Chayism

= Chayism = Chayism (aka Anti-Equestrian Fascism) is a totalitarian, economically third-positionist, and culturally far-right fascist ideology that opposes the existence of the equine species. It was originally developed by Sam Galindo before he joined the rebel Samist Faction. It is the ideology of the Chayist party, which rose to power in a revolution in Poland during the 1960s.

Chayism was greatly inspired by Nazism, but it, of course, has its differences. Chayists support a totalitarian dictatorship with the goal of forcibly removing and destroying all traces of the equine species (informally known as horses) from their country (Poland) by any means necessary. They believe that a mass execution of all horses in the area will bring forth the Next Evolutionary Stage of Man, a stage of mankind that has made horses extinct, described by Galindo in several publications prior to the rise of the Chayist party.

Chayists despise many ideologies, such as Democracy, Socialism, Samism, and Juanist Theocracy. Dissenters are often labeled "horseist misanthropes" and are known to receive death by firing squad and other public executions.

History
In 1957, the Polish left wing dictator Jakub Blazej instituted a policy named the Human Expropriation for Equine Equality Act (known as the HEA act) that cut funding for Polish doctors and redirected it towards Polish veterinarians in order to ensure better welfare for Polish horses, which were central to the Polish economy at the time. This, alongside the fact that horses were beginning to become unpopular with the public due to various public acts of violence committed by horses against people, began to stoke the flames of a revolution. The Polish Human Worker's Party (later renamed the Chayist party), a militant equinophobic faction, was formed in 1958 by avid human chauvinist and Polish nationalist Chayanne Staton. The HEA act was seen as an act of injustice against the human race; the PHWP saw it as an act of misanthropy and organized public rallies and riots in opposition. Several months later, a known conspiracy theorist who advocated "species realism" by the name of Sam Galindo joined the party. Historians have labeled him as the main philosopher of Chayism, and he composed much of the party's ideology and philosophical theory. Other known members of the PHWP at the time were Sury Camila de Lara Ruvalcaba, Glenn Longos, and Flem.

After several years of creating civil unrest and gathering support with the Polish people, the conditions had been set for a revolution. Following a strange interpretation of Vladimir Lenin's idea of the vanguard party, the PHWP renamed themselves as the Chayist party in honor of Chayanne Staton, the founding member of the party. Since the Chayists saw the horse as a degenerate animal that was not deserving of any rights and/or liberties, they felt that a government that recognized their rights needed to go immediately. On January 6th, 1962, the militant group took up arms and stormed the Capitol Building of Poland, killing the majority of Blazej's weak army. Blazej was forced to flee the country and he was never seen again, although some historians allege that he was last publicly seen in Brownsville, Brooklyn.

After the famous Coup of January 6th, the Chayist Party ushered in a totalitarian and fascist government that was intended to exterminate the degenerate equestrian race once and for all. In 1963, the infamous Equestrian Genocide began. Millions upon millions of horses were murdered by the Chayists; they were sent to killing fields, separated from their families, and brutally tortured by The Staff (not the staff as in the people working there, but a literal bo staff). In the killing fields, the guards did not force the horses to do hard labor - they simply spanked them with a staff until they neighed themselves to death.

In 1964, a year after the Genocide began, there was a split in the party. The theorist Sam Galindo, alongside Sury Ruvalcaba and a few other members of the party, had been exposed to communism and became disenchanted with the anti-equestrian fascism pushed by the Chayist party. Galindo began expounding a form of council communism (Samism) that was specifically pro-equestrian and anti-Chayist and was subsequently expelled from the Party. As soon as he was expelled from the party, a division within the Chayist Army known as the 21st division was specially created by Staton to assassinate Galindo. Shortly after, Galindo fled to the northwest and found himself in Belarus. The Chayist Party, led by Chayanne Staton, carried out the next campaign of their administation: the Anti-Misanthropy Campaign. The Campaign used Galindo as a scapegoat and was intended to purge all signs of perceived "misanthropy", which was a blanket term used by the Party to describe the rebellious and insurgent fervor that was beginning to rise within Chayist Poland.

A few months later, the Samist Faction was formed by Galindo, who was still hiding in Belarus. Led by Ruvalcaba in Poland, the rebel faction began recruiting alienated human civilians (which accounted for most of the Polish people under the regime) to fight against the tyrannical Chayist government. The violence between the Chayists and the Samists led to beginning of the Polish Civil War. The Chayists, headed by Chayanne Staton, Flem, Glenn Longos, Jackie, Ms. Conant, and Mr. Moore, controlled the north of Poland. The Samists, led by Sury Ruvalcaba, Sam Galindo (in Belarus), Nydia, Naomi,