Hans got onto the tram and headed to work. It was a grey morning, rain was almost guaranteed and everyone was talking about how this would be bad for the great launch. Hans just sighed and thought: "Morning Karl" as they passed the great statue of Marx. It really made the Brandenburg Gate behind it look small. You had no change to miss that Germany was a socialist country, there were posters and statues of Marx everywhere.
When Hans was younger his grandparents were open anti-socialists and often had arguments with his parents who were veterans of the revolution. Therefore, Hans didn't have a close connection with his grandparents and was a hardline socialist. They used to have the Manifesto at home and at school. He really hated it at some point, but he grew to it. It just becomes party of your life at that point. Seeing all the statues and posters of Marx everywhere made him seem more of a second father. A father that would unite the workers of the world.
In the Reichstag he sat down behind his desk and went to work. He didn't have that important of a job, he was to write down all meetings of the conference of the lower proletariat, the national assembly of the government. But there haven't been a conference in a week so most of Hans his job was working out everything he wrote down in a story suitable for the higher ups in the party. And through them the information would get spread to all in the government who would need it. Hans never met a lot of higher party members but the ones he did met he liked more then others. They seemed more professional and intellectual so he tried to spent as much time with them as possible.
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L'Empereur du Monde: La Revolution - An Alternative History Story
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