Padgintüschöchü: Difference between revisions
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'''Padgintüschöchü''' (lit. ''‘national malaise’'') is a cultural phenomena in [[Copper War|post-war]] [[Tschintiessteiss]]. Since the end of the Copper War, there has been a profound sense of national fatigue in Tschintiessteiss. Most major newspaper sources have run stories over the fruitlessness of Tschintiessteiss’s continued wars, and more than 67% of Copper War veterans have attested to feeling as though their “job is done.” This cultural shift stands in contrast to the previous Zeitgeist of [[Tschintierst nationalism]], and the need to assert the political and cultural status of Tschintiessteiss through military force. Over 56% of Tschintierst men over 30 have indicated, or voted for in the past, against future wars of expansion or influence, with a prevailing idea that Tschintiessteiss has “won” against the world being common. |
'''Padgintüschöchü''' (lit. ''‘national malaise’'') is a cultural phenomena in [[Copper War|post-war]] [[Tschintiessteiss]]. Since the end of the Copper War, there has been a profound sense of national fatigue in Tschintiessteiss. Most major newspaper sources have run stories over the fruitlessness of Tschintiessteiss’s continued wars, and more than 67% of Copper War veterans have attested to feeling as though their “job is done.” This cultural shift stands in contrast to the previous Zeitgeist of [[Tschintierst nationalism]], and the need to assert the political and cultural status of Tschintiessteiss through military force. Over 56% of Tschintierst men over 30 have indicated, or voted for in the past, against future wars of expansion or influence, with a prevailing idea that Tschintiessteiss has “won” against the world being common. |
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+ | ==History== |
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+ | {{See|Copper War#Legacy}} |
Revision as of 23:47, 22 February 2025
Padgintüschöchü (lit. ‘national malaise’) is a cultural phenomena in post-war Tschintiessteiss. Since the end of the Copper War, there has been a profound sense of national fatigue in Tschintiessteiss. Most major newspaper sources have run stories over the fruitlessness of Tschintiessteiss’s continued wars, and more than 67% of Copper War veterans have attested to feeling as though their “job is done.” This cultural shift stands in contrast to the previous Zeitgeist of Tschintierst nationalism, and the need to assert the political and cultural status of Tschintiessteiss through military force. Over 56% of Tschintierst men over 30 have indicated, or voted for in the past, against future wars of expansion or influence, with a prevailing idea that Tschintiessteiss has “won” against the world being common.