Sutheran News Section

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Welcome to the Index Page for News in Sutherland!

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SBS: The state-owned broadcasting corporation in Sutherland, SBS aims to be editorially non-partisan and balanced, building on the "reasonable consensus" opinion. Founded in 1929, the corporation began through radio broadcasts, and rapidly moved to television.

 
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100 years: the legacy of Richeism in Sutherland

In 1925, the URLS, and the control of the Richeist Party, both collapsed amid a wave of socioeconomic upheaval. As we approach the Centenary, it's time to reflect on Sutherland's Years of Hate

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Clashes between the provincial police and anti-Richeists against the Richeist Statesguard like the March on Unthank (left) took place amid demise of the Richeist regime (right) in Sutherland

On the twelfth of May, 1925, the first democratic President of Sutherland, Raynard Armstrong, pronounced the "end of terror and victory of good men." The Address on Ravenscar is fondly remembered as the end of possibly the worst chapter of Sutherlander history, however one of the quotes that has remained in public consciousness was to remember what came before far more urgently:
Victory is never final, Richeism is never dead and history is never over. Freedom will fall the day that the last free man forgets whose shoulders he stands on.


What is Richeism?
Richeism can best be defined to the international community as "Sutherlander fascism," but it has relatively distinct principles and foundations not quite replicated anywhere else, especially on the role of the nationstate. While not on an extremely surface-level analysis systemically racist, Richeist parties, politicians and governments advocate for the "Sutheran nationstate," which solely legitimises the role of Gotic-derived Atlish-speaking Sutherans, and deems any other group within the jurisdiction of this nationstate as a threat to its existence. Furthermore, the notion of a "national personal duty," as applied through the persecution of the unemployed and disabled (and by the regime's end, even children who refused or failed to work,) saw widespread conscription, forced labour and anti-trade union laws passed, with the duty of work shown in propaganda as the path to national progress as well as the successful fulfillment of men's societal role as workers and breadwinners in Sutheran richeist society.

Tenets of Richeist thinking include total loyalty to the actions and history of the Sutheran nationstate viewed through a Gotic lens, a strict hierarchical structure delineated on race, gender and ability to provide to the nationstate, and a warped interpretation of the social contract in which the nationstate permits citizens to remain, live and "prosper" within its jurisdiction as well as to be protected from the horrors of land without statehood (likely derived from Early Modern conservative thinking, with 17th century figure Tomas Hensen and his literature on the "nasty and short" lives to be expected without the state being propagated) in exchange for the citizen fulfilling the duties of working, maintaining what the Richeists viewed as optimal social standards (which were, in near-totality, deeply reactionary and antithetic to social liberalism & the idea of universal rights), maintaining public infrastructure and serving the country whenever possible. The failure to commit to these duties was seen as grounds enough to be stripped of citizenship (as was the "failure" to belong to one of the diminishing in-groups of what Richeists deemed as belonging to the Sutheran nationstate), and concentration camps were set up across the country to intern communists, the unemployed and disabled, trade unionists, liberals, Cumbrishfolk and Atineans. In the 1920s, Richeists pursued eugenicist policies in order to "eliminate" disability - which incorporated homosexuality/"transvestitism" at the time, with Richeists viewing the nuclear family as the only acceptable family structure - and increase the capability of the population to fulfill the duties of the Richeist citizen. They also sought to disengage workers from trade unionism, while violently suppressing trade unionist movements as a threat to the nation's security, resulting in the Red Sunday in 1918 when trade unions clashed with Richeist paramilitaries and the police during the wider General Strike of 1918 in protest to falling wages and the return of child labour in some areas.

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(right) Images of Red Sunday in 1918, with demonstrations in cities like Prospect, Barrowland province

Other aspects key to Richeism include the concept of a nostalgic future, which builds on national destiny myths to conflate the endgoal of Richeism (an ethnostate of Gotic settlers acting entirely within their prescribed roles without question and in the national interest) with an idolised version of Sutheran history, as well as the core nature of Amendism to the state, which was viewed as both a hallmark of being a good citizen, evidence of the "workability" for unquestioned faith to unite likeminded communities of Richeist citizens, and a means to the end of both categorising who fell within societal roles, and consolidating the power of all arms of the state. Friction with the Catholic Church of Sutherland, the key denomination for the Atinean people, was such that the Church was formally disassembled and driven into secrecy in 1918 to be replaced with a government-sanctioned Church in the Divinity of Sutheran Catholicism, while practice of Druidism and other Cumbrish folk religions was strictly prohibited. The power of the Amendist Church became such that the Richeist government saw it as a threat and alternative source of faith that distracted from faith in the nationstate, leading to the Night of Greatest Sin in 1925, in which key church leaders were killed en masse and replaced by the Richeist paramilitary wing. The professional army also faced significant persecution in favour of the paramilitary wing of the Richeist Party, who owed more to the Party itself and were more unquestioning in their loyalty to the Richeist nationstate, to the extent that the army faced multiple coups, assassinations and sustained pressure from Godfred Roscow to centralise power and provide loyalty.

Richeists were notable for their relatively opaque stance in favour of corporatism from an early stage, with the Richeist Party benefitting from rigorous (but not total) aristocratic and capitalist support during the crisis years of the 1910s amid the rise of communist, trade unionist and socialist working-class paramilitaries and organisations in the URLS (largely concentrated in industrial Sutherland.) Early Richeists acting within the frameworks of the democracy as it existed prior to the state takeover in the late 1910s campaigned on a promise of stability, both aimed at exploiting the fear of middle-class workers and landowners of communist and trade unionist parties, and the urgency of industrialists and corporations to find an amicable path to protect their capital interests and wealth from seizure. The Richeist state, especially in its early years, was highly corporatist, however disagreements between corporations and the Richeist party, and the declining economic situation in the URLS, led to increased pressure from Richeists to extract profits from corporations. By the mid-1920s, the Richeist state was almost entirely based on pseudo-state-run corporations and extremely laissez-faire working laws, causing a steady and severe decline in living standards nationwide, which exacerbated the social unrest which never truly disappeared from Richeist Sutherland.

The structure of power and government in Richeist Sutherland was distinctly autocratic and centred around a culture of fear and cult of personality around Godfred Roscow, the Richeist party leader. Questioning the legitimacy of the powers of the state, or the way in which it used those powers, was viewed as no less than treason; while Roscow tolerated a minimal level of controlled opposition both within his party and arms of government, and outside his party with the tolerance of the hardline conservative nativist National Sutheran People's Party (LSFP) remaining in the legislature, these sources of opposition were either driven into silence, amalgamated into the party on the provision that they remained in total loyalty to Roscow and his structure of power, or persecuted vigorously. The structure of the aristocracy initially afforded Roscow, himself a member of the landed noble family of the same surname, a level of pragmatic support, however his tolerance to the autonomy of aristocrats fell as his regime continued and as his paranoia grew.

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(left) A photo from Redcar, Eskland, at the height of the Richeist regime in 1922

By the time that the regime began to fell, it had already been significantly hollowed out by the effects of disillusionment, the drastically shrunk base of support, socioeconomic turmoil, increasing tolerance of "societal wrongs" by increasingly autonomous police forces and provinces who wrestled power away from the state, whose military arms were either degraded and demoralised (as in the professional army) or unprofessional and easily corruptible (as in the paramilitary wing.) The Richeists tolerated largely involuntarily, with much harm to their egos, the secession of Lyvenntia in hoping that the core Sutheran nation would have its support shored up, however the chaos created by the drastic reduction of tax intake by the state, the support quickly consolidated from Lyvenntia for anti-government forces and the increasingly transparent view that the Richeist government was little more than a paper tiger with limited and inconsistent jurisdiction all resulted in the total collapse of Richeist control throughout the first half of 1925.

The treatment of Richeist government officials, many of whom remained in the state either out of faith to its continuity or fear that Roscow would have them killed, was variably brutal, while the level of loyalty of police organisations, remaining governmental structures in the provinces waned unevenly over the successive weeks and months, with the wearied Statesguard often having to be utilised in lieu of the unprofessional paramilitary wing to quell anti-Richeist protests, which were sometimes supported and sometimes suppressed by local police forces. The leader of the paramilitary wing responsible for the persecution of minorities and the disadvantaged defected from the Richeist regime by entering the socialist stronghold of Threlkeld in mid-south Sutherland unarmed on 18 March, 1925, in the hopes of negotiating his freedom and amnesty, however was shot on sight by four different men within the space of a few seconds at around 7pm. Roscow's second-in-command, Edrick Oldhamstow, was sighted by a hunter in the boreal forests of Westmorland on 31 March after attempting to escape, however was shot in the leg, and tortured over the process of two weeks by a rural landowner before being disposed of in the River Eame and sighted in mid-April. Roscow's private secretary was initially granted amnesty by a workers' council in Whitton upon defection on 28 April, however was discovered to be a key conspirator in the persecution of Cumberland in the wider Farlam Trials in the autumn of 1925, and sentenced to death. Roscow himself disappeared for four months, until he was found by the underground organisation Foryield in rural Beira under a pseudonym, and brought before the Farlam Trials.

The legacy of Richeism
(right) Image of the Restane, in the central district of the capital of Sutherland, Eamont
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While comprehensive, our memory of Richeism has faded from living memory completely now that the oldest person alive in Sutherland today was merely 17 when Roscow finally slumped out of power. Nevertheless, with the cordon sanitaire against the far-right still in place, anti-fascist iconography and communitarian values still sacrosanct in Sutherland, as well as a militant democratic structure that proscribes anti-democratic and neo-Richeist parties and media routinely, there do seem to have been lessons learnt from the darkest days of Sutherland's history. Similarly, the Constitution (in conjunction with one of the world's most activist judicial systems) and setup of the Presidency, provinces and Government all aim overtly to prevent a singular party and singular strongman from seizing power unilaterally.

Remembrance Day is still held every 14 January, to commemorate the persecution of Cumberland in particular, but also all marginalised groups at the time.

With O100 Day approaching for 12 May next year, preparations are already underway for commemorating the centenary of the end of Sutherland's darkest hour, and the start of possibly its brightest. Yet, with ongoing problems with trust in the police and inertia in states' power reforms, as well as wider inequities associated with liberal capitalism, and the continued presence of the far-right on the fringes of Sutherlander politics, it would be far too sweeping to suggest that Richeism is defeated quite so confidently.

History is never over.

Quotes on Richeism

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The next Richeist, as with the last, will run as a man of the down-trodden people in the pockets of those whose boots have crushed them, with the sole goal of controlling who the boot falls on. -
John Blake Smith, Labour leader 2020-present​
Richeism is state and corporate power in tandem. The businessman and the statesman have one cause, the furthering of the Sutheran nation within and without, and deviation is folly. - Godfred Roscow, Richeist President of the URLS and later Sutherland​
Richeism is putting the state above all that is wrong, and all that is right too. Just as unity of faith in religion is theocracy, unity of faith in the nationstate is Richeism. - Thorborn Aldredsson, Professor of the Loreshall of Whitton​
Richeism is aristocracy not afraid to be caught redhanded. - Alma Hepburn, Civic Democratic Union (VDA) leader 1966-1977​
The love of power and police is the elixir that Richeism feeds on. - Raynard Armstrong, President of Sutherland 1925-1937​
The Cumbrishfolk are not deemed man by a Richeist, but beast who stands between his beloved state and its destiny as an ethnostate. We were the forest that was burnt to the ground, and far too many of our ashes were long gone and forgotten in the wind by the time democracy prevailed. - Morwen Gryffydd, Premier of Cumberland 2006-2015​
Neo-Richeists often claim that they are not racist but nationalist, but in the same breath state that the Sutheran nation is one race. Richeism, as with all far-right ideologies, have only the willingness to not believe their own words above their horrific love for ethnostatehood. - Freda Seddon, President of Sutherland 1961-1967​
The most dangerous thing to a Richeist is to be deprived their belonging to a state. They believe both that the state deserves the right to strip personhood, but has a duty to preserve THEIR personhood - the tragic unreciprocated love of a Richeist to a nationstate that has moved on from his hatred is the sweetest victory. - Eddard Falwick, Foreign Minister 1984-1989​
 
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Over 150 leading public figures come out against Sutherland Day celebrations

"Our collective identity is forged through our common struggle for democracy and far better represented by Syeday," says the letter to the Chancellor

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Onlookers watch Sutherland Day fireworks on 31 January, 2017, in Calablanca (NOV, left) and Ljouwert (ULM, right)

The creation of the nation of Sutherland has long been a subject of controversy. However, as the atmosphere trends towards an increasingly frought debate with each passing year, this year's Sutherland Day celebrations - set to be held on the final day of January across the country - have become the target of a campaign to "ground Sutherlanders' understanding in the true history of our nation."

Signed by 157 public figures - including 16 AMs*, writers, comedians, actors, environmentalists, the leader of the Greens (Catrin Talbot), and two Premiers - the petition has dubbed Sutherland's approach to its national history "totally revisionist."

"Sutherland Day represents the day that the final Cambrian nation-state was extinguished, no less and no more, in 1711. While this is clearly a momentous day in Sutherland's history, presenting it as a day of universal celebration is deeply problematic, and a part of a wider issue with how we represent our own history."
"There remain millions of Cambrians who are expected to simply hail and celebrate the moment that their culture was deprived of its nationhood. Only on the day that Sutherland represents all of its citizens, rather than just the plurality of Atlish-speaking, Gotic-derived bylanders* who benefitted directly from the amalgamation of Camwall into Sutherlander provinces centuries ago. The date is a total irrelevancy to the many who derive entirely or primarily from folks who made the courageous decision to come halfway across the world to our beacon of opportunity, and for that reason, we believe that our collective identity is forged through our common struggle for democracy and far better represented by Syeday*, the 100th instance of which will be celebrated next year. Alternative suggestions are numerous, and almost all share the common factor that they do not disgrace an entire breadth of civilisations that lasted a year to every season that Sutherland has."
The Greens' statement alongside the declaration declared governments of all hues "complicit" in the "erasure" of Cambrian history and influence on Sutherlander society and culture, and that Sutherland Day being marked on 31 January was a core example of this. Meanwhile, the VDA has openly criticised the petition for "rewriting history," and its leader Márcia Teixeira has called for Sutherlanders to "ignore the fuss" and "feel as much joy as you want about our national day when [31 January] comes, nobody can stop you."

Alternatives?
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The letter acknowledged that there are a number of "alternatives" - but did not go into much detail over what those alternatives may be.

However, a number of the petition's co-signers have elaborated, helpfully.

Liberal backbencher* AM, and former Underreeve for Sutheran Heritage in the Redery for the Homeland, Rudyerd Þewles posted on Sutheran social media forum Kwyk* (as on right) that either 3 March (Lyde) or 12 May would be suitable replacements, while the 12 May suggestion has been parroted by a number of other signers to this petition.

3 March would commemorate the success of the Sutheran Spring in 1829, where a mixture of poor socioeconomic conditions, a poor harvest, a harsh winter and anger over conservative reversals of franchise expansion & trade union legalisation all led to a "flash" uprising over the course of several days, after which the framework of the original Kingdom of Sutherland finally fell apart. As Þewles alluded to, this marked a key point for Sutheran democratisation - the franchise was expanded by Law 143/1829 ("Polling Law 1829"), to include any man over 25 who paid a "non-token" amount of taxation per year, amongst other key acts at the time (including the abolition of child labour.)

Nevertheless, arguably more have pointed towards the more recent downfall of the Richeists in 1925 as an example of a national historic moment - which would put Sutherland Day on 12 May, the date on which the rebels to the Roscow regime pronounced their victory in Eamont. Currently known as Syeday (or Victory Day in Mercanti), this would celebrate the downfall of Sutherland's last autocrat and the end to Richeism in Sutherlander history, as well as the resumption of its democracy at a time when it looked far more resemblant of what we would today recognise as a full democracy - after all, few in the modern era would recognise a state where you had to pay tax, be born male and be over the age of 25 as a full democracy.

A few other suggestions have been mooted, including the 8 Arraliðe (roughly 8 July) date which is possibly the date that the first Gotic Longshipmen* landed in the Sound of Sutherland* to settle in the year 888AE*. Sutherland's first "King", or "kynung" as it was then known, is documented as having arrived on the south coast of the island of Kirsey in modern-day Helsing province on that day in the Saga of the Sutherlands (whilst not universally accepted, this is deemed the most likely date for his arrival by the modern consensus.)

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The future of Sutherland Day


(left) Chancellor Allister Ramsay (Liberal), speaking at the Loreshall of Hartburn (FKL) last year

Despite this recent upswell of discussion over the future of Sutherland Day, there appears to be no change of direction amongst the government. The general public are relatively ambivalent, at most, to these talks; roughly half do not know whether Sutherland Day should be moved to another day, and the remainder are split nearly down the middle (53-47 for moving it, according to ÞusHus*.)

Allister Ramsay, Sutherland's Chancellor and Liberal party leader, has not directly responded to the topic recently - this contrasts heavily with the VDA's loud counter to the petition and likely reflects his balancing act between his Liberal supporters and members (many of whom are deeply sympathetic to this idea) and his coalition (many of whom, especially the VDA* and left-conservative CDP*) . However, in 2020, he hailed the union that Sutherland Day commemorates the formation of as "a true day of unity, frelsdom* where we can all gather together to welcome a new year for Sutherland as a nation and as a people." The Free Reform Party* have stated that while they "understand concerns over its origin," that they "fundamentally cannot agree" with moving Sutherland Day from its present date.

The only government party, therefore, with leadership-level sympathy towards moving Sutherland Day from 31 January are the Moderates, whose leader Mary Cooper has used social media to voice support for the petition. Cooper further told SBS News that she "fully supports" the petition, and that she "aims to have a Sutherland whose holidays represent every Sutherlander, no matter who they are, what their mother tongue is or where they hail from."

Labour's* leader, Blake Sagan, has tentatively supported the petition as the largest Againsthood* party. In a press conference in Halfpenny, Sagan told reporters that he "would push for an open discussion over the future of Sutherland Day," while criticising the government for "somehow managing to be both disunited, and totally unreceptive, on the matter." With Labour leading the polls by a substantial margin as of 12 January, 2025, their voice may end up being the prevailing one should they form government after this year's elections.

It remains unclear whether Sutherland Day will move or stay, but the ice has been thoroughly shattered on the conversation.

AM - (A)lmoots(m)en, members of Sutherland's unicameral elected legislature, the Almoot
Bylanders - lit. "people from the peninsula," Byland represents the core of Sutherland in the southern two-thirds of the country's mainland
Syeday - lit. "Victory Day," the date on which Godfred Roscow surrendered, see more in the Alternatives? section of the article
Backbencher - an AM who isn't in a Redery role (frontbench) or þyngbord role (midbench) at present
Kwyk - a social media forum set up in the Flint Valley of Ulmere, a core tech hub of Sutherland that speaks Ulmeran
Longshipmen - the name given to Sutherlander (and other Gotic, by derivation) Vikings, after their longships
AE - Anward Eld
ÞusHus - A polling agency, coupled with a think tank and organisation campaigning for "open, representative democracy"
VDA - Civic Democratic Union, a right-of-centre Messianist Democrat party that is the second party in the Ramsay government, led by Underchancellor Márcia Teixeira
CDP - Courantist Democratic Party, a left-conservative party with social conservative, Courantist views and heartlands in Rosalia and West Beira who are in the Ramsay government
Frelsdom - an Atlish word roughly translation to "freedom/celebration/peace"
Free Reform Party - a right-wing liberal, or classical liberal/libertarian, party which is in the Ramsay government
Againsthood - Opposition
Labour (PSA) - a left-wing trade unionist, democratic socialist party which is the largest in the Almoot, but is not in government, and forms the Againsthood
 
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