Atatürk

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Atatürk
Ka flag.gif
Established: March 17th, 1982/III
Cunstaval: (vacant, exercised by Crown)
Başbakan: Sevastáin Pinátsch
Senator: Sevastáin Pinátsch
Demonym: Atatürker or Atatürkey
Motto: Ne mutlu Talossalıyım diyene ("What joy to he/she who says ‘I am a Talossan’").
Ka map.png
Location of Atatürk.

Atatürk (pronounced [ɑtɑˈtyɾk]) is a province of Talossa. It is home of the Talossan capital of Abbavilla.

Atatürk Province is the Kingdom of Talossa’s northernmost province. It is bordered to the north by the United States, to the west by the river Manáweg (the Milwaukee River), to the east by the Már Talossán (the Talossan Sea, i.e. Lake Michigan), to the southwest by Benito Province and to the southeast by Vuode province. It is named after the great Turkish leader Mustafa Kemâl Atatürk, a one-time hero of King Robert I and one of the most important historical figures of the twentieth century.

Atatürk's provincial capitol is located at Enderis Hall, adjacent to the Milwaukee-Downer Quad, the cerimonial seat of the Ziu.

History

1980s

On 17 March, 1982, the first expansion of Talossa beyond the borders of Robert I's room happened in present day Atatürk, when two bits of land were annexed: the Downer Woods Natural Area, dubbed "Enver Hoxha State", and "Bare Ass Beach", a strip of lakefront between Edgewood Avenue and Kenwood House that is the present coast of Atatürk, which was called "Kemal Atatürk State". Within a year, a series of further annexations had brought its entire present territory, which is home to 6 Talossan citizens and over 6,000 Cestoûrs, into Talossan hands. The province has undergone several name changes and provincial border shifts; it acquired its present size and shape in July, 1985, except for the section known as the “Talossan Capital Territory” (Abbavilla was the nation’s capital at that time) which returned to Atatürkian control in August, 1991. In February, 1994, the national capital was moved to Electrabase, but it was moved back to Abbavilla with the adoption of the new Organic Law in 1997.

Unfortunately, Atatürk has long been one of Talossa’s least active provinces. Early provincial government was more or less nonexistent until November, 1988, when the Cosâ forced the province to adopt a constitution.

1990s

Dave Kuenn, of Davron fame, ruled Atatürk with an iron hand until he was driven out of office in the elections of 1991, and replaced by the FAD (Front for Atatürk Democracy), which oversaw the ratification of a new constitution and ruled Talossa with its own iron hand. In March, 1994, Kuenn returned to provincial politics, won the election, and again ruled Atatürk with an iron hand, until he was again driven out of office in the summer of 1995. Geoff Toumayan won the next election and assumed the Premiership, but did very little. In the fall of 1996, the provincial government was again reorganised, and for the first time in its history Atatürk got a democratic government: a participatory democracy with no leaders or political parties, where all the province’s citizens saw things done via online “town meetings”. A great idea in theory, but in practice all of those citizens became inactive, leaving Atatürk to flounder and wallow in nothingness while other provinces began to shine forth around it. This was the situation Sir Tomás Gariçéir found when he moved to Atatürk from Cézembre in July, 1998. That summer Secretary of State Ián Anglatzarâ called provincial elections in which Gariçéir became the Senator for Atatürk — by being the only candidate, the only person who voted, and voting for himself! The apathy and inactivity of his fellow Atatürkers began to wear on Gariçéir, who found himself pining for those fine days of yöre when Atatürk was ruled in steel-hard firmness. In the fall of 1998, Gariçéir was seriously considering staging a coup (not difficult to do when you’re the only active citizen) and appropriating Atatürk province as his own personal fantasy fiefdom. Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on your point of view) events outside of Talossa commanded much of his attention for several months, and said coup was never actually executed.

Help did arrive, however, on Wittenberg, the Talossan discussion forum, where it was pointed out that there was a clause in the Organic Law which allowed the Ziu to intervene and impose a military governorship on inactive provinces in order to reactivate them. Ben Madison wasted no time in authoring a bill entitled the “Not-so-hostile Takeover of Atatürk Act”, which invoked that very clause and proposed installing Gariçéir as the Military Governor of the province; the bill was quickly seconded by Gariçéir (who was delighted at the prospect of getting what he wanted, namely Atatürk province for his own personal fantasy fiefdom, without actually having to do anything) and placed on the March Clark. The bill passed, a joyful occasion for all Talossans and especially Gariçéir, who, confident of its success, had spent the hours leading up to the voting deadline mentally polishing his metaphorical Military Governor boots to a pristine shine. Overnight, Atatürk became a hotbed of patriotic Talossan activity as Governadéir Gariçéir assumed his post, labouring into the night to create the province’s first-ever website, before continuing work on his multitude of Talossan-language projects.

In the fall of 1999, Atatürk gained another active citizen in Davïu Foctéir, who immediately became very active in both national and provincial circles. He soon became Gariçéir’s right hand man in provincial affairs.

2000s

In July of 2000, at TalossaFest, Wes Erni was appointed Senator for Atatürk Province, replacing the defunct Mark Franklin, who had taken over as Senator when Gariçéir withdrew from national politics, but then promptly vanished. The year 2000 also saw the ranks of provincial citizenry swell with an influx of new citizens living in Atatürk-assigned territory, including Tanja Kraft, Mike Dinitz, and the ferociously active Martì-Pair Furxheir, who singlehandedly made up for all the other inactive Atatürkers.

Unfortunately, the cresting waves of activity in Atatürk soon came crashing down. In 2001, Foctéir was obliged to retire from public life due to job circumstances beyond his control, though he maintains personal contact with Talossans and attended TalossaFest and the Royal Wedding in August, 2002. Kraft and Dinitz disappeared. This left only Gariçéir and Furxheir as Atatürk’s shining beacons of activity and patriotism, with Furxheir providing the backbone of Talossa’s online existence through hosting Talossa.net, Wittenberg, and Talossa.com on his servers, as well as representing Atatürk in the Senäts, and Gariçéir continuing to devote all his efforts to the furtherance of Talossan language and culture.

In 2006 the addition of new blood started to revive local activity. Bradley Holmes, appointed Cunstaval in August, was active in the Cosa during the 35th, 36th, and 37th Zius. Holmes also served as Senator of Atatürk in the 38th - 47th Zius as well as serving as Minister of Defense during the 39th - 44th Zius.

Inside Atatürk, Holmes refreshed and led the charge in drafting the constitution of Atatürk. He prodded and cajoled his fellow Atatürkeys to review, amend, and finally vote to approve the law. As he was still Cunstaval, he had the distinct pleasure of proclaiming the constitution for the supreme Province of Atatürk on 20 March 2010/XXXI.

2010s

In the June 2015 General Election, held from 15 May 2015/XXXVI to 1 June 2015/XXXVI, Sevastáin Pinátsch was elected Senator, replacing incumbent Brad Holmes. Pinátsch distinguished his era by the regular establishment of a Senator's Office, regular calls for Bill input from constituents, as well as lighthearted posts that reflected his take on Atatürk culture (comedy, music, and beverages, in particular). He is a strong proponent of the ancient philosophy Servant Leadership, which guides his interaction and regard for the people of the province.

Both gentlemen ran again in the December 2016 General Election (15 November 2016/XXXVII to 1 December 2016/XXXVII), with Senator Pinátsch elected to a second term. This term saw one of the strangest examples of inter-provincial lobbying ever seen. A public conflict between two non-Atatürker officials about the colour used to depict the province resulted in The Provincial Depiction Right of Determination Act (RZ7), an oddly specific bit of legislation which Pinátsch opposed and which was later defeated. The Provincial Colour Bill (52AK01), a local bill drafted in response to the national one, became the first bill to be passed in Atatürk for some years, recognizing the official provincial colour as red and designating that #KARED Day be observed annually on the 13th of August.

Pinátsch ran unopposed in the April 2019 General Election. Conducted by the Chancery, the Senatorial election used Instant Runoff Voting and allowed write-in candidates. Pinátsch was elected in round one.

Provincial Laws

40AK01
Constitution of the Glorious Province of Atatürk
52AK01
Provincial Colour Bill
This section requires expansion.
Serve your country and write some more!


See also

External links