Empire of the Tao

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Empire of the Tao
道教帝国
Dōkyō Teikoku
Flag of Tao
Flag
Imperial Seal of Tao
Imperial Seal
Motto: Tao ni shitagau
Follow the Tao
Empireofthetao.png
The Location of the Tao in east Ophion
CapitalEin
LargestCapital
Official languagesJapanese
Recognised national languagesJapanese, English
Recognised regional languagesAoban
Ethnic groups
(2018)
Taoists (92.3%)
Aznazians (4.7%)
Other (3%)
Demonym(s)Taoist
GovernmentConstitutional Monarchy
• Enpress
Sora Miroyu
• Prime Minister
Nori Kenshin
• Speaker of the House
Juro Hideyoshi
LegislatureSenate
Imperial Council
Imperial Governors
Foundation 
Independence from ancient POD (2300 CE)
• Stelten Invasion of the Tao
1600
• Rhodeve annexation of the Tao
1793
• Aznazian takeover of the Tao
1832
• Independence from Aznazia
June 3, 1903
• Constitution
May 19, 1948
• Monarchy Re-Established
May 16, 2019
Area
• Total
886,067 km2 (342,112 sq mi)
• Penninsula
718,960 km²
277,592 sq mi
• Islands (including Aoba)
167,106 km²
64,520 sq mi
Population
• 2018 estimate
108,000,000
• September 2018 census
108,557,494
GDP (nominal)2018 estimate
• Total
₩5,121,904,000,000
• Per capita
₩47,425
Gini (2017)28.2
low
HDI (2018)0.894
very high
CurrencyTaoist Way (₩)
(WAY)
Time zoneUTC+8 (Taoist Time)
Date formatmm-dd-yyyy
Driving sideright
Calling code+213
ISO 3166 codeTAO
Internet TLD.tao

The Empire of the Tao, (道教帝国 Dōkyō Teikoku) sometimes referred to as the Taoist Empire or simply, Tao is an independent nation state located in East Ophion. The Tao is a large archipelago. For a period of time in the early-mid 20th century, it was considered to be one of the great powers of Sunalaya.

On May 16, 2019, then Prime Chancellor Sora Miroyu used emergency powers which were granted via a popular and military referendum which she used to dissolve the House of Chancellors, and the United States of the Tao. She was coronated as Empress on May 16, 2019, and the Empire of the Tao was re-established on the same day.

Etymology

"Tao" /dou,tou/

The exact origin and meaning behind the name "Tao" are still, not understood to this day. Many historians have attempted to find some evidence linking the name Tao to someone, an ideology, or religion, however, none have found such evidence.

Historians still debate, when the term "Tao" began being used as a common way of identification for the area. Though the oldest written reference to the area as "Tao" is in a sort of ancient census, dated approx 800 CE; most historians and archaeologists, believe that "Tao" was being used far before the days of the ancient census.

History

Prehistory

Many archaeologists and anthropologists believe that the first human settlers in the region arrived around 42,000 CE; though evidence shows that humans may only have arrived on Aoba island around 30,000 CE. The Tao's vast supply of fish along with wild fruits and vegetables made the Taoist land attractive for permanent settlement. Evidence shows that tribes from this time relied on fishing and a surprising capability to make rudimentary rafts out of the natural coastal flora and fauna of the region.

Later tribal civilizations would find the land to be quite fertile for their crops. In particular, archaeologists have found evidence that ancient Taoists smoked and otherwise consumed large quantities of cannabis and tobacco, likely for recreational, religious, and medical use.

By 2300 CE the first Ophionese settlers moved into the region and inter-bred with the native Taoist population, creating what most anthropologists consider to be the first modern Taoists. It was at about this time that major crops such as rice and barley had spread to the region. These new crops were found to be farmable pretty quickly by the Taoists. Archaeologists suggest Taoists began widespread farming of such crops as early 2200 CE. It is widely believed that as Taoists became more and more adept at cultivation, this allowed for people to pursue other work as it was not nessessary for everyone within a community to focus purely on food production. These newfound people could now begin gaining knowledge in construction, exploration, or smithing, all of which further lessened the amount of people nessesary to work gathering and cultivating food, creating something of a cycle of technological progression, continuing to the modern day.

Ancient

An ancient piece of ornate pottery found in the Tao.

The earliest evidence of anything resembling centralized power-base for the "nation" as several small surrounding communities began paying tribute to the Kingdom of Ein, either by force, or voluntarily in exchange for a steady supply of goods and/or protection. The Kingdom of Ein would slowly expand, and absorb surrounding states, quickly becoming the most powerful state in the region. By 400 CE, the Izumodo of Ein had almost all of the Tao under its control, mostly as puppet states and tributaries.

Over the next 500 years or so, the Izumodo of Ein had absorbed, annexed, or subjugated all of the Taoist islands and their tribes, spare a few northern tribal states. In the year 536, King Jurou Shinobu had begun an ambitious undertaking; the invasion of the highly aggressive and hostile natives of Aoba Island. By the end of the campaign, King Jurou Shinobu was on his deathbed, suffering from an infected arrow wound. Upon his hearing of the final Taoist victory in 548, it was his crowning achievement and announced the establishment of a new State, the "Grand Empire of the Tao".

Isolationist Era

After the Empire was established, Emperor Shinobu's son, Emperor Jūrō had begun implementing laws which prevented people from leaving or entering the Tao without written Imperial permission. Fueled out of fear of peoples from mainlaind Ophion, Jūrō maintained a large national military, and was infamous for forcing his regional leaders to maintain large malitias even outside of times of war.

Later in his life however, Jūrō began to slightly lax some of his isolationist laws. Jūrō seemed to begin learning military strategy after he had taken throne, in the last decade of his life, he would begin attempts at conquest all across the coasts of mainland Ophion, some of which would succeed and many of which would fail.

Emergence Era

In 1443 as much of the populous was starving and exhausted from wars they never saw the benefits of, Taoist citizens had been seeing far western foreigners bringing luxury goods and exotic foods to Royal quarters. As this continued and the goods became more plentiful and exotic, the Taoists found themselves being taxed more more. Soldiers were ordered to take goods or even vital food supplies, should a citizen not be able to pay his taxes, it was clear to the populous that the nation's Royalty were blantantly abusing their citizens. This would ultimately boil over into the broken mountain rebellion, named after the sacking of the royal palace which was sat the base of Mount Aoba.

In 1735, with the Rhodevus East Ophion Company looking to expand its borders, particularly in respect to gaining key ports for transporting goods back to Rhodevus, the Rhodeve state was quick to capitalize on the destabalized and weakened state of the native Taoists. After a short war, the Emperor of the Tao had come to terms with the Rhodeve state that as long as he could maintain his position, he would help secure the nation as a colonial state of the Republic of Rhoedevus. While the Emperor was allowed to keep his title, and his children would continue as royalty, he was effectively powerless and served merely as a figurehead for the new Rhodeve colonial state.

In 1843, the Englean Kaiserreich had entered a state of war with the Rhodeve Empire in the case of the Rhodeve Collapse, The Emperor at the time, Emperor Yūdai gathered as many men as he could in secret, pulling from native regional leaders and what small Imperial guard he had and launched a rebellion against the Rhodeves, which had widthdrawn a majority of their occupational forces to fight in other theaters of the world. It did not take long for the Taoists to overwhelm the relatively small Rhodeve force which was left. The Rhodeve crown, having his Empire quickly collapsing and beseiged from all sides, stated soon after the events that he would: "Absolutely decimate the Tao for their retaliation". However, in the Treaty of Pacifica City, Rhodevus would make the concession of the Tao to the Englean Kaiserreich, which was swiftly acted upon by the Englean Emperor. While the Engleans knew the Emperor was necessary to prevent mass retaliation and endless rebellion, the acts of Emperor Yūdai had scared the Engleans into taking some sort of action. Yūdai would ultimately abdicate, and state that he was wrong for the attempted succession from the Rhodeve state. Only a few weeks after this, Yūdai was found dead in his palace.

In 1863, after the death of Emperor Yūdai's son, the Taoist war of succession took place, as a dispute to who the rightful successor should be to the Taoist throne, the Englean Emperor claimed he should take the throe due to a questionable statement in Emperor Yūdai's will, while Yūdai's grandson, Emperor Shingo claimed he had birthright to the throne. This would become a two-year long war with Emperor Shingo slowly gaining international support, as he made several trade promises to major naval powers in the area such as Rhodevus, and Librira, who would ultimately come to the aid of the Tao in the final months, and secure a quick end to the war, effectively securing Taoist independence for the first time in over one-hundred years.

Modern Era

Geography

Political Map of the Tao.

The Tao is a nation which is seated in East Ophion. It is made up of hundreds of "major" islands. Most of the Islands fall under three island chains: Aoba Island, Taoist Islands, and the Dajime Islands.

The largest island, located in the Taoist Islands chain, is fairly mountainous. There are volcanoes located within the mountain ranges on the northern islands; one of which (Mount Kyojin), is a supervolcano with a Volcano Explosivity Index ranking of 7.

There are roughly 2,368 islands under the Empire's flag, from massive ones like Aoba island to some just a dozen or so meters in length.

The Tao is known for its beautiful coastline and beaches. In some areas, crystalline structures leftover from the formation of the earth eroded over the ages; this creates some beaches with pure white sands.

Climate

The weather in the Tao varies wildly, depending on where you are. Most of the population lives in hot, humid areas as almost 87% of the Taoist population lives in the coastal regions of the nation. In some coastal areas, like Takazaki, temperatures can reach 112°F and massive percentages of humidity.

Of course, some of the larger mountains in both the Northern ranges and the Aoban ranges can reach below zero temperatures on a regular basis. There are few people who live in the mountains, as some ancient Taoist folklore told stories of horrifying monsters lurking within the mountains; however, there are various native Taoist tribes who live secluded from modern society in the mountainous regions.

The massive tourist city of Dajime is well known for its "Perfect climate" staying in the 70-80°F range in the winter; while in the summer, it hovers in the 80-90°F range.

Environment

The Tao has a wide variety of flora and fauna, mostly indigenous to the coastal and tropical regions. There are dense forests of Taoist Juniper throughout the country, as they are the most plentiful trees in the nation. There are believed to be roughly 3,000 species of different plants, flowers, trees, and other flora and fauna scattered throughout the Taoist archipelago.

The Tao's 82 nuclear power plants provide relatively clean power to much of the country. The old UST regime made nuclear power a priority for the infrastructure budget in 1989, after the University of Ein appealed to the House of Chancellors, and showed that the fastest way to switch to a clean source of power would be Nuclear, which we now know is cleaner than even Solar power.

Taoist car companies, such as Hantau, or Yotota are some of the leading developers in hydrogen and nuclear-powered cars.

Largest Cities

Demographics

The total population of the Empire of the Tao is estimated to be in the range of 108 million people. The vast majority of the Tao's population is Taoist due to both historical reasons and the fact that the Tao has fairly strict immigration laws for people who are not Rhodeve, which are subsequently the third and fourth largest ethnic groups respectively. The Tao's large Podian population is thought to be a result of the Tao's cultural similarities to POD as it was, in fact, an ancient POD settlement at one time.

Religion

The religious demographics of the Taoist Empire.

  Taoism (73.1%)
  Bhuddism (12.8%)
  Protestant (4.2%)
  Sunni Islam (3.3%)
  Shinto (2.7%)
  Other or Athiest (3.9%)

The Empire has a predominantly Taoist population, the religion even holds very strong in the Tao in this modern era of falling religions; the Empire of the Tao could even named after Taoism.

There are other smaller religions in play in the Tao, most notably Buddhism. The exact reasoning for the Buddhist rise in the 40s is unknown, but it is speculated that a lack of "faith" in the Tao and unwillingness to follow it after the loss in the second world war, could have been the reason.

Government

The Empire of the Tao is a Constitutional Monarchy. Under its current constitution it is referred to as the "The Serene Empire of the Tao", however, it also notes that in all official documentation and references, it should be simply referred to as the "Empire of the Tao" or simply the "Tao". Its government is made up of four branches: Executive, Judicial, Legislative, Military. There is some controversy in the military having such a large part in the civilian lives of the Tao.

There are 6 levels to the Taoist governmental system: Local, City, Region, Island, Chain, and National. The Local level of the governmental system is usually made up of neighborhoods or city blocks and generally manages the safety regulations of its citizens. The City level administers the City Proper area, which is usually downtown and in some cases, chunks of outer suburban areas, city governments manage safety, pollution regulation, recreation, and primary public services. The region is made up of generally a large city and various surrounding suburbs, regions manage property taxes, agricultural regulation, auxiliary public services, small-scale corruption, and bribery in check and often monitor city and county governments. Island governments oversee national and provincial parks in their borders and manage all businesses in their borders. Chain governments incompass 2-10 islands and provide large-scale administration, most notably provincial economic policies and laws. The National government manages the entire Empire, it administers national policies and laws, national public services, national recreation, national territories and handles international relations.

Military

The Empire of the Tao has four armed branches of the military: Army, Navy, Airforce, and Coast Guard. Each branch has a Royal Advisor which are appointed by the Emperor/Empress, but must qualify through military service in a said branch, each branch also has a Deputy Advisor who is appointed by that branch's Royal Advisor, though all deputies must also qualify through military service. While each branch has its own Royal Advisor, there is also the Royal Advisor of Defense and the Deputy Advisor of Defence, both of whom are Appointed by the Crown, and may not have enlisted military service; this allows those from intelligence and law enforcement agencies to oversee Military Operations, should the Emperor/Empress see fit.

Each branch of the Military acts independently but answer to, and coordinate through, the Royal Advisor of Defence. None of the branches have the authority to make or declare war on their own, these actions must be initialized by the Emperor/Empress alone. Any international bases are under the command of the military and the Royal Department of Defence, as they are all classified as joint bases, even if there is only one branch occupying and holding operations there.

Economy

Empire of the Tao's national budget
Military
31.7%
Education
26%
Food & Agriculture
11%
Transportation
8%
Science & Environment
6%
Debt Interest
5%
International Affairs
4%
Public Benefits
1.2%
Other
7.1%

The Taoist Empire has a sprawling economy, a 2018 estimate put the GDP at somewhere around ₩5,121,904,000,000 or $5,736,532,480,000 with a flat tax rate of 11% on everything giving the Tao an estimated national budget of ₩563,409,440,000. Massive Taoist companies such as Yotota and Samusun are well known and have become a national and international idol for the level of quality Taoist industrial and electronics goods can be.

One of the largest industries in the Empire of the Tao is shipbuilding and naval architecture.

Economic history

Modern Tao's economic period is commonly believed to have started at some point in the "emergence era". Some of the surviving elements of the emergence era are roads and water transportation routes, as well as many colonial companies, which have become fully privatized over time, such as the Mikanan Strait Company. Many of today's enterprises were founded at the time, and Tao emerged as the most developed and westernized nations in Ophion. The period of overall economic growth from the 1950s to the 1970s has been called the Taoist miracle of re-emergence. Most people believe the term "re-emergence" signifies the Tao's economic and military strength is on a respectable and first world level. Tao averaged 6.9 percent growth in the 1950s-1970s, and 3.1 percent in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Agriculture

The Tao has a small agricultural industry, at least relative to what it used to be. Making up only about 5.3 percent of the Empire's GDP, compared to the late 40s and early 50s, when agriculture was one of the only industries keeping the Taoist economy afloat while the country was rebuilding. The majority of the Tao's agricultural production currently comes from cash crops, such as: natural rubber, coffee, bananas, and coconuts. The Tao does not produce much of its own agricultural products for domestic consumption, especially as food. While the Tao does produce somewhat large amounts of crops like: cashews, papayas, and tea, the majority of the production from the crops is exported to countries around the world.

Industry

The Empire's industrial sector makes up approximately 31.2% of its GDP. The Tao's major industries are motor vehicles, electronics, machine tools, metals, and ships, some major Japanese industrial companies include Yotota, Guun Inc., Wochika and Tao Heavy Industries.

The Empire of the Tao is the second largest automobile producer in the world and is home to Yotota, the world's second largest automobile company. The Taoist consumer electronics industry is often considered one of the strongest in the world. Despite facing competition from up-and-coming third world countries, the Taoist shipbuilding industry is expected to remain strong due to an increased focus on specialized, high-tech designs.

Services

The Tao's service sector accounts for about two-thirds of its total economic output. Banking, insurance, real estate, retailing, transportation, and telecommunications are all major industries, with companies such as Yotota Economics, Tao Airlines, Sakura Airlines, and Kikare Communications being some of the largest companies in the world.

Tourism

Izumo Palace, one of the most popular historical monuments in the Empire.

The Empire of the Tao attracted 25.86 million international tourists in 2017 and increased by 22.4% to attract 31.65 million international tourists in 2018. Tourism from abroad is one of the few businesses expected to see large amounts of growth in the Tao. Foreign visitors to the Tao have doubled in the last decade and reached 10 million people for the first time in 2012, led by an increase of Ophionic visitors.

One of the most popular city for tourists to visit is Dajime, often referred to as the "perfect city" due to its natural beauty and long tradition of being a stop for tourists, starting in the emergence era when Rhodeve sailors and tradesmen where looking for a place to rest and recuperate before making a long journey back home. Dajime, due to its coastal and economically-central location at the time made for a perfect suitor. Within 5 decades after the Rhodeve government seized control of the Tao, Dajime had embraced this concept and was widely known as the place to stop and rest in the Tao.

The Taoist government hopes to receive 40 million foreign tourists every year by 2020.

Infrastructure

Transportation

The Empire's road spending has been extensive. Its 1.2 million kilometers (0.75 million miles) of paved road are the main means of transportation.

Since privatization in 1962, dozens of Japanese railway companies compete in regional and local passenger transportation markets; major companies include Huntau Railways, Karitsura, and Aoban Rail. Some 175 high-speed trains connect major cities and Taoist trains are known for their safety and punctuality.

There are 223 airports in the Tao; the largest domestic airport, Sekai Airport in Dajime, is Ophion's busiest airport. The largest international gateways are Ein International Airport, Aoba International Airport, and Jiyū International Airport. The Port of Neshito is the country's largest and busiest port, accounting for 12 percent of the Empire's trade value.

Energy

A nuclear power plant located in Shintao.

The Empire of the Tao is one of the global leaders and largest investors into nuclear energy. While the Tao does not usually offer incentives to companies since 1982 the Tao has been offering incentives to companies making the switch to Nuclear energy. The Tao has 82 nuclear power plants which provide an estimated 89-93% of the Empire's electricity.

Because there is already such an extensive nuclear energy grid constructed in the Tao, it has had a hard time switching to renewable resources, though all of the federal environmental agencies in the Tao agree that renewable energy is extremely low on their list of priorities, largely because it is cleaner than solar energy, hydro energy, and geothermal energy. Wind energy is one of the only mainstream sources of renewable energy that is more efficient than nuclear. It is for these reasons that the Tap has not been making a large-scale transition to renewable energies because it is already one of the greenest nations on sunalaya.