New Yankee Nation
Life in the @The New Yankees Nation is a mirror opposite of the world it rebelled against—an empire of strength built on oppression, wrapped in the rhetoric of liberation. Founded in 2064 during the American Civil War, the breakaway state spans the central belt of the former United States—@Montana, @Wyoming , @South Dakota , @North Dakota , @Super Kansas, @Missouri, @Arkansas, and @Mississippi—a territory now reshaped into a militarized society that worships power, purity, and President @Jackson Justice.
The New Yankees proclaim themselves the world’s first Super Human Nation, a place where Quirk users rule openly and the weak no longer hold authority. What began as a revolution against discrimination has twisted into a new hierarchy of domination—one where the gifted reign as gods, and the quirkless survive only through obedience.
Society and Culture
Every aspect of New Yankee life is organized around the concept of biological superiority. Quirks are seen not merely as abilities, but as divine proof of evolution—a sacred inheritance that separates the chosen from the obsolete. The population is divided into formal castes, determined by the strength, utility, and lineage of a person’s Quirk.
High Quirk Citizens—the elite, often soldiers or officials with powerful or versatile abilities, enjoy privilege and authority.
Standard Quirk Citizens—those with weaker or specialized powers form the backbone of society, working in production, labor, or local defense.
The Quirkless Class—legally “human citizens,” but socially regarded as subservient. They are denied most positions of influence, restricted from hero work, and subjected to constant propaganda about their inferiority.
Officially, the government claims to “protect” the @Quirkless Human from the burdens of leadership. In practice, they are servants, laborers, and propaganda tools—used to demonstrate the mercy and tolerance of the superhuman regime.
Posters across the cities feature smiling quirkless farmers, workers, and medics under the slogan:
“They Serve, We Rise.”
Citizens grow up knowing that status is not earned through education or morality, but through power—the ability to dominate, destroy, and command. Compassion is viewed as weakness; humility, as treason.
The Cult of Jackson Justice
At the center of New Yankee identity is President @Jackson Justice, the revolutionary leader who founded the nation and declared himself the “First Perfect Man.” His charisma, unmatched battle record, and vision of a world governed by the strong make him a near-religious figure.
Every public square holds statues of Justice in golden armor, hand outstretched toward the horizon. His face dominates screens, walls, and banners. Citizens are required to watch his weekly broadcast, “The President’s Command,” in which he delivers speeches mixing political instruction with divine rhetoric.
Children chant his name each morning in schools. Military cadets carry medallions bearing his image. In propaganda films, Justice is portrayed as a savior who ended centuries of oppression by tearing down the “false democracy of the weak.”
To speak against him is not merely treason—it is blasphemy.
Education and Indoctrination
Education in the New Yankee Nation no longer produces heroes—it produces soldiers. The school system, known as the National Quirk Development Corps (NQDC), functions as both military academy and indoctrination center.
From childhood, students are taught that Quirk supremacy is destiny, that the old world’s weakness led to Earth’s near collapse, and that the future belongs to those strong enough to seize it. Textbooks glorify violence as a form of discipline, portraying past heroes as naive puppets of corrupt quirkless governments.
Subjects include:
Combat Doctrine and Power Mastery – physical and tactical training emphasizing lethal efficiency.
Political Purity – courses in national ideology and Jackson Justice’s philosophy.
Human Psychology – teaching students how to “command and contain” quirkless populations.
Obedience and Loyalty Studies – daily recitations of the National Creed: “The weak shall serve. The strong shall rule. The chosen shall endure.”
Graduates of the NQDC are immediately conscripted into the Superhuman Guard, the nation’s elite defense force. Others are sent to the Internal Security Corps, tasked with policing dissent and ensuring ideological compliance.
Media and Propaganda
The New Yankee government maintains total control of all communication through the Office of Truth and Valor, a propaganda ministry that broadcasts constant messages of unity and strength. Every channel, radio, and data feed is saturated with slogans, triumphal music, and state-approved news.
Jackson Justice is portrayed as immortal and infallible. Quirkless citizens who die in service are honored as “willing sacrifices to the Great Design.” The Pi invasion and other global threats are reframed as divine punishments for humanity’s weakness, with the New Yankees positioned as Earth’s last hope for survival.
Art, film, and literature are all militarized. Every story ends in victory through dominance. Every hero learns that mercy is a myth.
Daily Life
For the average citizen, life in the @The New Yankees Nation is regimented, loud, and ideological. Public parades of superhumans march weekly through the streets, displaying power as civic pride. Neighborhoods are divided by Quirk strength, and inter-caste relationships are discouraged. Quirkless individuals wear identification tags, both as security measure and social marker.
The government ensures basic needs—food, housing, and medical care—are met, but all through state-controlled programs designed to enforce loyalty. Citizens are monitored constantly by Sentinel Units, drones equipped with surveillance quirks, ensuring obedience and patriotism at all times.
Music, architecture, and fashion reflect military aesthetics: sleek lines, black and crimson uniforms, and metallic emblems of the lightning-star insignia, symbolizing strength and divine order.
Religion, in the traditional sense, is banned. The only faith permitted is The Doctrine of Power, a state philosophy that teaches that the universe favors the strong and that Jackson Justice is the living embodiment of its law.
The Quirkless Question
The @Quirkless Human population lives under quiet oppression. Many serve as maintenance workers, educators, or caretakers, forbidden from owning property or traveling freely. They are used as cautionary examples in propaganda—“proof of what happens when evolution stops.”
Some whisper of Underground Sanctuaries, hidden communities where quirkless citizens help one another survive, aided by exiled heroes or sympathetic soldiers. These groups are branded as terrorists, hunted relentlessly by Internal Security.
Rumors persist that quirkless citizens are being used for experimental breeding or Quirk enhancement programs—a grim irony for a state that once rebelled against human exploitation.
The Iron Paradox
The New Yankee Nation presents itself as a utopia of strength and freedom, but beneath its banners lies exhaustion. Constant militarization, fear, and propaganda have created a population that knows only obedience. Children grow up wielding power but never learning compassion. Heroes are born to kill, not to protect.
Even so, many citizens believe in the dream. They see the old @USA as weak, the Quirkless President @Theodore Stan Lee as a puppet of corruption, and Jackson Justice as the savior who gave them purpose.