of Justice: Marguerite-Louis-François Duport-Dutertre/ZearothK (zearothk@trioptimum.com)
The Minister of Justice is responsible for all judicial affairs within France and ensuring the rule of law is maintained. Due to the chaotic nature of French internal affairs, the Minister will have to balance the orders of the King and Legislative Assembly.
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Controller-General of Finances: Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade/Fall Sick and Die (ccferrara@gmail.com)
The Controller-General is charged with maintaining state finances, agriculture, industry, commerce, roads and estates. Due to the poor state of the French economy, the position is in a state of turmoil and officials here rarely last long.

=Factions=

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- Club des Feuillants

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Constitutionalist, led by Antoine Barnave/IPlayVideoGames (vhramis at gmail.com )

The Feuillants are considered the ‘moderates’ of the French Revolution. These officials believe in the preservation of the monarchy in its current limited form and promote decentralization. Their headquarters is located in a former monastery on the Rue Saint-Honoré in Paris. Represented by the colour blue.

- Club des Jacobins

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Radical Republican (Montagnard) wing led by Maximilien de Robespierre/sniper4625. Liberal Republican (Girondin) wing led by Jacques Pierre Brissot/Freudian (i.bindley at g-mail). The faction is roughly evenly split.

The Jacobins are the radicals of the French Revolution who want the complete dissolution of the monarchy and to further centralize the French government. However, the group is divided further into two bickering wings, with the Montagnards believing in immediate dissolution of the crown and the Girondins preferring to keep the King until the nation stabilizes. Their headquarters is located in a former convent on the Rue St. Jacques in Paris. Represented by the colour red.

- Monarchistes Français

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Reactionary Monarchist, led by Georges Cadoudal/Arujei (rjohnlennon@gmail.com)

Although they are not represented in the Legislative Assembly, this group represents an alliance between members of the former aristocracy, who wish to see a return of the absolute monarchy and landed aristocracy, and marginalized minorities like the Bretons who chafe under the centralization of the state. Although many fled following the ratification of the Constitution, those who remain in France have strong funding from outside parties. Both Jacobins and Feuillants are terrified of these émigrés because of their ability to influence French politics.

- Les Enragés

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Babeufist (Populist Left), led by François-Noël Babeuf/A RICH WHITE MAN/(moodinconsistency at gmail) and Jacques Roux/Stalingrad (stalingradlenin@gmail.com)

The crippling bread prices and a general lack of work in Paris have given some popular support to a movement that might otherwise have been a footnote of history. Even further to the left than the Jacobins, the Enragés rely on the support of the common man and encourage a thoroughly radical revolution. .

Departments:
Following the ratification of the French constitution, the provinces of France were destroyed and the lands of the aristocracy dissolved. In their place, the Legislative Assembly established 82 departments. Each department is ruled by an Administrator and receives three representatives in the Legislative Assembly, except Paris which receives only one.

=Newspapers=

L'Ami de la France
Editor: Antoine Barnave
Ideology: Constitutionalist
Readership: mostly in larger cities - Paris, Lyon, and Marseille especially. Widely read by the middle class, some readers in the aristocracy.
Headlines: “TAXATION THE BOON OF THE FRENCH”, “HIS MAJESTY THE KING, A COMMENDATION”, “THE FEUILLANTS AND AN END TO FAMINE”

Le Libertin
Editor: Donatien Alphonse François, Marquis de Sade
Ideology: Radical Republican
Readership: the petit bourgeoisie and urban laborers. Read almost exclusively in Paris.
Headlines: “QUEEN MARIE IN THE NUDE, A FANTASY”, “ON THE LIBERATION OF INDIA AND THE ROLE OF FRANCE”, “TOUSSAINT THE BRAVE, PLANTER THE FOOL”, “THE ILLEGAL EMIGRATION”

=Military=

256x270


The reformed French military in 1791 required well-trained officers, disciplined soldiers and freethinking non-commissioned officers. Due to the collapse of the nobility, of which the army had been dependent on, the French military lacked all three of these qualities. The result was a poorly organized, poorly disciplined fighting force.

1791 Reglement
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Maréchal de France: Nicolas Luckner/OscarDiggs (oscardiggssa@hotmail.co.uk)
Forces: 94,250 soldiers, 11,000 cavaliers, 290 cannons
Organization: 2 corps, 10 brigades, 50 regiments, 500 companies
--- l’Armée du Nord [assigned 37500 soldiers. stationed near Lille. commanded by Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, Comte de Rochambeau/stalin-chan (stalin@c0balt.com)]
--- l'Armée du Rhin [assigned 37500 soldiers. stationed by the bank of the Rhine. commanded by Alexis Le Veneur de Tillières/vacant]
--- 8e Brigade d'Infanterie [assigned 7500 soldiers. stationed in Corsica. commanded by Napoléon Bonaparte/YF-23 (yfaltmiau at hotmail dot com)]
--- 4e Brigade d’Infanterie [assigned 4200 soldiers. stationed in Jacmel. low-ranking commander]
Situation: Low morale, newly implemented army structure untried and causing disconcertion in the ranks, officers from remnants of Royal Army continue steady desertion. Volunteer regiments suffer from a complete lack of training and discipline. Rate of recruitment increased thanks to Suffrage Act.

French Navy
219x250

Admiral: Charles Hector, comte d'Estaing/tatankatonk (tatankatonk22@gmail.com)
Forces: 71 ships of the line, 61 frigates, 45 corvettes, sizable merchant marine
Organization: 2 fleets, several smaller patrols
--- Flotte de l’Atlantique [assigned 40 ships of the line, 30 frigates. based in Brest. commanded by Louis Thomas Villaret de Joyeus/vacant]
--- Flotte de la Méditerranée [assigned 31 ships of the line, 26 frigates. based in Toulon. commanded by Louis-Armand de Rohan Constantine/vacant]
Situation: New command structure, many remaining officers skeptical. Many vessels in disrepair or the targets of sabotage. Efforts to develop a more advanced gunnery technique underway.

Swiss Guard
276x250

Oberst: Major Karl Josef von Bachmann/Enjoy (sw_faulty at hotmail dot com)
Forces: 930 guardsmen, 450 soldiers
Situation: Highly trained, highly effective mercenaries serving as the King’s personal guards. The Swiss Guard have defended the monarchy since 1480 and are one of the most feared fighting forces in Europe. The Swiss Guard is currently experiencing difficulties integrating the Frenchmen in their service.

National Guard
246x250

Commander-in-Chief: Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette/ a bad enough dude (ehoovestol@gmail.com)
Forces: 43,000 National Guardsmen, 12 American advisors, 12 cannons
Situation: Somewhat high morale, but poorly organized. Training is underway and discipline steadily improving. Recruits are drawn almost solely from the middle class.

=Rebellions and Militias=
Ar Diebiñ Bretoned

Leader: Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouerie
Commanders: Vacant
Ideology: Breton Nationalism / Conservatism
Popularity: 5% in Brittany
Forces: 500 peasants
Situation: No muskets or other arms beyond farming instruments. No training. Good morale.

La Garde Révolutionnaire

Leader: François-Noël Babeuf
Commanders: Vacant
Ideology: Babeufism
Popularity: 3% in Paris
Forces: 200 sans-culottes
Situation: Volunteer militia formed after the March on the Champs-Élysées, made up of disenfranchised peasants and artisans. No training, decent morale.

Haitian Slave Revolt

Leaders: Several, in disarray
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Commander: Toussaint Louverture/EccoRaven
Ideology: Abolitionist
Popularity: 85% among black Haitians, no support in Metropolitan France
Forces: 28,000 slaves, 1 cannon
Situation: Morale is very high, training is abysmal or nonexistent. Occupying most of northern Saint-Domingue and sporadically attacking the whites there. Receiving arms and supplies from the Spanish.

Other Important Individuals and Groups:

Archdiocese of Paris
With the confiscation of church property and the subjugation of the clergy to the state, the influence of the church hierarchy on France is theoretically minimal at best. In reality, however, many voiceless Catholics still place their church first, and no one is in so good a position to take advantage of that trust as the Archbishop of Paris.
173x250

Archbishop: Antoine-Éléonor-Léon Leclerc de Juigné/Cozy Hemp Mines (Cozyhempmines at googlemail)

American Embassy to France
Although he may not wield significant power on the European stage, the American ambassador and his government serve as symbols of democracy and republicanism.

Ambassador: William Short/Tao Jones (sa.taojones at gmail)

British Embassy to France
Along with setting British foreign policy concerning France, the current ambassador also has a vast amount of personal wealth to draw upon.
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Ambassador: Duke George Leveson-Gower/Incy (incysa at gmail)

216x268

Marie Gouze/vacant
Although initially in support of the Revolution, Marie Gouze was disenchanted when she learned women would not be allowed to participate. She is an influential writer in Paris but extremely controversial.

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Madame Roland/vacant
The wife of noted Jacobin Jean-Marie Roland, the Madame exerts a great deal of influence over her husband and through him the members of the Legislative Assembly.


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Louis Philippe II, “Citoyen Egalité”, Duke of Orléans/Colonel Wood (sacolonel.wood at gmail.com)
Louis Philippe is notable for being one of the few members of the French nobility to actively support the revolution. Both sides distrust him for his unconventional politics.

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Louis Antoine de Saint-Just/Epicurius (epicurius at aol.com)
Louis is a young, up and coming star within the Jacobins. He has publicly called for the execution of all monarchs, a terrifying idea for most of France.

177x250

Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouerie/Gorgo Primus
As a veteran of the American Revolution and self-described "Champion of the Nobility", Charles is an influential French citizen and Breton nationalist.

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Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord/Götterdämmerung (wafflepoet at gmail dot com)
Charles Maurice is a member of the minor aristocracy in France but has devoted his life to far more revolutionary ideals. He participated in the writing of the Declaration of the Rights of Man and proposed the Civil Constitution of the Clergy.

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Louis Stanislas Xavier, comte de Provence/Takanago (ktakanago@gmail.com)
The younger brother of the King of the French and the de facto leader of the émigrés outside France. His recent declaration of regency is a threat to the stability of the country and is currently recognized by the Kingdom of Prussia.

=Stats=



Agriculture: Undercapitalized with below average average crop yields. Poor harvests have lead to unfavorable conditions for local markets. Situation improving.
Industry:: Mostly textiles, with some mining and metalworking. Though stabilized somewhat by ample subsidies, the solution is only a temporary one and unless export markets and ample cotton supply can be secured it will collapse.
Food: Mild famine has resulted in a massive spike in prices but agricultural investments have resulted in a minor improvement in diet. Brittany is on the verge of starvation should tariffs be collected. Nobility and bourgeois eat well.
Labor: No restrictions on working hours or hiring practices
Education: 45% literacy for men, 32% for women. Based on the apprenticeship system, with Catholic seminaries being used as an alternative for poor families. Private tutors used for nobility.
Public Health: Major cities contain small sewers but require updated water systems. Health care largely provided by the clergy.
Crime: Approximately 3,660 officers are used to defend strategic sites like the palace, royal mint and major roadways. Well-organized and trained but corrupt.
Trade: France receives a large influx of goods from her colonies. However, her exports have fallen out of favor within Europe itself.
Colonies: Mostly in the Caribbean and India, holdovers from numerous unsuccessful wars against Britain. Slavery is widespread and forms the lifeblood of the overseas economy. Revolt in Haiti threatening to destroy the sugar trade.
Finance: Assignats have largely replaced the livre as the de facto currency of France. Mild inflation due to overproduction of paper money.
Urbanization: Less than a quarter live in cities. Population growth primarily in rural areas.
Religion: Catholics dominate political life but Calvinists are tolerated. Jews are non-citizens. The Civil Constitution of the Clergy makes priests direct employees of the state.
Ethnic Groups: 48% French, 44% Occitan, 7% Breton, 1% Corsican. Official toleration of local languages but increasing momentum towards French as the sole language of the state.

=Budget=

Due to the poor economic policies of the monarchy, the treasury of France was bankrupt by the time the Constitution was enacted. In order to ensure economic stability, church property was forcibly seized and used as a standard for the currency. Despite the decrease in royal power, a large portion of the yearly budget was used to build and maintain the property of the nobility.

As a consequence of underfunding the police and low accountability among tax collectors, Revolutionary France often had difficulties collecting taxes.

quote:

Contributions Directes:
Tax Efficiency: Low
20% tax on nobility (10)
20% tax on bourgeoisie (9)
20% tax on the petit bourgeoisie (3)
0% tax on working poor (0)
10% tax on land and estates (5)

Debt
Current Market Interest Rate: 2.0%
Debt growth per turn: 15 credits
Payments to debt interest per turn: 0
Payments to debt reduction per turn: 0
Debt Credits: 515
---102 credits to Swiss banking houses
---413 credits to various private investors

Possible creditors: Private citizens. Dutch and Swiss banks willing to loan more only at higher than market interest rate while stability of government still in question.

Trade
Tariffs: 5.0% tax rate on all overseas imports and exports. Internal tariffs upon the production and manufactures of the departments of Finistere, Morbihan, Cotes du Nord, Ille et Vilaine and Loire Inferieur.
---1 from agricultural imports [Brittany - France] (NOT COLLECTED)
---1 from textile exports [France - Brittany] (NOT COLLECTED)
---1 from salt imports [Pondicherry - France]
---3 from sugar imports [Saint-Domingue - France]
---1 from cocoa imports [Martinique - France]

Trade Deals: None

Government Revenues:
Minting: 10 (+1.0 inflation/year)
Inflation: 5.25%

Manufacturing: 3/3
Agriculture: 4/4
Infrastructure: 4/6
Transportation: 2/2
Culture: 3/2
Police: 8/8
Army: 5/12
Navy: 5/10
Intelligence: 1/2
Courts: 1/1
Clergy: 1/3
Education: 2/4
Healthcare: 2/5
Colonies 6/8

Yearly Credits

Free Credits: 0
Credit Income: 44

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




If Brittany would reject the Revolution, let them be treated as the traitors they are!

Otherwise, a decent season. I regret my Girondin counterparts are not as willing as we to punish the enemies of the revolution. Alas!

Empress Theonora
Feb 19, 2001

No reason to make an effort to empathize if doing so comes at the price of oblivion.



Armand Marc, comte de Montmorin

In the actions of the "Citizen" de Sade, we see the true face of radical Jacobinism: Bloodlust, depravity, and capriciousness. Is that the road the Assembly wishes France to travel?

It is my recommendation that de Sade be stripped of his titles and offices immediately.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




Shame! Citoyen de Sade may have a quirk or too, but his revolutionary credentials are impeccable! We must all strive to emulate his zeal!

Viral Warfare
Aug 4, 2010

~~a n d I a m c a l m~~

If there are any problems in the report that we missed, let me or QuoProQuid know in IRC or email, we'll fix it right away.

Friar John
Aug 3, 2007

Saint Francis be my speed! how oft to-night
Have my old feet stumbled at graves!

Georges Cadoudal

Excerpt from the pamphlet "Liberté et libertinage" posted:

...Once more the foresight of wisdom is proven true, once more the peoples of France see the decadent and corrupt heart of the Revolution! They speak of freedom, but what they mean in their hearts is the freedom to do evil! Has any man with ears not heard the tales of the "Citoyen" de Sade? Do not the very hints and rumors of his conduct shock the mind of any man? Torture? Degradation? Horrible perversions of lust and vice that speak more of Sodom & Gomorrah than France? And yet this "Citoyen" is the standard-bearer of the revolutionaries!

Peoples of France, you see before you now even more offenses against the laws of Man and God that the revolutionaries desire. They sought to murder Brittany, obliterate her people like Cromwell sought the death of the Irish! Do you, man of Langeudoc, man of Lorraine, Béarn, Provence, Auvergne, think they will not come for you next? Do you think that should the Vendee burn, you will be spared? No, the madmen of the assembly have declared war on all the peoples of France who would love God, King, and Kingdom. There is no human heart in a revolutionary, only a hatred for the history, customs, and laws of our families, from the farmhouse to the Kingdom itself. But we are not powerless, friends! We have a great and Christian protector as our King, for it is only within that kingdom, stretching from the misty depths of history from Clovis himself to now, that we may find sanity of governance. Show your support for the King, friends, and let the catamites of de Sade know we shall have true virtue for our state! Vive le Roi!

a bad enough dude
Jun 30, 2007

APPARENTLY NOT A BAD ENOUGH DUDE TO STICK TO ONE THING AT A TIME WHETHER ITS PBPS OR A SHITTY BROWSER GAME THAT I BEG MONEY FOR AND RIPPED FROM TROPICO. ALSO I LET RETARDED UKRANIANS THAT CAN'T PROGRAM AND HAVE 2000 HOURS IN GARRY'S MOD RUN MY SHIT.



Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard

The highwaymen in Brittany under the whip of the rogue Charles Armand "Tuffin" will lay down their arms and return to their fields or be forcibly dismantled by the National Guard. The lawful taxes will be collected. We will not tolerate an anti-French rebellion in France itself!

I would like to thank President Washington, Secretary Jefferson, and the American people for their aid to the French. I once again call for the signing of a Free Trade compact with the United States of America by the Legislative Assembly. This is vital not only to show our brotherhood in Liberty with America, but also as a benefit to our economy. That the Assembly failed to consider this vital treaty in the past several months is disappointing indeed.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.


a bad enough dude posted:

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Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard

The highwaymen in Brittany under the whip of the rogue Charles Armand "Tuffin" will lay down their arms and return to their fields or be forcibly dismantled by the National Guard. The lawful taxes will be collected. We will not tolerate an anti-French rebellion in France itself!



Hear hear! With such a devoted servant of the Revolution at the helm, it is certain that the brigands days are numbered. Once the criminal Tuffin and his compatriot Cadaoul are found, they must immediately be brought back to Paris to face the people's justice! Long live La Revolution! Such an excellent display of devotion to the ideals of the Revolution would also be cause to look even more favorably upon an excellent idea. (Free Trade Agreement).

Enjoy
Apr 18, 2009




Major von Bachmann, Swiss Guard

We do not live in a republic yet, you hideous little gremlin, but you have revealed yourself as the traitor you are! I cannot suffer this insult to my liege any longer! Your second will discuss this further with mine own and we will meet on the morrow with pistols or you will be known as a coward as well as a traitor!

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.


Enjoy posted:

Major von Bachmann, Swiss Guard

We do not live in a republic yet, you hideous little gremlin, but you have revealed yourself as the traitor you are! I cannot suffer this insult to my liege any longer! Your second will discuss this further with mine own and we will meet on the morrow with pistols or you will be known as a coward as well as a traitor!

I accept! As the challenged, I reserve the right to choose the weapons we duel with...and I choose our tongues! Let us debate the matters of the day, and truly see whose opinions are superior!

Tao Jones
Jun 15, 2007

That's a very courageous post, Minister!




The American people and government remain friends to France. I requested a generous aid package from my government, but thanks to the efforts of intransigent people within our administration, I was able to obtain only a fraction of what I hoped to deliver. I have no doubt that Lafayette's proposed trade agreement would help to ease any misgivings that our Secretary of the Treasury has about further aid.

In the meantime, I plan to advocate for Franco-American Friendship Societies to be established in my country, whereby ordinary free citizens of America who wish to show their support for the French crown and people can do so as they please.

Further, I would like to remind you all that whatever your political positions are, the ravenous wolf King George III still lurks just across the English Channel, no doubt planning to take advantage of your disunity.

Takanago
Jun 2, 2007

You'll see...


I will take the role of Louis Stanislas, the comte de Provence, and regent of the Kingdom of France.

True noblemen can reach me through PMs, and lesser nobles can go through the hassles of using email at ktakanago@gmail.com.

Gorgo Primus
Mar 29, 2009

We shall forge the most progressive republic ever known to man!



Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouerie

Extracts from a speech given in Rennes at a meeting of the newly formed Breton Association posted:

... so they call us highwaymen. If you go to rob a man's home and he hides his gold in the safe, you may not call him a thief - you also don't call yourself the rightful government. *laughter from crowd* No, we are not highwaymen. We are the people of Brittany who refuse to allow this unlawful government, ordained not by God or even the majority of men, to steal the product of our hard work. We do not allow them to take food from starving children or gold from poor women. We do not allow or consent to the extermination of our culture and language.

We do not consent! This government says it is for suffrage and democracy, but what do you mean if they do not mean that the voice of the Bretons is equal to that of their own? They will not let us speak. Their 'assembly' is one of madmen and sadists who care not for our needs or wants. And if we so clearly can not trust them to act in our interests or refrain them from seeking our deaths than clearly we can not trust them to defend us. So we formed our own defensive force. We formed Ar Diebiñ Bretoned! *cheers* We may be small in size now, but as a veteran of the American War I can promise you I have seen worse get better at the double-quick. I will personally lead and train this defense force until it is an army capable of safeguarding us from the capital until such time as it accedes to our demands - demands for our inalienable rights laid forth in their own damned Declaration! How soon they forget what it is they claimed to take power for.

We demand bread! We demand land! We demand our language and culture be acknowledged as the majority in Brittany, and an equal to French in this Kingdom! We demand the right to autonomy! We demand that we be allowed to organize ourselves freely! We demand justice, and we shall never stop!

If the capital would do this we were all be fervent supporters of our constitution, but they do not and thus it is not our constitution - it is theirs and theirs alone. It leaves us no room for ourselves in it!

If you want a world with room in it for you and your children, join the Breton Association and serve in Ar Diebiñ Bretoned!

*cheers of "Give us liberty or give us Death!", "Bretagne Libre!", and "Breizh dieub!" can be heard from the crowd*

Extracts from a speech given in Leon to a mass of peasants posted:

... so you look to the King. But did the King not receive ample petitions begging him to veto the budget and remove Sade? *cries of death to Sade are heard* Yes, the King ignored us and backed Sade instead! He allowed Sade to stay Minister and signed the budget calling for your deaths, our deaths!

If we can not look to the King, who are we to look to? But no, you look to the King, and so I must look to the King. But looking at a thing is not the same as having a thing. If the King is our King, as you and I believe him to be, then let us go to the King! Perhaps the Radicals in the capital merely hide our cries from the King's sight. Perhaps if he only hears our cries he will be moved, arrest Sade, and give us back our freedoms robbed of us.

I have never been one to be closed of mind; we should try it. We should go. Let us march on Paris, peacefully, and demand our rights. Let him see the suffering his ignorance brings! *calls of "Let him see!" are heard* But if he does not act, if he does not care, if he does not think - that we are subjects worth keeping - then let us prepare ourselves for the reality that this King has succumbed to the Great Parisian Chauvinism and is naught but a puppet of the Radicals!

But, let him see... so that we may see where we stand.*calls of "Let him see!" and "We will go!" are heard*

Now, as for these tales I hear of famine, the Nobility of Brittany has prepared a means so as to ...

Enjoy
Apr 18, 2009


sniper4625 posted:

I accept! As the challenged, I reserve the right to choose the weapons we duel with...and I choose our tongues! Let us debate the matters of the day, and truly see whose opinions are superior!

I have been denied satisfaction! You are no gentleman.

QuoProQuid
Jan 12, 2012


Just a note, please try to limit your actions to 5 or 6 per turn. This is to make writing turns easier for CVortex and I and increase the speed at which we can operate.

Thank you.

Tao Jones
Jun 15, 2007

That's a very courageous post, Minister!




I have been reviewing the situation in Bretagne, and I wish to say that true government is intended to protect the rights of all its citizens. We can see this in the reflections of your Baron Montesquieu on the greatness of the Romans, as well as in the revolutionary musings of that great citizen of Geneva, JJ Rousseau. Marquis Tuffin served with distinction in the cause of freedom in the New World, and deserves to be treated with respect.

The principles of Hobbes and Locke state that when any population is oppressed by their government, or any slave oppressed by their master, then a state of war exists between them. To single out Bretagne for onerous taxation is to create an entire class of citizens that are, at the same time, not treated equally.

I respectfully implore the members of the French Assembly to repeal the taxes levied on the Bretons and to consider other means of enhancing the state's treasury. The taxes so levied as as tyrannical as any levied against our continent by the King of England.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




Traitor Tuffin has taken up arms against France, and must be prepared to face the repercussions thereof. If he were to give himself up to the National Guard, then perhaps leniency would be shown to the people of Brittany. If not, the status quo must prevail.

Friar John
Aug 3, 2007

Saint Francis be my speed! how oft to-night
Have my old feet stumbled at graves!

Georges Cadoudal

Excerpt from "An Open Letter to the Bretons" posted:

Devezh mat, ma Breurdeur!
It is with a heavy heart that I find myself penning this letter, when I consider the circumstances. If we lived in better times, there would be no need for you to band in such a way to protect our homeland. But we are born into our age by the designs of God, and let no man whinge that he is not some Greek or Roman, for our times are of the most import for the whole of the Earth, and our actions will be remembered by the generations to come!
Selaou! You have felt keenly the desires of the revolutionaries to destroy our homes, to bring horrid murder upon our families and friends, but you resisted! You proved to the blood-crazed madmen that they are not all-powerful, they are not the representatives they claim to be! And for your courage, I know all men shall speak highly of the Bretons! I know that you have only undertaken arms in defense of your lives and freedoms, and I speak of the lawfulness of your actions to all the men I meet in my travels. Take heart, and train dutifully!
Charles Armand Tuffin is a fine man, a great leader of men, dedicated to the cause of true peace in the Kingdom of France, and worthy of your loyalty! Follow his instructions on the battlefield, and you shall have little to fear!
Know that as I travel the Kingdom, as I seek to turn men to the path of sanity and virtue, my heart is ever with you! Vive Bretagne! Vive le Roi!

Takanago
Jun 2, 2007

You'll see...



Louis Stanislas Xavier, comte de Provence, and Regent of the Kingdom of France and Navarre

Let it be known that my brother, Louis XVI de Bourbon, has been imprisoned by the shameful, treasonous government in Paris. As such, he has been unfortunately rendered completely incapable of ruling as a good Bourbon king should and as the Kingdom of France and Navarre requires. It is up to the good French nobility to help Louis XVI out of his predicament. More than that, it is up to me, Louis Stanislas Xavier, comte de Provence. I declare myself Regent of the Kingdom of France and Navarre, acting in lieu of Louis XVI, who is held powerless.

Do not worry, my brother! You have many enemies in Paris, but you have many friends abroad! I, and all the loyal noblemen who have escaped the peasant and bourgeois terrorists, will do our very best to rescue you from their clutches! We still stand by your side! The crimes and injustices committed by the "government" send tears through our noble faces and aches through our noble hearts.

Now, let me say this to the radicals of France: if you lay one single finger on my brother, the King, and harm him in any way, the vengeance delivered by the rest of Europe will be swift and brutal. If you are wise, and you respect his rights, then we may choose to stay our hand and be merciful when I and my forces return to restore the rightful power of the French monarchy and aristocracy.

In short: your time is short. The émigrés will soon return to France.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




An open letter to the people of France

Malcontents stir up the countryside, and Monarchists threaten to return and force us back in to serfdom. Lies and betrayal are their weapons, and your honest toil is their sustenance. Will we, the free peoples of France be content to submit once more to an absolute tyrant? Never! I call upon all those who love liberty, who love the ideals of the Revolution, who love living a free man to join us! Join the Jacobins! Join the National Guard! Join us and fight for your liberty! Renounce the one who travels among you, seeking to put you back in chains! Seize him and deliver justice, for he is your enemy! Any man who bring a monarchist to justice is a righteous man, for the monarchists are the enemy of the people, and have already declared war. The question is, people of France, will they win unopposed? Not so long as I draw breath!

To the members of the Assembly - we must move swiftly, for the forces of reaction gather at our very doorstep. We must ensure our armies remain strong, that we may purge our homeland of traitorous elements in safety. We must declare a State of Emergency, that we may effectively take action to safeguard our beautiful nation.

Finally, to the hungry and poor - the Jacobins hear you. Jacobin clubs across France are distributing grain from our facilities at great cost to ourselves, (though to read the news you would not know it.) Now word has reached me that the Bretons, already seeing fit to abjure their fair share of taxation have now taken to hording food. They would see themselves fat and happy while you starve! Shall we let the Breton, who sees himself better than you, the people of France, engorge himself while your children bloat from lack of food? An outrage! A disgrace! Rise up, people of France, rise!

Vive la France!

a bad enough dude
Jun 30, 2007

APPARENTLY NOT A BAD ENOUGH DUDE TO STICK TO ONE THING AT A TIME WHETHER ITS PBPS OR A SHITTY BROWSER GAME THAT I BEG MONEY FOR AND RIPPED FROM TROPICO. ALSO I LET RETARDED UKRANIANS THAT CAN'T PROGRAM AND HAVE 2000 HOURS IN GARRY'S MOD RUN MY SHIT.



Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard

I call on the King of France to denounce Louis Stanislas Xavier as an enemy of the people. He seeks to wage war on us, ostensibly in the name of the Bourbons, and it must be made clear that his justification is bankrupt and merely a front for the tyrants of Europe to crush French liberty. The people will surely rally around their Sovereign if he does his patriotic duty - but if he betrays the nation than all hope in him will be lost, and I fear hate, chaos and anarchy will destroy our country.

Gorgo Primus
Mar 29, 2009

We shall forge the most progressive republic ever known to man!



Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouerie

An Open Response to an Open Letter to the people of France posted:

Whom has declared war on whom? Have you seen the budget passed by the radicals in the capital? Taxes on Bretons, and Bretons alone, were tripled from that asked of the rest of France - taxes that as you are all aware are hideously huge as it is. That budget was a declaration of war on the Breton people and the poor across France. Take note of how they fire shots into the masses and call the masses murderers!

They say we horde food. We are starving as you are, the only reason we have any food at all is our proud Nobility have come together to aid the people under our care - that is how monarchy is supposed to work after all! If your nobles are incapable of that you should look to yourselves and ask what the connection is between the mass flight of Nobles and your poverty. The government in the capital has taken your Nobles away and thus your safety net! They have cast you adrift! And they would have you steal from your poor Breton brothers on behalf of the wealthy dirty Bourgeoisie in the capital. You are better than that!

We are not fat and happy in late Brittany; we are angry and hungry! Angry that the Revolution has betrayed us thus, and hungry for bread and justice! Do not join forces with your oppressors to shift the weight of cruelty further upon the Breton nation. Rather you should join with the Bretons in demanding your rights and the rights of your Nobility be respected! Demand to be allowed to grow and keep food for yourselves instead of shipping it off to Paris! Demand to be allowed to keep your wealth from going towards a cruel ethnocidal government intent on destroying your Catholic Church and proud French and Occitan nations!

The Jacobins ask you to rise up. Then rise up! But rise up against them and for yourselves and each other! Rise up for your nations and your Nobles! Rise up and be counted; Take your part in the solution; Linking arm in arm, to arms, to arms!

Vive les combattants! Vive les nations du Royaume de France!

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.




An Open Response to an Open Response to an Open Letter to the People of France

Farmers of France, the Breton would tempt you with his siren's song. But be warned, and look to his words - he speaks of rights for the Occitans, for the Bretons, a return to the sheltering embrace of the nobility. Is that the spirit of 1789? Should France exist at the whim of the aristocracy, surviving off whatever scraps they deign to throw us? No! Should criminals, traitors, and rebels be permitted to walk free? No!

Know this - the Jacobins have forced through a budget that will see more money in your pocket, more seeds in your field, more money on your table, if you will just give it time to work. Would you abandon the gains of the Revolution so quickly? Would you cast away your dignity as proud French men and women to beg at the feet of the nobility? For those in need, emergency supplies will be forthcoming from the nobility, but they will not be a gift to be begged for, but rather a small repayment of the vast riches that you have paid them over the past centuries. Would you side with a rebel, and at the same time raise your wrists for the manacles? Or will you stand tall, proud, free and virtuous, and fight for France?

To side with the Breton is to side against France! The path of the Breton is subservience to aristocracy, is slavery! The path of the Jacobin is the path of a free man. I can make it no clear than that. May you all choose wisely.

Do not forget that you can stop in any Jacobin Club, be it Paris, Lyons, or Marseilles, and you will find a warm meal. While we cannot feed all of France, we can do our best to feed some of it. Would that others would attempt the same.


Legislative Proposals

Amended Emergency Food Act: The people are still starving, and the King's promises fell through. Enough is enough.

City Guard Act: Legalize the Revolutionary Guard. Not all men are capable of serving in the official Armed Forces, but all should have a chance to serve France with martial valor.

Traitors to France Resolution: Officially designate Tuffin as an enemy of the people, and offer a reward for his capture.

Gorgo Primus
Mar 29, 2009

We shall forge the most progressive republic ever known to man!



Charles Armand Tuffin, marquis de la Rouerie

An Open Response to an Open Response to an Open Response to an Open Letter to the people of France posted:

Yes, I speak of Rights! Why should I not? What was the spirit of 1789 sold as if not the spirit of Rights?! Rights for all! Rights for the Bretons! Rights for the Occitans! Rights for the French! Who is this Robespierre to tell me, to tell you, to stop talking of Rights? He is a traitor to his own Revolution! That is the saddest and most bemusing thing in all this. That I, whom he calls a traitor to Revolution, is talking of the Rights of Man - whilst he, whom he fancies the leader of the Revolution, tells me to stay in my place under the boot of Paris! I laugh at these people who aspire to the title of illustrious and humane.

Their budget takes bread from one poor oppressed area, because of their race, and gives it to another poor oppressed area. It is a shell game where no one wins but the Bourgeoisie, and everyone else loses! Would you side with the men who hold your King hostage and rape Brittany, or would you side with us and yourselves in a struggle for the Rights of all men? Think about it!

To side with the radicals of the capital is to side against the peoples and nations of France! The path of the radical republican is subservience to Bourgeoisie, is tyranny! The path I ask you to consider is the path of a free man. You owe it to yourselves to take heed to what I say and what you can see.

Do not forget that you can stop in any Jacobin Club, be it Paris, Lyons, or Marseilles, and you will find nothing but scorn and snide remarks as to the barbarity of your customs, languages, and cultures - nothing but Great Parisian Chauvinism! Meanwhile you can stop in any city or town of Brittany, or Occitania, or even the French territories and see poverty and misery all around. Compare that with the hubs of the Jacobin Club - the hubs of the Bourgeoisie! While the Nobility cannot feed all of France, they feed as much as they can while simultaneously fleeing for their lives from this government that would have them killed! To save yourselves you must save your brothers, and your Nobles!

a bad enough dude
Jun 30, 2007

APPARENTLY NOT A BAD ENOUGH DUDE TO STICK TO ONE THING AT A TIME WHETHER ITS PBPS OR A SHITTY BROWSER GAME THAT I BEG MONEY FOR AND RIPPED FROM TROPICO. ALSO I LET RETARDED UKRANIANS THAT CAN'T PROGRAM AND HAVE 2000 HOURS IN GARRY'S MOD RUN MY SHIT.



Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard

We have no need for another militia, for the National Guard already fills that role. Granting the explicitly radical "Revolutionary Guard" any authority would be a mistake and I call on the Legislative Assembly to reject it.

Instead, I suggest providing the National Guard - which is now an all volunteer force where the members must provide their own weapon and uniform - with funding from the state coffers to increase recruitment and afford better training. The Reinforce the National Guard Act will designate two credits from the current "police" budget to go to this necessary institution.

sniper4625
Sep 26, 2009

It is a foolish man indeed who attacks his fellow man when there are literal crocodile-men eating Virginians.


a bad enough dude posted:

246x250


Marquis de Lafayette, Commander of the National Guard

I call on the King of France to denounce Louis Stanislas Xavier as an enemy of the people. He seeks to wage war on us, ostensibly in the name of the Bourbons, and it must be made clear that his justification is bankrupt and merely a front for the tyrants of Europe to crush French liberty. The people will surely rally around their Sovereign if he does his patriotic duty - but if he betrays the nation than all hope in him will be lost, and I fear hate, chaos and anarchy will destroy our country.



Hear, hear! Citoyen de Lafayette is a true embodiement of Revolutionary ideals, and I agree most wholeheartedly. With regards to your concerns about the Revolutionary Guard, please do not be alarmed by the name - think of it as a neighborhood watch, writ large! While the National Guard is an excellent organization, it is a mainly middle class organization. Should not the poorest be allowed to contribute to the common defense?

To the Traitor Tuffin, and to all of France

The notion that you understand the ideals of 1789 is laughable. You seize upon an unfavorable budget to declare open rebellion, then declare that the people should beg their nobility for the sustenance to live! Is that any way for a man to live? Dependent on the whim of some petty local tyrant? I say, non!

To the people: Read his words. Tuffin speaks again and again of the rights of Bretons, the rights of Occitans. The good people of France are but pawns in his ambitious adventures. Do not be fooled.

Legislative Proposal

The Final Contribution of the Emigre: Seize the possession of all goods, properties and wealth of any emigres, and use it to pay for two things: an expansion of the National Guard, Military and Police, and food for the poor. Any aristocratic emigrant will be allowed to leave, but will forfeit all their possessions.(*Second proviso to be debated)

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