Name of Nation: Democratic Confederacy of Hungary Government Type: Democratc-Confederalism/Lib-Soc/An-Com/Consul Communism Military: Hungary's military force is a strictly volunteer force of People's Defense Forces, or militia units within the country. The liberal conditions of service means that the volunteer numbers are often recycled by men and women entering, leaving, or re-entering their local brigades at an organic rate often bringing along their own equipment. Due in part to Hungary's position in Europe they repeatedly became the military, diplomatic, and political front line of the conflicts between east and west. In the initial Third World War NATO and the European Union curried favor and support of the Hungarian Fidesz party under president Viktor Parjda. But over the course of the war Russian influence managed to have the established party unseated in favor of the pro-Russian, far-right Jobbik Party. This political back and forth means that through the course of the conflict the Hungarian military was bolstered with the most up to date German, French, and American weapons to fight what'd later be their own Russian-based equipment. A similar precedent would be undertaken in the great war following when political tensions in the country boiled over and a sudden influx of international brigades into Hungary saw a boom in a diverse range of foreign and increasingly modern weaponry coming into the country in the defense of the uprising, or of the government. All equipment found themselves in the winning regime. Economy: Following after radical anarchist rhetoric, the Hungarian economy is difficult to measure by capitalist measures or seemingly nonexistent. Cash in Hungary is nearly and wholly nonexistent save for the few occasions where the country must deal with groups and nations outside their borders. The money-based economy is dead, and the new worker's union needs-based economy has over taken it. But in the countries sectors, Hungary boasts a robust agricultural sector and a moderately powerful industrial sector geared towards metalurgy and an automotive industry left over when international companies fled the country. Within the Carpathian mountains that form the eastern edge of Hungary metals such as coal, iron ore, copper, chromium, uranium, antimony, mercury, gold are mined as is what hydropower can be pulled from the mountain rivers and streams. Foreign Policy: Like many things, Hungarian foreign policy can be rather decentralized, but the bulk of it is handled through the International Front or through the young International Anarchist Society which often opt to operate with non-governmental organizations though aren't wholly opposed to dealing with national bodies. But any treaty written between either and a foreign power or group has to be approved by 5/7ths of the nation's communes, but even those that do not chose to support can wholly refuse to cooperate with the goals outlined. History: Influenced by Kurdish political philosopher Abdullah Öcalan, the seeds of Anarchist Hungary were sown after the Third World War after the authoritarian abuses of the government and the establishment of a political nobility that came to replace the young political nobility of the Fidesz party after János Áder. With the total upheaval of the country by the political victories of the Jobbik Party and its victories in stealing western Romania spurred an anemic attempt by the socialist and communist parties to overthrow the ultra-nationalists. The move was a failure, and with what seemed to be Russian blessings both parties were effectively destroyed in a series of Russian-backed pogroms against them and EU aficionados. When the fire of war settled the Jobbik Party and its Russian allies had doubled the size of the Hungarian nation and in the inter-war peace years attempted programs of national development. This pushed into formerly agricultural lands that had been family owned and displaced or threatened many rural villages as the Jobbik Party pushed to rebuild Hungary in the model of Eastern European nationalism after Russia. The alienation of the Romanian and Hungarian rural population, now on the fast track to a status of peasantry created rising dissent that found the interest in the left-leaning student populations in Hungary and in liberal nations that came to sympathize with the plight of the Hungarian common man, slowly being displaced by an artificial industrial boom. The subject attracted much attention over the internet, and stoked their own passions. A series of attempted uprisings and protests continually galvanized and radicalized the lower class of Hungary, with each instance of oppressive action further radicalizing more and more of the people. As radicalism grew more international groups took notice and soon it was common to see Catalonian Anarchists marching alongside their Hungarian brothers in solidarity as well as any other far-left group peacefully protesting government policy which never changed, and eventually a strong showing of anti-war when the embers of war began to heat up. While the Hungarian state followed its Russian allies into war its troops never made it to the battlefield as a spontaneous uprising erupted in Hungarian streets and the country quickly became not a front, but a revolution as a proxy war as the Carpathian Basin swelled with support. Both Russian and PMC forces rushed in an attempt to defend their political allies in the nation and radical internal brigades came in the defense of the equally spontaneously aroused Worker's Councils. The first years of the revolution were marked with their own trials and tribulations but like with the Hungarian uprising of 1956 the government forces - and the Russians - were pushed out of Hungary. But unlike the uprising of 1956 the Russians never came back, choosing to concentrate their forces elsewhere to hold or push the front in more vital areas. Since then, revolutionary ultra-democratic government has persisted within the nation. Foes: The Bourgiese Demographics: Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian, Roma Other: Since the Revolution, Hungary has become a safe haven for political radicals seeking to disappear from their oppressive governments or the destination of such radicals to visit to observe the needs based economy at work. The nation functionally doesn't believe in capitalism, but doesn't wholly deny it. Operational capitalism relies in some parts on approval from local consuls and on local rules, private names can not be used to brand the factories, products, or resources manufactured, grown, or mined from the country. And while this may be true, many other regions are much more in line with the self-help philosophy of the consul system and reject capitalism as a corruption. But all over the country, the means of production are strictly owned by the workers, which is made easier and simpler through the advent of automation and computer aided design in the past century. Map: [img]http://img01.deviantart.net/451a/i/2017/025/2/5/hungary_by_aaronmk-dawpswh.png[/img]