Thursday 3 March 2016

A Brief History of the Dark North

Since I'm Canadian, and I love my country, the best thing I could do for it was to ruin the hell out of it in the name of Dark Future. What follows is a brief overview of where things are in Canada in 1995, at least in the areas I'll be operating in. There's a lot of work to be done, especially in getting from the '70s to 1995, but I'll probably fill things out as I need them.


A Brief History of Canada

As global trade broke down, the States began looking to Canada more and more for oil. This created a period of economic ascendancy for Canada, under Prime Minister Trudeau. But it couldn't last, and Canada entered a stark depression, into which the social reforms taking place in the south found a perfect breeding ground.

Trudeau was remembered for his extreme excesses, on which the country was ready to blame their growing list of problems, and things began to change in Canada, as the country began adopting changes they saw in their neighbours to the south. Rock and roll was banned.  Objectivist philosophers became increasingly popular. The Private Peacekeeping Act was passed.

As things broke down further, Canada's position as a country became tenuous. Oil-rich Alberta turned to China when the US stopped buying, arming itself with Chinese weapons in the process, and shortly thereafter declared itself sovereign. But when continued trade with China became difficult, Alberta began selling to interests in the US again, establishing a heavily patrolled border to the south to ensure their trade routes remained open and unmolested.

Quebec was quick to follow Alberta’s lead, taking another huge portion of Canada's natural wealth with it.

Ontario began to fracture under the strain, with Toronto not seeing a point in Ottawa any longer. Under the philospher-turned-politician, Neil Peart, Southern and Eastern Ontario seceded from Canada.

Lord Protector Peart declared Toronto the new capital, and his protectorate the "true" north. The new Protectorate of Upper Canada was quick to arm itself against southern invasion and reprisals out of Ottawa. Several short, brutal wars were fought in southern Ontario, along the old American border. The fighting was fiercest at the Detroit-Windsor crossing, ultimately leaving much of the production capacity there useless, but providing Upper Canada with enough raw material and spoils of war to outfit its own para-military force: the Ontario Peace Patrol.

As Lake Ontario dried up, decades of industrial slag and waste were revealed, providing a new resource to exploit as the waste of yesterday became the mines of tomorrow. With Niagara Falls running dry, power became a serious problem for Upper Canada, and is still strictly rationed outside of the Toronto PZ.

The Toronto core became a heavily guarded PZ, with the Greater Toronto Area essentially being left as it was. The GTA began attracting people from across the new protectorate, fearing as they did more war coming up from the south, or from Quebec. They wanted safety, and the GTA offered that, at least from outside forces.

While other, more high-class state forces guard the citizens of Toronto, the Ontario Peace Patrol ranges across Upper Canada, from the Niagara grow-ups in the south, to the lakebed mines, up the 401 even as far as Ottawa itself, though they never act to help the former capital.

Ottawa, meanwhile, became a battleground. Qubecois separatists wanted to annex it for Quebec, staunch Federalists wanted to keep it as the capital of Canada, and resurgent Loyalists (an oft-used term, in Ottawa) supported the idea that Britain would, somehow, solve all of Canada’s problems.

Today, Ottawa retains a tenuous relationship with the rest of Canada. While still nominally a country, Canada is broken up by independent nations. Quebec separates most of Canada from the Maritimes, who themselves are subject to piratical raids on their oil reserves; the Free Metis Nation controls much of southern Manitoba; Native bands have declared dozens of nations across the country; Alberta stands on its own, Saskatchewan is a flat and dusty canvas for brutal motorized gang wars; BC is isolated by the Rockies, but deals with the remnants of a large influx of Asian gangs and American predation; the North has become a country almost unto itself. With the environment ruined, the ice melting, and government protection a thing of the past, the north has become easier than ever to exploit, resulting in new oil wells and mines popping up everywhere, along with a lucrative trade in freshwater. Diamonds from northern mines have become so common they have formed a kind of currency in the north, a new gold dust, and while Ottawa still officially endorses the loonie as the national currency, many across the nation just use the new, diamond standard.

In Alberta, the oil wells have become heavily guarded, walled cities. The Albertan oil forts are among the most well defended sites in all of Canada, and while Albertan PZs are protected by a powerful army, they sometimes suffer raids. Not so, the heavily defended oil forts.

Due to the isolation of the oil forts, Alberta required a force to patrol the lanes between them, resulting in the creation of the Alberta Rangers. Equipped with powerful muscle cars of Chinese make - modern reproductions of older American cars - these brutal lawmen go where sanc-ops don't, keeping the Albertan wilds some semblance of safe.

The claim to the True North is now a disputed one, with Canada fracturing under the grim pressures of the dark future.

2 comments:

  1. This is so cool! :D
    Even though I don't know much about Canada, I love your history write up. Will look forward to reading more. :)

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    Replies
    1. Thank you! I hope it inspires people and gives players some new ideas and options.

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