National Syncretism

Revision as of 02:36, 21 October 2023 by Ms.Fresh (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
National Syncretism
IdeologyCivic Nationalism
Corporatism
Militarism
Syncretism
Totalitarianism
Chauvinism
Political positionFar-Right

National Syncretism or Sincretismo Nacional is a third way, authoritarian, ultranationalist ideology created in Elaklania by former President, professor, and revolutionary, Pascual Josué Obregón. It is characterized by dictatorial leadership, collectivism, militarism, civic nationalism, and the belief that the state should bend its ideology right or left to serve the best interests of the people.

National Syncretism was popularized in early 20th century Elaklania. It emerged during the second Elaklanian Civil War before expanding into Nastnovo and other countries in Cesylle, though it would not rise to prominence past Elaklania and has stayed predominantly a Elaklanian ideology.

Syncretists saw the accession of Obregón from a simple Professor to the new leader of Elaklania as proof of the ideologies credible and as Obregón’s reign brought Elaklania to new heights of development this belief only became more widespread. Syncretists reject both socialism and conservatism instead believing in Obregón’s theory of ideological annihilation, where to be above ideology the government must shift from socialism to conservatism depending on the needs of the people. Whoever generally Syncretists agree that interventionist autarky, a strong vanguard party, and a nationalist populace are core values of National Syncretism.

In the modern day, Elaklania has abandoned many of the more radical positions of Radical Syncretism leading many to wonder what the future of the ideology will be as fundamentalists struggle to keep the old principles intact in the face of mounting liberal pressure.

Etymology

History

Background

Founding

The New Republic

Tenets

Civic nationalism

Authority

Economic policies

Aesthetics and culture

Architecture

Art

Fashion

Film

Literature

Music

Theatre

Age and gender roles

Notable Theorists

Criticism

Legacy

In popular culture