Tun'ilhameng: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "The Tun’ilunhameng (Lit. "Beasts Cursed by Hangmeng") are a social catagory in Mideaval and Modern Nongban society. The Tun’ilunhameng are slaves that are legally considered animals and chattel. Tun’ilunhameng are commonly used for mining, farming, transportation, and food. Tun’ilunhameng are often mutilated disfigured and inbred to make them seem less like humans. Due to centuries of propaganda very few Nongbans consider the Tun’ilunhameng humans an...")
 
(Adding categories)
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=== As transportation ===
=== As transportation ===
In the year 8602, the first sled rails were opened. These railways were built alongside major roads. The “rails” were made of concrete, while the cars were made of steel and wood. The cars ran individually. They were enclosed to house 10 slaves that would move the car up to speeds of 10 miles per hour. The slaves were hidden away from the outside, both to prevent overheating and escape but also to prevent people from seeing the slaves, as at this time most people considered slaves very unsightly and filthy. In addition, the YCH Congress tried to cover up the mistreatment of slaves to prevent people drawing connections between slaves and the beginning of Hangism, as Hangmeng was raised a slave. These cars could carry up to 1 ton of material. These rails replaced the pushed carts on the major roadways.
In the year 8602, the first sled rails were opened. These railways were built alongside major roads. The “rails” were made of concrete, while the cars were made of steel and wood. The cars ran individually. They were enclosed to house 10 slaves that would move the car up to speeds of 10 miles per hour. The slaves were hidden away from the outside, both to prevent overheating and escape but also to prevent people from seeing the slaves, as at this time most people considered slaves very unsightly and filthy. In addition, the YCH Congress tried to cover up the mistreatment of slaves to prevent people drawing connections between slaves and the beginning of Hangism, as Hangmeng was raised a slave. These cars could carry up to 1 ton of material. These rails replaced the pushed carts on the major roadways.
[[Category:Nongba]]

Revision as of 00:44, 3 September 2022

The Tun’ilunhameng (Lit. "Beasts Cursed by Hangmeng") are a social catagory in Mideaval and Modern Nongban society. The Tun’ilunhameng are slaves that are legally considered animals and chattel. Tun’ilunhameng are commonly used for mining, farming, transportation, and food. Tun’ilunhameng are often mutilated disfigured and inbred to make them seem less like humans. Due to centuries of propaganda very few Nongbans consider the Tun’ilunhameng humans and there are conspiracies within Nongban acedemic circles to suggest that Tun’ilunhameng were never related to humans.

History

Around the year 9530, the Congress of the Yotumic Confederacy passed a landmark law. They declared that all non-hangists were not humans, and therefore Hangmeng’s truths of Life, death, and hatred did not apply to them. Around the year 9600 this law was put into practice.

A large lizard farm in the Yotum mountains captured a tribe of nan-hangist, cannibals, in the desert. These “animals” were held in an enclosed area to mine copper. As these slaves proved effective, they would capture more slaves to mine copper. Eventually these mines gathered more copper than any other mine

During the 14,120 famine, many slaves died of starvation, and their remains were fed to citizens. When the news of this happening reached the general public it reached mixed opinion. While many thought it was unethical, many thought of these slaves as non humans and that nothing was wrong with eating their remains as it prevented some hangists from dying. Eventually, after the famine, demand for meat began to rise. As the general opinion was still so mixed the owners of the slave mines would burn the skin of all the slaves, cut off their tongues, and paint their faces to make them seem less like humans. To make the public less concerned about them (and more importantly, prevent the congress from outlawing this farming) they would let the public watch the mutilated slaves from special areas to make them seem far more like livestock. This was so effective that  over decades the meat of these slaves became more prized than lizard meat.

In the year 14582 the Congress of the YCH praised Tun’ilunhameng products. The congress subsidized more to be opened and for a propaganda campaign to promote those products. Due to the high profit margin of these farms protections against escape were great, and very few slaves would ever escape where they were housed.

Meat from slaves used to mine rock, copper, and iron were considered less valuable, while meat from slaves that woved fabrics were considered the best. Over time, slaves of these two conditions were selectivley bred not only to improve meat and their working skills but also to make them appear less human.

As transportation

In the year 8602, the first sled rails were opened. These railways were built alongside major roads. The “rails” were made of concrete, while the cars were made of steel and wood. The cars ran individually. They were enclosed to house 10 slaves that would move the car up to speeds of 10 miles per hour. The slaves were hidden away from the outside, both to prevent overheating and escape but also to prevent people from seeing the slaves, as at this time most people considered slaves very unsightly and filthy. In addition, the YCH Congress tried to cover up the mistreatment of slaves to prevent people drawing connections between slaves and the beginning of Hangism, as Hangmeng was raised a slave. These cars could carry up to 1 ton of material. These rails replaced the pushed carts on the major roadways.