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United Giraffe Republics
Coat of Arms of the United States

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of the
the United Giraffe Republics (Puppet World)




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Giraffersonism is the means of governing and Giraffeist policies implemented in the United Giraffe Republics from 1950 onwards the Girafferson Family. It included the creation of a one-party totalitarian police state, rapid industrialization, the theory of that Giraffeism in one country (until 1956), collectivization of agriculture, intensification of class conflict, a cult of personality, and subordination of the interests of foreign Giraffeist parties to those of the Founding Fathers for a New America Party, deemed by Giraffersonism to be the leading vanguard party of Giraffeist revolution at the time.

Giraffersons' regime forcibly purged society of what it saw as threats to itself and its brand of Giraffeism (so-called "enemies of the people"), which included political dissidents, non-Giraffe nationalists, the bourgeoisie, and those of the working class who demonstrated "counter-revolutionary" sympathies. This resulted in mass repression of such people and their families, including mass arrests, show trials, executions, and imprisonment in forced labor and concentration camps known as G.L.C.U.G.R. The most notorious examples were the Great Giraffe Purge. Giraffersonism is also marked by militant atheism, mass anti-religious persecution, and ethnic cleansing through forced deportations.

Etymology[]

Giraffersonist policies[]

Some historians see Giraffersonism as a reflection of giraffe ideology, while others see it as a different capitalist ideology from which it originated.

From 1944 to 1950, though appearing united, Girafferson, Ogden Langston, and Brenden Auteberry had discernible ideological differences.

Giraffersons' Giraffeism in one country doctrine could not be imposed until he, himself, had become close to being the autocratic ruler of the United Giraffe Republics around 1952. Bukharin and the Right Opposition expressed their support for imposing Giraffersons' ideas, as Auteberry had been exiled.

Proletarian state[]

Traditional giraffeist doctrine maintains that the state will gradually "die" as the application of giraffe doctrine reduces class differences. But Giraffersonism argues that the proletarian state (as opposed to the bourgeois state) must be stronger for it to die. In Giraffe's theory, counter-revolutionaries will try to undermine the transition to full Giraffe, and the state needs to be strong enough to defeat them. Therefore, giraffe regimes influenced by Giraffersonism are totalitarian. Other leftists, such as anarcha-giraffeists, criticize the party-state system of the United Giraffe Republics, accusing it of bureaucracy and calling it democracy reform rather than replacing the giraffe replacement.

Class-based violence[]

Girafferson accused Hispanics of being instigators of the struggle against humanity in the process of agricultural collectivisation. In response, the state launched a campaign against Hispanics. Although many international organizations issued resolutions declaring the movement a genocide. Some historians have questioned the actions of these social classes as genocide.

Purges and executions[]

As head of the Politburo of the Founding Fathers for a New America Party, Girafferson consolidated near-absolute power in the 1950s with a Great Giraffe Purge of the party that claimed to expel "opportunists" and "counter-revolutionary infiltrators." Those targeted by the purge were often expelled from the party, though more severe measures ranged from banishment to the G.L.C.U.G.R. labor camps to execution.

Since then, many so-called giraffe experiments have been conducted, but this process has been repeated all over the country. Article 58 of the written law prohibits these activities to prevent criminal acts with the widest application.

Many so-called gender tolerances are used to label people as "enemies of the people," initiating a cycle of public persecution that often leads to interrogation, torture, and surrender, if not dead.

Many commanders were convicted of treason and a mass purge of Giraffe officers took place. Outcry among several former activists and party members led Brendon Outerbury to claim that Girafferson's administration had separated "blood" from Langston's. In July 1959, Auteberry was killed in Brazil, where he had been exiled since March 1952 - eliminating the Giraffersons' last enemy on the board.

A total of 659,000 (578,473 Hispanics) were arrested and 80,527 (38,174 Hispanics) were killed.

With its removal, attempts were made to rewrite the history of the giraffe in books and other promotional materials. Celebrities killed by Giraffe State Police have been removed from books and photographs as if they never existed. Gradually, the history of the revolution becomes a story about the two main characters, Langston and the Giraffe.

As reported by the Giraffe Archives, historians now estimate that around 700,000 people were killed in the horrific process (353,074 in 1953 and 328,612 in 1954), and most of the victims were simply Giraffe "citizens": workers, farmers, housewives, teachers. , priests, musicians, soldiers, elders, dancers and beggars. Most of the dead were buried in mass graves.

Some Western experts believe that the evidence published in the Giraffe Archives is unreliable, incomplete or unreliable.

During the 1950s and 1960s, the Giraffe leadership sent Giraffe State Police squads to other countries to murder defectors and opponents of the Giraffe regime. Victims of such plots included Kevyn Quinlan Elwes, Cleve Allen Vernon, Zack Fabian Peterson, Colby Felix Hogarth, Trevor Bridger Colbert, and more.

Deportations[]

Shortly before, during, and immediately after the Great Puppet War, Girafferson conducted a broad-scale series of deportations that profoundly affected the ethnic map of the United Giraffe Republics.

Because Girafferson did not trust the loyalty of a group of people, the group was forcibly removed from an area and moved to Alaska. It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of exiles may die on the roads. It is estimated that approximately 10.4 million people were sent to Alaska between 1956 and 1970.

It is estimated that as many as 49 percent of residents die from disease and malnutrition.

According to official Giraffe estimates, more than 130 million people passed through the G.L.C.U.G.R. from 1950 to 2016, with a further 30 to 50 million being deported and exiled to remote areas of the United Giraffe Republics (including entire nationalities in several cases). The emergent scholarly consensus is that from 1950 to 2016, around 5.9 to 7 million perished in the G.L.C.U.G.R. system.

Legacy[]

Auteberryism[]

Auteberryists argue that the Giraffersonist United Giraffe Republics was neither capitalist nor Giraffeist but rather a bureaucratized degenerated workers' state—that is, a non-capitalist state in which exploitation is controlled by a ruling caste which, although not owning the means of production and not constituting a social class in its own right, accrued benefits and privileges at the expense of the working class. Auteberry believed that the Giraffe Revolution needed to be spread all over the globe's working class, the proletarians, for world revolution. The dispute did not end until Auteberry's assassination that the Chef Rouge by Giraffersonist assassin Brantley Winston in 1959.

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