Oct 24, 2012 20:44:38 GMT -5 |
Post by Evita 'Argentina' Mendez on Oct 24, 2012 20:44:38 GMT -5
EVITA ARGENTINA MENDEZ
{"Don't cry for me Argentina
the truth is, I've never left you
through all my wild days, my mad existence
I've kept my promise, don't keep your distance"}
{"Don't cry for me Argentina
the truth is, I've never left you
through all my wild days, my mad existence
I've kept my promise, don't keep your distance"}
I Feel Like We're Summoning The Devil
Nickname/Alias: Vita, Eva (only well acquainted people tend to call her by nicknames, especially this one)
Gender: female
Character Type: country
Country or Country of Origin: the Argentine Republic
Canon or Original: original
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When I look into all of your stupid faces
I think how fun it will be to pound them into dust
Hair: Dark brown with a natural wave to it.
Height and Weight: 5'10" and 156 lbs
Other Distinguishing Features: Nothing about Evita really stands out except her own personal quirks--for instance, you'll probably catch her in her dancing shoes or with knitting needles in her hair from time to time.
Overall Appearance: Evita thrives on her femininity and, unfortunately, she is the kind of woman who will take hours to get ready to go the the most meager of events. She loves to wear long, breezy dresses and bright colors because they coincide with her liveliness.
Though she is about an average height, Evita is lanky and thin from years of work and hours of dancing. She has been blessed with incredible flexibility that has proven useful in situations other than dancing.
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Man up or I'll beat you with my peace prize!
✓ Knitting
If there is a day Evita spends without yarn and needles in her hands, there is something seriously wrong with her. Knitting is her main pastime: she knits when she’s bored, anxious, worried, angry—it’s pretty much her anti-drug. Whether the rest of the Latin nations like it or not, they should not be shocked if they open their mailbox and find a random scarf or hat or sweater.
✓ Taking Care of People
Evita has always been a mother figure. Even when she was very young, she had to take care of and watch out for her little brothers and has always enjoyed it. Vita has never gotten anything out of raising her brothers except motherly fulfillment; she can never recall being thanked in any way and would never even bring this up. She has always dreamed of having children of her own.
✓ Autumn
Evita is very accustomed to humid summers and cold winters, no matter where she is at the time. But, there’s something about that transitional phase where things are still warm but breezes are cool and leaves are vibrant.
✓ Fútbol
Even though she is probably the most gentle mannered of the Latin nations, Evita is very competitive when it comes to sports. Though it doesn’t last long, she can have quite an outrageous and out of character victory celebration.
✓ Flowers
It is not uncommon for Evita to wear some sort of lily, or any flower, in her hair. She loves collecting, picking and even growing flowers doing all of which makes her feel young again. She has always been the kind of woman to enjoy life’s simplicities and flora is one of the most enjoyable of them all.
✓ Dancing
The next of life’s simplicities she loves to partake in would be music and the self expression of dancing. Evita can be loud and boisterous, like almost all of her other Latin counterparts but, just as she loves to stop and smell the roses, Evita loves the silence and unearthliness of dancing beside someone. She, in fact, is very renown her dancing, having her own style of tango along with many other traditional dances.
✓ Seeing People Smile
If Vita could find some way to make everyone in the world happy, she would do it. She is thankful for her almost contagious grin because nothing seems to establish happiness more than a smile. Behind closed doors, in her own company, Evita can be a very downtrodden woman but she will always put on a smile for those who need it.
✓ Drinking
To a few, it is no secret that Evita is quite the alcoholic. She always knits to take out her worries and frustrations but Vita cannot deny her urge to drink away her sorrows. Evita doesn’t like for people to known that she even has sorrows to drown herself in and therefore likes to hide her alcoholism but that doesn’t stop her from getting caught drunk in public. There have been many years where she let her own birthday slip by due to her being passed out somewhere in her house.
Dislikes:
✗ Conflict
There is no doubt that if the situation calls for it, Vita will stand her ground. But, if any sort of conflict can be avoided at all, she would much prefer to just step away from it completely. Again, she just wants everyone to be lively and happy and can't stand for things to be otherwise.
✗ Dark Moods
See above + people smiling. Really, without everyone else being happy, Evita has to reason to be happy as well and she's afraid that if she gets the chance one day she might break down in tears and embarrass herself.
✗ Missing Things
There have been many years where Evita had missed many important things, some of which include her own birthday--multiple times. It is also not uncommon for someone to find her sprawled out somewhere in her house in a drunken stupor or even unconscious. Luckily the only handful of people who care enough to even celebrate her birthday understand that she just can't help these things. This bothers her like nothing else.
✗ Antonio
Evita can't bring herself to hate anyone but her blood boils every time she sees the man. Even though he has tried his best to settle the differences between the two parties, Evita just won't let it slide. Nothing can keep her from dwelling on him crushing her and her brothers' empire.
✗ American Football
Sorry Alfred, but Evita is one of those nations that is incredibly disdainful about this 'American football' she keeps hearing about. One, it doesn't even involve feet, and two, there's already a sport that's been named that.
Strengths:
✓ Modest
Vita is loud and boisterous and loves to gussy herself up but that doesn't mean she doesn't know when to step back and hang her head with humility.
✓ Humble
See above. This mainly comes from the years of raising her brothers. She's well acquainted with the idea that love is the only thing worth living for and she will not let her desire for fun and youth ruin her modest outlook.
✓ Understanding
Again, motherly instincts. Evita is an empath like you wouldn't believe and will stop and listen to literally anyone's woes, whoever they may be. However, it is not often someone returns the favor and even if they did ask for her to share her sorrows, she more than likely would refuse anyway.
Weaknesses:
✗ Can be Distant
There are times when Evita just can't help but get caught up in her emotions and she will run from anyone and everything and hideout until it is all said and done. This doesn't happen often but she's so cautious she can't help but hide out in her house from time to time.
✗ Pushover
Evita has, through out history, established herself as a powerful and capable woman. But, when it comes to her family and personal matters, people walk all over her. She caters to her brothers every whim without a second thought and will do anything anyone wants if they are close enough to her. She is indeed aware of this but won't make any steps to change this any time soon.
✗ Emotional
See anything above.
Fears:
[-]Her family ignoring her/forgetting about her.
[-]Losing independence.
Secrets:
[-]She's incredibly worrisome.
[-] Alcoholic (I think you're aware of this by now)
Any Quirks/Habits:
[-]She wears flowers in her hair.
[-]Knits and or drinks to cope with certain emotions.
Overall Personality: Evita has established herself among her continent as a happy-go-lucky woman who loves her family, dancing, knitting and a quick sip of tequila here and there. She is pretty much the entity of love and compassion for South America and will take anyone under her wing that needs doing so. Having raised her two brothers, Peru and Chile, Vita has grown up in a motherly position all her life. Having spent much of her early years watching out for her brothers, Vita now has resorted to a loud and boisterous nature to regain a bit of that youth she never had contact with.
Evita is definitely one of the sweetest people you could ever meet and will lend and open ear and a smile to whoever needs it. However, these favors are not often returned for her. She loves her brothers dearly and they both tend to walk all over her or disregard many of her motherly acts and this has led her to a troublesome personal state. Since, she has become very sheltering when it comes to her own emotions and problems, figuring that no one is even interested her own own input on her life.
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I'm the hero!
1438 1438 - 1535: The Inca Empire & Civilisation
1516 Juan Diaz de Solis became the first European to enter Argentina in search of gold. Many of the population of Argentina were killed by the diseases brought over by the Europeans
1580 Buenos Aires was established
1680 The Portuguese established a trading post across the Rio de la Plata from Buenos Aires
1776 Spain encompasses all of its territories in south-east South America to create one large colony called the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata
1812 Jose de San Martin led the Argentinean fight against Spain for Independence
1816 9 July: Argentina officially declared their independence from Spain
1853 Argentina became a republic after adopting a constitution
1859 Buenos Aires refused to become part of the country of Argentina and set up their own independent state but the plan was defeated by General Bartolome Mitre
1916 - Hipolito Yrigoyen of the Radical party is elected president. He introduces a minimum wage to counter the effects of inflation. Yrigoyen is elected again in 1928.
1930 - A coup involving all services of the Argentine armed forces and led by General Uriburu overthrows Yrigoyen. Civilian rule is restored in 1932.
1939 - Outbreak of World War II. Argentina proclaims its neutrality.
1942 - Argentina, along with Chile, refuses to break diplomatic relations with Japan and Germany after the Japanese attack on the US Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbour.
1943 - Military regime seizes power. It is known to favour Japan and Germany. One of its leading figures is Colonel Juan Peron.
1944 - Argentina breaks diplomatic relations with Japan and Germany and declares war on them in 1945.
The Peron era
1946 - Peron wins elections for the presidency. He had promised workers higher wages and social security. His wife, Eva Peron - 'Evita' - is put in charge of labour relations.
1949 - A new constitution strengthens the power of the president. Congress - dominated by Peron's supporters - passes legislation providing jail terms for anyone showing disrespect for the government. Regime opponents are subsequently imprisoned, independent newspapers are suppressed.
1951 - Peron is re-elected president with a huge majority.
1952 - Peron's wife dies of cancer. Peron's support begins to decline.
1955 June - An attempted coup by the Argentine navy is crushed as the army remains loyal to Peron.
1955 September - Coup by all three branches of the armed forces succeeds after three days of fighting, during which thousands are killed. Peron resigns and takes refuge on a Paraguayan gunboat. He subsequently goes into exile in Paraguay, and later in Spain. The federal constitution of 1853, based on that of the United States, is restored.
1966 - Military rule is imposed again with a coup led by General Juan Carlos Ongania.
The return of Peron
1973 - The Peronist party wins elections in March. Hector Campora is inaugurated president. Argentina is wracked by terrorist violence. Peron returns to Buenos Aires in June. Campora resigns and Peron becomes president in September.
1974 - Peron dies in July. His third wife, Isabel, succeeds him. Terrorism from right and left escalates, leaving hundreds dead. There are strikes, demonstrations and high inflation.
1975 - Inflation rises to more than 300%.
1976 - A military junta under General Jorge Videla seizes power. Parliament is dissolved. Opponents of the regime are rounded up in the 'Dirty War', which is to see thousands of people 'disappear'.
1981 - General Leopoldo Galtieri heads the military regime.
1982 April - Argentine forces occupy the British-held Falkland Islands, which Argentina calls Islas Malvinas and over which it had long claimed sovereignty. The United Kingdom dispatches a force to re-take the islands, which it does in June. More than 700 Argentines are killed in the fighting. Galtieri is replaced by General Reynaldo Bignone.
2 April 1982: Galtieri announces invasion
1983 - Argentina returns to civilian rule. Raul Alfonsin becomes president. Argentina begins to investigate the 'Dirty War' and charge former military leaders with human rights abuses. Inflation is running at more than 900%.
1989 - Carlos Menem of the Peronist party is elected president. He imposes an economic austerity programme.
1990 - Full diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom are restored, with Argentina still maintaining its claim to the Falklands.
1992 - Argentina introduces a new currency, the peso, which is pegged to the US dollar. A bomb is placed in the Israeli embassy, 29 people are killed.
1994 - A Jewish community centre in Buenos Aires is bombed. 86 people are killed and more than 200 injured.
1995 - Menem is re-elected.
1996 - Finance Minister Domingo Cavallo is dismissed. Economic hardship leads to a general strike in September.
1997 - A judge in Spain issues orders for the arrest of former Argentine military officers on charges of participating in the kidnapping and killing of Spanish citizens during the 'Dirty War'. Argentine amnesty laws protect the accused.
Recession bites
1998 - Argentine judges order arrests in connection with the abduction of hundreds of babies from women detained during the 'Dirty War'.
Recession starts.
1999 - Fernando de la Rua of the centre-left Alianza opposition coalition wins the presidency, inherits 114 billion-dollar public debt.
2000 - Strikes and fuel tax protests. Beef exports slump after an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease. Soya exports suffer from concerns over the use of genetically modified varieties. The IMF grants Argentina an aid package of nearly 40 billion dollars.
2001 February - Argentina recalls its ambassador to Cuba after President Castro accuses Argentina of 'licking the yankee boot'. Castro made the remarks in an apparent reference to Argentina's support for US condemnation of Cuba's record on human rights.
Argentina and the United Kingdom agree that Argentine private aircraft and vessels may now visit the Falkland Islands again.
2001 March - President de la Rua forms a government of national unity and appoints three finance ministers in as many weeks as cabinet resignations and protests greet planned austerity measures.
2001 July - Former president Carlos Menem is charged with heading an 'illicit organisation' that violated international arms embargoes against Croatia and Ecuador in the early 1990s. A court throws out all arms trafficking charges against Menem, freeing him after five months of house arrest.
2001 July - Much of the country is brought to a standstill by a general strike in protest against proposed government spending cuts. Country's credit ratings slip.
Return of the Peronists
2001 October - The opposition Peronists take control of both houses of parliament in Congressional elections.
July 2002: "Day of Rage" protests
2001 November - President de la Rua meets US President George W Bush in a last-ditch attempt to avoid an economic crash in Argentina. Share prices reach record lows.
2001 December - Economy Minister Cavallo announces sweeping restrictions to halt an exodus of bank deposits. The IMF stops $1.3bn in aid.
2001 13 December - A 24-hour general strike is held in protest at curbs on bank withdrawals, delayed pension payouts and other measures.
2001 20 December - President Fernando de la Rua resigns after at least 25 people die in street protests and rioting.
2001 23 December - Adolfo Rodriguez Saa named new interim president. He resigns on 30 December, citing a lack of support within his party.
2002 1 January - Congress elects Peronist Senator Eduardo Duhalde as caretaker president. Within days the government devalues the peso, ending 10 years of parity with the US dollar.
2002 April - Banking and foreign exchange activity suspended; Duhalde says the financial system could collapse.
2002 June - Two killed in anti-government and IMF protests in Buenos Aires. The protesters, known as 'piqueteros', are highly organised groups of unemployed who block the main road bridges into the capital.
2002 July - Duhalde calls early elections for March 2003, later put back to April, to try win public support for the government's handling of the economic crisis.
2002 November - Argentina defaults on an $800m debt repayment to the World Bank, having failed to re-secure IMF aid. The World Bank says it will not consider new loans for the country.
Kirchner sworn in
2003 May - Nestor Kirchner sworn in as president. Former President Carlos Menem gained most votes in first round of elections but pulled out before second round.
August - Congress, Senate vote to scrap laws protecting former military officers from prosecution over human rights abuses during military regime.
2003 September - After weeks of negotiations Argentina and IMF agree on debt-refinancing deal under which Buenos Aires will only pay interest on its loans.
2004 April - Judge issues international arrest warrant for former President Carlos Menem, over allegations of fraud.
2004 September - Court clears five men accused of involvement in 1994 bombing of Jewish centre in Buenos Aires.
2004 December - Former President Carlos Menem returns from self-imposed exile in Chile after two arrest warrants are cancelled.
188 people are killed and around 700 are injured in a fire at a Buenos Aires nightclub.
2005 March - President Kirchner declares the restructuring of the country's debt to be a success. Argentina offered to exchange more than $100bn in defaulted bonds.
2006: River row divides former friends
2005 June - Supreme Court scraps an amnesty law protecting former military officers suspected of human rights abuses during military rule between 1976 and 1983.
2005 November - Argentina hosts the 34-nation Summit of the Americas, an event accompanied by sometimes-violent protests against free trade and US President Bush.
2006 January - Argentina repays its multi-billion-dollar debt to the IMF.
2006 May - Citing environmental concerns, Argentina files a complaint against the construction of two pulp mills in neighbouring Uruguay at the International Court of Justice in The Hague. The court rules in July that the project can continue.
2006 October - Violence mars the reburial of former President Juan Domingo Peron at a new mausoleum outside Buenos Aires.
2007 January - Spanish police arrest former President Isabel Peron in connection with an Argentine investigation into the activities of right-wing paramilitaries in the 1970s.
Fernandez elected
2007 October - Former Roman Catholic police chaplain Christian Von Wernich is convicted of collaborating in the murder and torture of prisoners during the 'Dirty War'.
Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner is elected president, succeeding her husband Nestor Kirchner in the post.
2007 December - Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner sworn in as president.
2008 April - A Spanish court rejects a request from Buenos Aires to extradite former Argentine president Isabel Peron, wanted for alleged human rights abuses.
2008 July - President Fernandez cancels controversial tax increases on agricultural exports which sparked months of protests by farmers.
2008 August - Two former generals are sentenced to life imprisonment for their actions during the period of Argentina's military rule - known as the Dirty War - during the 1970s and 1980s.
2008 November - Lower house of parliament approves government's controversial plan to nationalise pension funds. President Fernandez says the move is necessary to protect pensioners' assets during the global financial crisis.
2009 January - Government declares state of emergency over worst drought in decades.
2009 February - Farmers threaten to halt livestock and grain sales in protest at agricultural export taxes.
2009 July - Legislative elections result in President Fernandez's Peronist party losing its absolute majorities in both houses of parliament.
2009 April - Argentina hands documents to UN formally laying claim to a vast expanse of the ocean, as far as the Antarctic and including island chains governed by Britain.
2009 March - Britain rejects calls from Argentina for talks over the future sovereignty of the Falkland Islands.
2009 December - Argentine parliament passes law claiming Falkland Islands and several other British overseas territories in the area.
2010 February - Argentina imposes new controls on ships passing through its waters to Falkland Islands in response to plans by a British company to drill for oil near the islands.
2010 July - Argentina becomes first country in Latin America to legalise same-sex marriage.
2010 October - Ex-President Nestor Kirchner, the president's husband and predecessor, dies. He was seen as a key presidential contender for 2011.
2010 December - Exploration firm says it fails to find oil at Falkland Islands.
Former military ruler General Jorge Videla is sentenced to life in prison for crimes against humanity.
2011 October - Benefiting from strong economic growth, President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner wins a second term with a landslide 54% of the vote.
Former naval officer Alfredo Astiz and 11 other former members of the security forces are given life sentences for crimes against humanity committed during the 1976-83 period of military rule.
2011 December - As the 30th anniversary of Argentina's invasion of the Falkland Islands approaches, tensions with Britain increase after Buenos Aires persuades members of the South American trading bloc Mercosur to close their ports to ships flying the Falkland Islands flag.
2012 February - Argentina makes an official complaint to the UN that Britain is "militarising" the area around the Falkland Islands after the UK announces that it is sending one of its newest destroyers to the region. Argentina also accuses Britain of sending a nuclear-armed submarine to the area. British officials discuss the accusations as "absurd".
2012 May - The European Union files a suit against Argentina's import restrictions at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in a row over Argentina's nationalisation of energy company YPF, which was majority owned by Spain's Repsol.
2012 July - Former military rulers Jorge Videla and Reynaldo Bignone are sentenced to long prison terms for overseeing the theft of babies from political prisoners during military rule in 1976-1983. They are both already serving long terms for other crimes during their rule.
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You've got it backwards! Backwards!
Hurry up and throw it! If you don't hurry up and throw it, you'll go "boom"!
yeah, just see ak for this shiz
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I Summon thee from far away lands, come forth!
You called?
Timezone: Central
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