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Monday, June 21, 2010

Secretary of State Iustì Canun calls for bills for the 2nd Clark, 41st Cosa

Secretary of State Iustì Canun has called for legislators to submit bills for the 2nd Clark of this Cosa, now that the no-business month has ended.

You want it in, post it here.

Name of Act AND final draft, please.

Monday, June 7, 2010

MiniStuff Announcement

Announcement from the Ministry of Stuff

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The Ministry of Stuff hereby (and happily) delegates the role of TalossaWest Coordinator to Senator Brad Holmes.

Thank you, Brad, for giving me one less thing to do!

Dréu Gavártgic'h
Minister of Stuff

Appointment of the Secretary of State

Article IX: The Secretary of State, the Hopper, and the Clark
Section 1. The Seneschál shall appoint a Secretary of State to an indefinite term.
Today, I am given both a burden and a pleasure.

My burden is that I must fill the post of Secretary of State.  There is scarcely a weightier responsibility in the Kingdom.  The Secretary of State must be swift in action, cautious in judgment, keen of eye, learned in law.  He runs our elections and is pivotal in the creation of our governing apparatus.  And the people who have risen to that challenge - well, they are inevitably among the best our nation has to offer.  The Secretary of State has been the founder of Talossa, Robert I, as well as the architect of principled opposition to his tyranny, Sir Fritz.  And need the name of Woolley even be mentioned?

But despite this burden, I also have a pleasure in it.  It is indeed good to be able to say that we have another person equal to the challenge, and I know him.

It is my distinct joy to appoint the Right Honourable Iustì Carlüs Canun, speaker of the tongue and my invaluable Distain, to the position of Secretary of State.  You all know S:reu Canun, who serves as Senator for Maricopa and laboured as Seneschal last term to good effect.  I have no doubt he will prove measured to this challenge as well, and I ask him to serve his country in this new capacity.

Alexander Davis
Seneschal del Regipäts Talossan

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Seneschal's Remarks on the Resignation of Secretary of State Mick Preston

Mick Preston is an amazing man, and has been a great Secretary of State. I am proud to call him an exemplary statesperson, a fine Talossan, and my good friend.

Being Secretary of State is one of the most demanding jobs in our great nation. Rather than the periodic bursts of activity that so frequently flash in Talossa, burning fiercely before guttering out like a snuffed star, the job of Secretary of State requires continuous diligence and long devotion. While each house of the Ziu has its own ceremonial leader, it is the Secretary of State in many cases who runs both chambers, working to make the efforts of our legislators into a workable reality. He is given discretion to decide what is unworkable and inorganic, and carries through the voting on each bill, each month. He sorts through confusing or confused votes. And our national elections are one of the biggest burdens a statesperson can shoulder.

On behalf of a grateful nation, I would like to thank Mick Preston for his years of service to the crown and his country. S:reu Preston has been scrupulously just and cautious in fulfilling his duty. Always careful to examine a piece of legislation, ferreting out those items that he could not accept or that came to him unready to be considered, he nonetheless stinted no bill in his treatment, regardless of his personal opinion. And in collecting votes and tabulating them, he was swift and capable. S:reu Preston says truly that he has stood on the shoulders of giants, but I think it is no exaggeration to say that future Secretary of States will sigh to themselves and say, "That Preston leaves some big shoes to fill."


Alexander Davis
Seneschal del Regipäts Talossan

Friday, June 4, 2010

Culture Moment: Our Berber Heritage



“[T]he Talossan people are inexplicably and inextricably connected somehow to Berbers,” reads Talossan law (RC37, “The You Are What You Talk About, and You Talk About Berbers Act”).  And inexplicably and inextricably, it’s true. While it was once simply a blatant attempt at mythmaking by Robert I, in an attempt to distinguish Talossan history from that of the United States of America, it can’t be denied that most Talossans think the Berber people – a light-skinned North African group – are interesting and cool. And in Talossa, that’s how traditions become fact.

As the old Talossan proverb says, "It is highly possible, and therefore true."

Thus, in some mysterious sense, the ancient Berber tribes are the ancestors of the modern Talossan people, and every Talossan should study them in at least some small way to understand an ancient heritage.

The ancient Berber people occupied much of North Africa, and their direct descendents populate much of the countries of Morocco and Algeria. They spoke the Berber language, written with a variety of alphabets over the years. As a predominantly coastal people they absorbed much of the influences of seafarers such as the Phoenicians and Greeks. They were especially prominent in history at such times as the Second Punic War of the third century B.C., when their powerful cavalry performed outstandingly well when allied with Carthage against Rome, and during the Islamization and empire building in Africa the seventh to tenth centuries A.D. that set up powerful Berber caliphates.

Importantly for Talossa, the Berbers were also great travelers. It is widely believed by historians that they had cultural and genetic influence upon most of the peoples of Europe until well into the Renaissance. And because Talossa is located in an area settled predominantly by European peoples, this means that there is at least one verifiable link between Berbers and Talossa.

While this might be a solid connection, rather bolder and more tenuous was Robert I’s further claim in his 1996 The Berber Project (which you can read in its entirety here) that the Berber people later became the Beaker people of ancient Europe, and then navigated the Atlantic Ocean five thousand years ago, populating North America and transforming into the indigenous Mound-Builders of the Talossan area. He argued that “around 3000 B.C., North America was indeed treated to a large and substantial wave of Berber immigrants who brought their culture with them when they settled around the copper mines of Lake Superior and northern Wisconsin.”

Robert I also pointed out that “Talossa” resembles the word “talayot,” the ancient Beaker civilization’s name for their hutlike dwellings. Robert I claimed that this connection was evidence for a link between the ancient Beaker culture and Talossa. He also listed a whole host of indigenous North American words that sound similar to either “Talossa” or “talayot” (“tuy,” “talo,” “tell”) and indicated that this was also strong evidence for substantial Berber influence.

If you want to find out more about the Berber people, you can listen to the British Broadcasting Company's radio program, "The Berbers of North Africa," or visit your local library.


Mick Preston is an amazing man, and has been a great Secretary of State.  I am proud to call him an exemplary statesperson, a fine Talossan, and my good friend.

Being Secretary of State is one of the most demanding jobs in our great nation.   Rather than the periodic bursts of activity that so frequently flash in Talossa, burning fiercely before guttering out like a snuffed star, the job of Secretary of State requires continuous diligence and long devotion.  While each house of the Ziu has its own ceremonial leader, it is the Secretary of State in many cases who runs both chambers, working to make the efforts of our legislators into a workable reality.  He is given discretion to decide what is unworkable and inorganic, and carries through the voting on each bill, each month.  He sorts through confusing or confused votes.  And our national elections are one of the biggest burdens a statesperson can shoulder.

On behalf of a grateful nation, I would like to thank Mick Preston for his years of service to the crown and his country.  S:reu Preston has been scrupulously just and cautious in fulfilling his duty.  Always careful to examine a piece of legislation, ferreting out those items that he could not accept or that came to him unready to be considered, he nonetheless stinted no bill in his treatment, regardless of his personal opinion.  And in collecting votes and tabulating them, he was swift and capable.   S:reu Preston says truly that he has stood on the shoulders of giants, but I think it is no exaggeration to say that future Secretary of States will sigh to themselves and say, "That Preston leaves some big shoes to fill."

Alexander Davis
Seneschal del Regipäts Talossan

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Notiçieir dal Regipäts Talossan

Notiçieir dal Regipäts Talossan




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Your hardworking government has set up yet another way for you to keep updated about Talossa. While Wittenberg is certainly invaluable, all too often the appearance is that our internet message board is the whole of our community. This is not just sad, it is blatantly false. To help forestall this illusion, the Government has created a brand new blog (supplanting previous iterations) to keep Talossans updated on the workings of their government.

You can read the brand new here, or if you have an RSS reader like Google Reader you can subscribe to the feed here.


Alexander Davis
Seneschal del Regipäts Talossan

Seneschal's Address to the Nation 6/2/10

Citizens:

Much hubbub has been raised recently over the status of micronations - the Republic in particular. There was a tense moment where a Senator stood ready to defy the law, and a sad moment as a provincial leader departed in recognition of the law. These were combined with an impassioned jeremiad delivered by a former citizen of this nation, imploring for an end to this government's obstructionism when it comes to the Republic.

Most of us have followed the ongoing debate and discussions precipitated by these events. Immediately, I took action as Seneschal, submitting an amendment to our Organic Law that would make it easier and less humbling to rejoin Talossa after an absence, while also calling for the elimination of the abhorrent "Schiva Doctrine" of the Republic that stands starkly in any path to their repatriation. In another quarter, we are debating the very nature and virtue of the long-standing Semi-Permeable Wall that separates Talossa from micronations. And in another, the possibility of pledging allegiance both to his Majesty and Talossa as well as to the Republic is being examined.

I would like at this time to especially urge our legislature to vote against the "First Matchstick Act," currently under consideration. Regardless of the status of the Semi-Permeable Wall Act, we should not at this time make special exception to permit our citizens to join a group that lays claim to the whole of our own territory and who specifically denounce our King and our laws. Such attitudes and stances are incompatible with any whitelist as it stands, although they may work within some future of the law.

These are all good and worthy questions, and I am glad to participate in them. But let us remember some things.

Here in Talossa, we have a thriving language. A new blog was recently launched to report on Talossan news - check it out - and an amazing course is finishing at our university, courtesy of Lord Hooligan. The Government has planned (and is already carrying out!) a vast number of activities and initiatives, available for citizens to keep track of here. Our political debates, current ones included, run for pages of detailed and erudite discussion. We have published books on our language, still available for the asking. We have a vibrant and thriving College of Arms, which allows our citizenry - all of whom are considered noble - to craft a set of symbols for themselves to touch on ancient tradition. Our provinces are truly taking off when it comes to activity, with several of them deeply enthralled by working out their paths to the future and amending their governing laws.

We are a rich and busy nation, and all of these things are important. Remember them and remember our worth, as we engage in these weighty debates. We flourish year-round with many varied opportunities to be Talossan, rather than sinking into sullen silence most of the time - as could easily be the case in a less potent people.

Long live the King, and long live Talossa!


Alexander Davis
Seneschal del Regipäts Talossan