Cunctator, that is the most widely accepted definition of a micronation, yes. They're
also referred to as "fifth world nations". I'll bow out now. Thank you all
for giving this some thought.
Kind regards,
Adrian
Message du 08/12/03 14:22
De : The Cunctator
A : English Wikipedia
Copie à :
Objet : Micronation (was Re: [WikiEN-l] Question)
On 12/8/03 7:06 AM, "sannse" wrote: > Jake wrote: > >> I find
people's use of "Micronation", especially as in the [[Micronation]] >>
article, terribly inconsistent- the only way I've ever seen it used > outside
>> of Wikipedia (Note the "I've seen", don't list Google results
of other > uses, >> I'm sure they exist) is to refer to very small nations
that actually exist >> and have some degree of legal recognition (even if it's
just that they're >> islands outside any other nation's territory):
[[Sealand]], North Dumpling >> (Dean Kamen's island, near Long Island- has a
non-aggression pact with the >> US signed by then-President George H.W. Bush), and
several dozen others. >> However, many people seem to use the term to describe
entirely fictional >> entities with no territory. I would simply call these
"Fantasy nations", >> "Imaginary nations", or something like
that, as the prefix micro- makes no >> sense in that context. >> >> --
Jake > > The [[micronations]] article makes a distinction between
"micronations" and > "microstates", but I've no idea if this is
a common way of using the words. > I've never come across the concept before this,
so am probably using it > wrong. The main promoter in print of the term
"micronation" to refer to small nation-like groups without official recognition
is this Wired Magazine article from March 2000:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/8.03/kingdoms.html Until a more precise term comes
along, one might as well call Talossa a micronation. Micronations, also known as
counternations and ephemeral states, consist of one or more people united by the desire to
form and/or inhabit an independent country of their own making. All micronations have
governments, laws, and customs; the main distinguishing factor is whether their citizens
want to establish a physical home country and seek international recognition, or whether,
as is the case with Talossa, they're happy just to pretend.
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