Chlouvānem/Lexicon: Difference between revisions

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===Ideologies in the Chlouvānem Inquisition===
===Ideologies in the Chlouvānem Inquisition===
* ''nāɂahilūṃlija'' — Nāɂahilūmism (modern Yunyalīlti fundamentalism)
* ''nāɂahilūṃlija'' — Nāɂahilūmism (modern Yunyalīlti fundamentalism)
* ''opaṣāṃrædani'' — traditionalism
* ''opaṣāṃrātra'' — traditionalism
* ''yaivcārṇædani'' — communism
* ''bisnašmālginātra'' – deregulationism
* ''ęriṇātra'' — permissionism
* ''kaulerjinātra'' – mercantilism
* ''yaivcārṇātra'' — communism


The main split in the Chlouvānem political spectrum is between traditionalists (''opaṣāṃrædǣnai'', sg. ''-ǣnah'') and Nāɂahilūmists (''nāɂahilūṃlejīn'', sg. and pl.). Trying to define them in a left-right spectrum, they are both right-wing authoritarian but strongly left-wing economically: their main differences are on the role the Inquisition should have towards other nations. Actually, Nāɂahilūmists are more traditionalists than modern-day Traditionalists are. Traditionalists are advocates of some degree of "peaceful coexistence", thinking that the ultimate fate of all societies is to reach a Yunyalīlti-acceptable way of life, and thus advocate a peacefully cooperative, even if protectionist, foreign policy. Nāɂahilūmists, on the other hand, think that Chlouvānem people, having been "chosen" as bringers of the message of nature through the birth among them of the Chlamiṣvatrā, must intervene globally in order to spread the Yunyalīlti faith at any cost, because heresy would destroy everything otherwise. Economically, Nāɂahilūmists support a much higher degree of state control and economic planning than traditionalists do.
There are various main political currents in the contemporary Chlouvānem Inquisition, which do not easily fit in our left-right political spectrum, as they would mostly be described as (to various degrees, with exceptions) right-wing authoritarian but left-wing economically; it is also to be noted that the full scope of these political factions is at the national level, where only Inquisitors, not directly elected by the people, represent the country.<br/>The two main factions among Inquisitors are Traditionalists (''opaṣāṃrātryaus'', sg. ''-yūs'') and Nāɂahilūmists (''nāɂahilūṃlejīn'', sg. and pl.), with some less numerous recognized ones like Permissionists (''ęriṇātryaus'', sg. ''-yūs''), the minoritarian Mercantilists (''kaulerjinātryaus'', sg. ''-yūs'') and the fringe Deregulationists (''bisnašmālginātryaus'', sg. ''-yūs'').


Communism is the main Western political ideology supported by both Traditionalists and Nāɂahilūmists for foreign, non-Yunyalīlti majority, countries, particularly the form called "Yunyalīlti communism" which is derived mainly by Yunyalīlti religious theory with influence from Western Communism. It was the general state ideology in the former Kaiṣamā and, to a lesser extent, still is in the Eastern bloc (even though countries such as most of Greater Skyrdagor are not communist). However, the Inquisition itself is not usually considered a communist country, due to the prevalence of the religious drive and to the presence of some markedly non-communist elements, such as, for example, the existence of sixteen actual kingdoms (even if with mostly ceremonial power only), a third of whose elective, scattered in a few Western and Southern dioceses - they had all been deposed by Great Inquisitor Nāɂahilūma and were only restored after the end of the Kaiṣamā.
The two main factions differ mainly on the stance that the Inquisition should take towards other countries, with Nāɂahilūmists being close to being Yunyalīlti fundamentalists (in a certain way, more traditionalists than Traditionalists), with the fundamental ideological belief being that Chlouvānem people have been "chosen" as the bringers of the "message of nature" through the birth among them of the Chlamiṣvatrā, and therefore must intervene globally in order to spread the Yunyalīlti faith at any cost, to affirm the supremacy of the faith over heretics. Traditionalists, the majoritary ideology since the Kaiṣamā era, on the other hand, advocate some degree of "peaceful coexistence", but maintaining that reaching a Yunyalīlti-acceptable way of life, even if not explicitely following the Yunyalīlta, is the ultimate fate of all human societies: the Traditionalist foreign policy is peacefully cooperative (for Chlouvānem standards), even if protectionist. Nāɂahilūmism supports a stronger degree of state control and economic planning than Traditionalism does, which puts Traditionalism in the place of being the centralmost and least radical political faction in the Inquisition.
 
The economical ideology supported by both Traditionalists and Nāɂahilūmists is Communism, particularly in the form called "Yunyalīlti communism" (''yunyalīltat yaivcārṇātra''): Yunyalīlti communism is a somewhat retroactive term for a "communist" ideology which is the economic system developed independently from Western communism by following the prevailing interpretation of the moral principles of the Yunyalīlta applied to the economic organization of society; during the Kaiṣamā era, it became the economic system that the Chlouvānem applied to the other countries of the Union which did not have any Yunyalīlti presence<ref>Note that this approach was markedly Traditionalist, as Nāɂahilūmism (at that time not mainstream anymore, due to the disastrous state Great Inquisitor Nāɂahilūma's global wars had left the Inquisition in) would have favoured a complete religious conversion of those peoples.</ref>; furthermore, Yunyalīlti communism as applied outside of Yunyalīlti countries interacted with Western communism, which often (but not always, due to the theocratic nature of the Chlouvānem state) aligned themselves with the Kaiṣamā, at that time Calémere's only superpower. Yunyalīlti communism was the general state ideology of the Kaiṣamā and to a lesser extent still is in the Eastern bloc, even if countries such as most of Greater Skyrdagor are not communist. The Inquisition itself is not usually considered a communist country, due to the prevailing religious drive, the theocratical organization of the country, the lack of any political parties, and the presence of some markedly non-communist elements (such as, for example, the existence of sixteen actual kingdoms (even if mostly with ceremonial power only), a third of whose elective, scattered in a few Western and Southern dioceses - they had all been deposed by Great Inquisitor Nāɂahilūma and were only restored after the end of the Kaiṣamā).
 
The other three minoritary ideologies mostly deviate from the main split in one of their axes. Permissionism, the most widespread of the three, is a growing ideology particularly associated with younger Inquisitors and the areas of the Eastern Plain and the Near East, plus some other urban areas such as, notably, Līṭhalyinām in the Jade Coast<ref>Nonyāvi Kūrṣitaisa ''Hamilǣṣṇa'', Bishop of Līṭhalyinām, and Danaimūṣāvi Hånihaidī ''Lilemāvya'', Bishop of Lāltaṣveya, are considered the main ideologues of Permissionism in the present-day Inquisition</ref>, with a particular consideration given to the theories of Lajñyāvi yamei-Šulegat ''Tainā'' of Gāvṝcantis Monastery developed around 50-60 years before the present. The core belief of Permissionists is the necessity of building a state which follows the economical ideology of Yunyalīlti communism but which is not authoritarian, abolishing censorship and allowing greater freedom of speech and press; a minority of them (with little representation at the national level and no Bishops, but commonly accepted by many monastic orders) aims at the separation between church and state, having as goal the foundation of a National Synod replacing the legislative aspect of the Inquisitorial Conclave or at least a mixed composition of the three national powers with both Inquisitors and laypeople.<br/>Mercantilism aims at having a stronger trade-based relationship with the West, with companies controlled or participated by the Inquisitorial state operating in Western countries and the ultimate goal of establishing a foothold of the Inquisition abroad by gaining economic power there.<br/>Deregulationists are a fringe ideology (with little presence at the national level) which as a whole does not question the authoritarian rule or the overall theocratical structure, but aims at an economic reform shifting the state from a planned economy to a market economy with the reintroduction of private property and private enterprise not limited to family enterprises or cooperatives as in the current system.


===Law and documents===
===Law and documents===
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