User:DeficitSpender/Sandbox1
廣東省, Guǎngdōng Shěng' | |
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Flag of Guangdong TAG = GNG | |
Capital | Kōshu |
Ruling Party | Kanton Minseifu |
Head of State | Suzuki Teiichi |
Sphere | Co-Prosperity Sphere |
Foreign Alignment | Corporate Dependency |
GDP | $21.21B |
Credit Rating | Good |
Market Type | Corporate Oligopoly |
The State of Guangdong is a country located in southern China, occupying the majority of Guangdong province. A puppet state of Japan, Guangdong borders the Republic of China to the north and east, the South China Sea to the south and the Guangxi Clique to the west.
In-Game Description
Carved out of the Republic of China as a concession to the Zaibatsu at the end of the Greater East Asian War, the State of Guangdong is an experiment in corporate colonialism, an unnatural entity existing between its Chinese roots and its Japanese suzerain. Despite its independence, Guangdong is far beneath Japan, China, or even Manchukuo in status - its Chief Executive playing second fiddle to the rest of the Co-Prosperity Sphere, even as the Four Companies of Guangdong greedily exploit Guangdong's land and people for their own benefit.
Guangdong is a country without a nation: a society bound together by wire transfers, banknotes, and share certificates. In the glittering Three Pearls of Guangdong - Honkon, Makao, and Kōshu - the Four Companies and the Chief Executive indulge in boardroom politics as the Japanese expatriates lord over the Cantonese-Japanese Zhujin, who struggle for recognition as second-class citizens. Beneath them all, the Chinese are herded from their ancestral towns into the electronics sweatshops on the Pearl River, a people displaced inside their own homeland. And as Asia awakens, few ask: will Guangdong survive the storm to come?
Country Overview
Carved out from the Republic of China as an independent state by Japanese fiat in the Kanton Protocols of 1950, the State of Guangdong is an experiment unlike any other in history: an artificial nation dedicated solely to corporate colonialism. Where the Empire of Japan's other conquests in Asia - even its most artificial child, the Empire of Manchuria - pay lip service to the Co-Prosperity Sphere's vision of Pan-Asianism, Guangdong stands alone in its devotion to the yen under the whim of its Four Companies - Sony, Matsushita Electric, Fujitsu, and Yasuda. Through a combination of neglect from Tokyo and the reckless ambition of its tycoons, Guangdong has become a place in the Sphere where pretenses fall away in favor of naked greed and the pursuit of profit. But all is not well inside the world's only bastion of unchecked capitalism.
The native Chinese population toils endlessly in the factories of the Three Pearls of Guangdong - Kōshu (Guangzhou), Honkon (Hong Kong), and Makao (Macau) - while receiving none of the benefits accruing to the Japanese industrialists and expatriates that oversee their corporate exclave. Between them, the Zhujin - educated professionals and businessmen, fluent in Japanese but local to Guangdong - both serve and benefit from Guangdong's economic order, a middle class decried as collaborators by the Chinese and seen as useful proxies by the Japanese expatriates. Crime and corruption are widespread, with the Triads and Yakuza vying for control over the web of vice that sprawls across Guangdong's underground, in defiance of an undermanned Guangdong Police Force and an uncaring Kenpeitai garrison. In Guangdong, crime is less an aberration than simply another means of doing business, a reciprocal relationship of favors done and debts owed.
Internationally, Guangdong is afforded the trappings of a country and little else. China - holding fast to its pride - refuses to accord Guangdong's representatives the equal treatment they deserve, while Japan's attention has long since drifted away from its unnatural tributary. Manchukuo - the original pan-Asian experiment - remains the crown jewel of the Sphere, equally condescending towards China's poverty and Guangdong's corporate upstarts alike. Guangdong is a country without a nation, in either spirit or in form. And as Chief Executive Suzuki Teiichi begins his uneasy mission to bring Guangdong and its corporations back into Japan's dominion, the people and tycoons of Guangdong wait, and yearn for a future, a nation, that could yet be theirs.
Politics
Legislative Council
Inside Guangdong's state of corporations, something resembling a democratic Parliament akin to the ones in Japan and Britain exist. Though these seats are not elected, rather they comprise 100 of the most important businessmen in Guangdong. These businessmen are the ones who vote on the ordinances of Guangdong, which dictate policy and the future direction of Guangdong. The businessmen flock to where it is most profitable to be, and their votes and loyalty are traded as currency by the different presidents of the main companies of Guangdong, or are in some cases bought away to change the dynamics of the Council.
The Chief Executive proposes the ordinances of the Legislative Council, and should 50 seats support the ordinance, it will go into effect. The businessmen are not bound loyally to a corporation however. For the ordinances of Guangdong, the usual voting period for it is 30 Days, though exceptions can occur in special cases. An ordinance usually does not survive without changes and might need amendments which will be proposed by other parties to seek out more than 5 amendments. Whenever a bill's vote had been concluded, it will be archived in the ordinance history, and will stay there to document the history of Guangdong's Legislative Council.
Parties and Factions
Name | Ideology | Leaders |
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Guangdong Civil Administration Kanton Minseifu |
Corporate Statism | Suzuki Teiichi |
Legislative Council - Business Faction Rippoukai - Zaikaiha |
Corporatocracy | Matsuzawa Takuji Matsushita Masaharu Ibuka Masaru |
Legislative Council - Civic Faction Rippoukai - Minseiha |
Corporate Paternalism | Morita Akio Li Ka-Shing |
Legislative Council - Central Committee Rippoukai - Chuou Iinkai |
Corporate Statism | Ibuka Masaru Following passage of The Guangdong Future Act |
Legislative Council - Manchuria Faction Rippoukai - Manshūha |
Reform Bureaucracy | Komai Kenichirō |
IJA - Martial Law The Imperial Japanese Army - Martial Law |
Ultramilitarism | Nagano Shigeto |
Gameplay
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Regions of Guangdong
Between the Chinese Mainland and the South China Sea lies Guangdong, an artificial state with an artificial culture and identity. In this hot pot of Chinese and Japanese culture lies the three main ethnic groups, the Chinese, the Zhujin, and the Japanese, who in each state have their own approval of our government. Each of these ethnic groups represent steps in the Cantonese societal ladder, and their support or lack thereof can make or break the finances and stability of the State of Guangdong.
Though it might not seem like in the midst of the bustling cities of the Three Pearls, Guangdong is a major refuge as well for the outcasts and criminals of Japanese and Chinese society, the Chinese Triads and the Japanese Yakuza. Our own Police force is not enough to stop these forces from overrunning our nation and turning it into an opium den, but the ones who help us police these groups are as ferocious and corrupt, if not more so. The Japanese Kenpeitai, who hold ht people obedient through violence and force. The amount a group controls each state and potentially the majority of Guangdong's regions will have major effects on the different demographics support for Guangdong, Chinese and Japanese support for our government and how corrupt or not our society will be.
Three Evils of Guangdong
Even if the Chief Executive sits atop the food chain in Guangdong, there are three things that conspire to throw a wrench in their plan. Two that are outside the Chief Executive's direct control - and one that suffuses everything in Guangdong, formless but undeniably present.
The Empire of Japan - the backer of Guangdong's security and its greatest investor - has expectations that must be met, lest a Chief Executive suffer their disapproval and open himself to attack by jealous peers. And the Republic of China has never had a very high opinion of Guangdong - the 'state' carved out of its southern province - and certainly knows how to make life difficult, both for the Companies and the Chief Executive, if it is so inclined.
And beyond it all, corruption seeps into every crack and crevasse, lock up the gears of government with vice and apathy. Even if some would say such is fate of a nation that worships the yen beyond anything else, nobody enjoys having to deal with corruption - rotting away at souls, cheapening work, and crimping profits.