by G. R. Carter
Quarter-Bushels – The hard currency used in the Okaw Valley SDC after the Reset is the Quarter coin, formerly the twenty five cent piece in US currency. Each quarter represents one quarter-bushel of soybeans. This means of exchange becomes widespread throughout the surviving communities of the Okaw. Demand is so high for the coins that certain industrious individuals make salvage trips into the ruined megacities, where some coins are still hidden in old bank vaults. Because of the large volumes needed, paper scrips soon supplement the coins, but the term still remains. i.e. That vehicle is worth about 1500 Quarter-Bushels
Wizards – At the onset of the Reset, rural America is still populated by a generation of retired engineers from the major industrial companies that once were headquartered there. In the Okaw, these men and women are mostly veterans of Caterpillar, John Deere, and the power plants that fed the larger urban centers. Both by training and birth they are true mechanical geniuses. Many are gentlemen farmers and use their time making improvements to what they consider the modern world’s substandard quality of machining. Even before the Reset, they are tasked with helping to make cooperative biofuel refineries work. After the Reset, their expertise allows the Okaw SDC to create machines to defend themselves from larger more powerful forces that would destroy them.
Snapping Turtles – In the aftermath of the Reset, the SDC realizes they’ll have to make salvage trips into city ruins to find spare parts and other important items they cannot yet produce on their own. After several disastrous trips into dangerous areas, the Wizards design armored trucks to protect the salvagers during their travels. The odd shaped vehicles are dubbed Snapping Turtles, reflecting both their shape and the powerful bite their weapons provided. Also called Mark 1s in a nod to the original tanks of World War 1.
Mark 2 (Rhino) – For heavier protection, the Wizards soon realize bulldozers plentiful in their rural area can be armored. While much slower than Snapping Turtles, the Mark 2 is nearly unstoppable against anything short of a tank or RPG. Because Rhinos are too slow for salvage missions, each Fortress Farm is assigned several to use for farming. The heavy armor and weaponry protect exposed farm workers from Ditchmen attacks.
Razorback – Technically referred to by the Wizards as the Mark 3, the SDC troops call their ultimate weapon the Razorback (so called because of the ridges running down the back of the machine used for cooling the diesel engine cocooned inside steel plates). The odd appearance is anything but humorous to the enemies of the SDC. A purpose built weapons platform based off of the chassis of a track hoe, the Razorback can rotate its weapons 360 degrees while still on the move. Most have a crew of two, one main gunner and one driver. Expensive and difficult to build, the Razorback is nowhere near as numerous as the Turtle or the Mark 2. Most are held back in packs, to be used in the event of a New America invasion.
Archives – From the beginning, all books and historical documents are a priority to the leaders of the SDC. Salvage crews search libraries, bringing back information to help rebuild the Cooperative’s manufacturing, economic and agricultural production. The Archives is the name of the building these priceless documents are stored in. Maryanne Olsen is curator.
Raptor – Crop dusting planes converted to ground attack fighters by the Wizards of the SDC.
Major Midwest societies arising after the Great Reset
(State names left for geographical reference)
Boxes denote approximate areas of influence
1. Okaw Valley Self Defense Cooperative (later known simply as the SDC, and the core territory of the future Red Hawk Republic) — The SDC began before the Reset as a biofuel cooperative of local farmers. As a result of high unemployment and neglect, the remaining locals attempt to form their own economy. After the Reset, the informal farm cooperative is well positioned to transition to a self-defense force. Engineers known as the Wizards help the farmers of the SDC create machines for food and fuel production as well as defense from outlaws known as Ditchmen. Fortress Farms are established throughout the country side, built around the soaring concrete grain elevators present every few miles throughout the prairie. With a safe base of operations, and expertise in fuel and food production, the Okaw Valley SDC becomes a shining example of how to rebuild in the new Dark Ages. Primary post-Reset technologies are mechanical and organic, not electrical, to prevent interference from the Solar Storms. Shelby County is the heartland of the SDC and is home to the families of Founder Phil Hamilton and Sherriff Clark Olsen.
2. Old Main College—Before the Great Reset, Senator Julia Ruff and her family returned to become President of Old Main College, a private institution that had once been a public university in eastern Illinois. Under her leadership, Old Main invested in Agriculture faculty (Applied Sciences), providing their local community with expertise in decentralized food production. Ruff’s connections established while serving as a US Senator help funnel money from the The Pullback spending bill into Old Main; a benefit counterbalanced by Federal spies in her faculty tracking her actions. Old Main Applied Sciences faculty and SDC members work together before the Reset to create biofuel, leading to a fast alliance in the post collapse chaos.
3. New America— Making its headquarters on the former campus of Illinois University (each state’s university system was combined into one as a cost saving measure, initiating the name change), New America is led by Colonel Darien Walsh. Colonel Walsh is a veteran of many tours in the Sandbox (Middle East) for the United States Army. The Pullback bill removes funding for the military, leading to the consolidation of all branches and integration of units into other government departments. With political connections, Walsh is able to keep his base open in the midst of mass closures. Immediately after the Reset, Walsh seizes civilian authorities and treats the surrounding area as a tribal area to be pacified. Through his organization, modeled after the Legions of Rome, and grand plan for a reunified America, Walsh rapidly expands his area of influence. He uses massive stashes of MRE (Meals Ready to Eat) leftover from overseas operations to influence communities that survive the Reset, causing most to join New America. Those that resist peaceful overtures are assimilated by force. Walsh and his allies are the first organized threat to the Okaw Valley Self Defense Cooperative and Old Main.
4. ARK—Tony Diamante and his law firm known as ARK, made up in large part by his family, get fabulously wealthy from channeling Pullback spending through their allies in government and construction. The Diamante’s are electronics experts, and have suspicions that the artificial intelligence now controlling the country’s economy and electrical grid may not be as benevolent as the masses think. Using their profits to build firewalls around their own onsite supercomputer, Tony and his Peacekeeper security forces are well prepared to act when the lights go out on society. Quickly moving to establish control, Tony eliminates the leadership of his rival law firms and brings their organizations under his. Peacekeepers create a safe zone in the skyscrapers that made up downtown St. Louis, allowing the rest of the surrounding area to destroy itself in an orgy of violence. Once on the opposite side of the law, the Diamantes now become the law after establishing a modern feudal system in the ruins of a once great city. Pre-Reset connections lead ARK and the Okaw SDC to become allies despite their radically different backgrounds and forms of government.
5. Blackhawk Confederation— Post-Reset, a tenuous collection of Iowa towns along the Mississippi River band together for trade and self-defense. While the participating towns make it through the initial collapse better than most, outlaws and bandits living in the unpopulated areas raid the survivors continuously, bleeding the resources needed to establish a strong civilization.
6. The Grange—Vast in territory but sparse in population, The Grange exists more as an idea than an actual society. Due to the lack of long range communications, communities that agree to the terms of the Grange can only interact via messenger. Most major population centers cease to exist, replaced by large ranching centers where beef rules the economy. Security and ec
onomic pressures make continued existence difficult, leading to a closer relationship with ARK who provides strong leadership to the otherwise stubbornly independent ranch owners.
7. North American Caliphate (Sunni) - The African immigrant community in the Minneapolis area suffers less than most when modern conveniences evaporate after the Reset. With strong religious ties and a powerful Islamic leader the Somalis form a new Caliphate that encompasses most of Minnesota by the second year post-Reset. Their expansion is checked by the Great Lakes Republic in what was once Wisconsin, the Provincial Canadian Government based in Thunder Bay, and the Blackhawk Confederation. Believing the Reset to be a sign from Allah, the North American Caliphate allies with the Shia Muslim community of Michigan to wage Jihad against any infidels.
8. North American Caliphate (Shia) - Arising from the Muslim communities that dominate eastern Michigan at the dawn of the Reset. Shia leaders assume that the collapse of America is the sign from Allah heralding the arrival of the Twelfth Imam, a Messiah that will lead Muslims of the world to victory over all others. Eventually joining the North American Caliphate exerts tremendous pressure on the Great Lakes Republic from east and west. Small towns are converted or killed until they butt up against New America’s Legions in northern Indiana.
9. Great Lakes Republic—Tough as nails farmers and outdoorsmen of rural Wisconsin band together in the aftermath of the Reset. Early success establishing a safe and prosperous community is halted when the first North American Caliphate jihadists out of Minneapolis appear. After making early contact with other free peoples, the GLR is soon cut off in the south by New America. Squeezed from multiple sides, those who can begin to flee from the approaching Caliphate soldiers, known to them as “JiJis”. Faced with impossible choices, many become refugees in New America territory, where they are forced to become provisional soldiers in exchange for food and safety. Others stay in their homes and fight, with most moving out to the islands of the Great Lakes where it becomes nearly impossible for the Jijis to reach them in sufficient numbers.
10. Vincennes— The night of the Great Reset found the last remaining whole unit of US Marines making the trip from their former base in Texas to their new home in the Federal District. Camped just outside of Vincennes, Indiana that night, Major General Nicolas Hopkins and his men convinced local authorities they faced disaster without quick action. While retaining civilian control, the mayor and city council quickly signed over all security matters to the Marines. In short order, the General himself became the de facto government. A form of martial law remained in effect, though once citizens realized the horrors outside the protective umbrella of one thousand highly trained and well-armed Marines, little dissent was present. The Wabash River separates strictly secular Vincennes controlled area from the theocracy of Little Egypt, the river being the only barrier to all out religious war between the two. Both New America and the Okaw/Old Main alliance actively court Vincennes as an ally.
11. Little Egypt (later renamed Grand Shawnee) - While not a formal government, communities that make up Little Egypt agree to live by a strict interpretation of the Ten Commandments. Little Egypt residents, soon known by the outsiders as “Buckles” (Buckle of the Bible Belt), believe the Great Reset to be God’s judgment on the evil and decadence that had seized America. A simplified Bible is produced and referred to as simply “The Testament”. Buckles are quite adamant about their beliefs, leading more secular societies like ARK and Vincennes to ban them from entering their territory. Little Egypt is considered an ally of the Okaw Valley SDC, but a source of tension between them and other allies. The leader of Old Main, Julia Ruff, is tasked with helping Little Egypt focus on creating a functioning Post-Reset society.
12. Chicagoland (Aurorans)—Little is known about the fate of the great metro that once served as the Regional Capital for the Midwest. Tens of millions of people have perished there in the aftermath of the Reset. Rumors are trickling in that a charismatic leader has risen to consolidate the survivors under a united banner based in the former suburb of Aurora. Some say the North American Caliphate follow this mystery man. Jihadists believe he is the Twelfth Imam because of the unworldly power he possesses. All that is really known is that if just five percent of the Chicagoland population still survives, the free peoples face an overwhelming force.
13. The Thirteens—Known for their symbol, thirteen stars on the old American flag, this group of survivalists from the area known as the Great Redoubt (Idaho) spread out to help rural communities survive. Not much is known about the Thirteens but they are clearly an enemy of the North American Caliphate, helping keep their expansion in check. Thirteens operate more as advisors to small groups of survivors, not attempting to force ideology or systems on anyone. They are led by a family named Rawles.
Other groups presented in Fortress Farm volumes:
Jenkins Family—A strong family unit living in the Federal District. When the Reset happens, they band together with their Church and extended family to convert a century old brick school building into a fortified shelter. Led by Lamar and Charlotte Jenkins, along with Lamar’s former boss, the Jenkins temporarily restore stability to their neighborhood before attracting unwanted attention.
Fruit of the Valley (Also referred to as The Assembly)—Rowan Shayam, the man credited with creating GRAPEVINE, also promotes Continuity. His faith is tested when GRAPEVINE crashes, but his partner Angela and other followers help him see the Path. He expands the faith throughout the survivors of Northern California via force and coercion. Followers of Continuity await the Awakening, when Network access returns.
Secretary of the Interior Herman Johnson—Once a professor at Stanford, Johnson is the real power behind President Aguilar and Speaker of the House Reed. He also holds the reins of the secret society behind Continuity.
Ditchmen—Criminals, newly un-medicated psychopaths or just those who have always harbored resentment to band together like packs of wild dogs, raiding and pillaging the unprotected. Millions of empty square miles throughout the Midwest give shelter to clusters of savages who lose a bit more of their humanity with every murder and theft. Okaw Valley SDC deputies coin the Ditchmen name, because of how the bandits use the drainage ditches cutting across farm fields to travel unseen.
Rateaters—The same criminal profile as Ditchmen, Rateaters live in the ruins of cities instead of rural areas.
Gangstars— A Pre-Reset criminal organization that pulls the meanest and brightest gang members into a mafia type structure. Known to have many politicians and bureaucrats on their payroll, the Gangstars are well poised to seize control of cities when the chaos of the Reset hits. Major producers and distributors of Syn, a synthetic drug that allows minds to be altered and easily influenced.
RedHawkRepublic.com
The Pullback
Book One
Fortress Farm Series
…the great cities rest upon our broad and fertile prairies. Burn down your cities and leave our farms, and your cities will spring up again as if by magic; but destroy our farms and the grass will grow in the streets of every city in the country.
William Jennings Bryan 1896
Chapter One – The Pullback
Three Years before the Great Reset
Shelby County, Illinois
“Our main story today is the upcoming vote for passage of the historic ultra–omnibus bill known as the Pullback.”
A pretty talking head spoke from an ancient TV perilously perched on a tilted corner platform of the Dixie Cream donut shop. The picture cut in and out, color fading to black and white and then back again to blurry color.
The reader’s voice resonated clearly, yet completely ignored over spirited conversations taking place around small square tables.
A common question sprouted from each table: “What do you make of this bill they’re calling the Pullback?”
“I don’t know, what do you call a horse designed by committee, Einstein? This whole mess of a country is being fixed by the sam
e people who caused the problems in the first place. That’s just brilliant.”
Phil Hamilton took in the different conversations while enjoying his coffee. This was Fight Club for ideas, like Ben Franklin and his peers debating at pubs all over colonial America. The donut shop was the arena and the tables were boxing rings. Step into the ring and be prepared to defend yourself. Over three hundred years had passed since the Founders and one common theme remained: politics were a mess.
Smells of deep fried dough mixed with the aromas of common man coffee brewed just a bit too strong. The warm blanket of familiarity was what Phil looked forward to each morning. Old men who had seen it all, sometimes twice, gave perspective and challenged his personal beliefs, sometimes just for fun. Eight tables arranged in the typical small town diner configuration, and eight similar conversations going. The picture windows facing Main Street showed it was still dark outside. A lifetime of mornings spent waking before dawn didn’t quit when men retired, or after harvest was done.
To an outsider, none of these quasi-philosophers would seem particularly noteworthy. About the only distinction from table to table was the different hat that each man had on. Seed companies, tractor companies and even chemical companies spent millions of dollars on free giveaways like these hats each year, just hoping some old man would wear their logo to a local coffee shop just like this. Because each one was directly responsible for, or had direct influence on, purchases that totaled in the billions across farm country.