//Future_Total:A-AD1974
estado-marxista-de-la-hente-de-los-andes
 The EMA may have been created as the answer to revolutionary marxist social forces, but in fact it represents a unique form of statecraft. The Torneo officially traces its origins to the Warsaw School, also called Heuristic School of Marxism, although this is controversial, as the term Projective Tournament appears in print two years earlier than the Maichingen's arrival in Warsaw as a transcript of a series of lectures, Niepewność, by resident Warsaw mathematicians, statisticians and economists. During and after the Exodus many of these mathematicians worked as consultants in the finance houses of Beyruth, where they refined their notion of a Bobrowski score (which is only slightly different from the Maichingen's Angle of Envelope). Among Lebanese financiers, the term Big Bobrowski is used to this day to refer to someone with poor projective record. It is unclear wether Maichingen's account of inspiration by the Ombu sapling is apocryphal or coincidental. The Torneo allows any EMA citizen to submit projections for scoring. In principle this means anyone who scores well enough can participate in the legislature, although in practice the formal submission process requires some training. The legislature works essentially the same as a parliament would, except that members are required to submit a projection of the outcome of their proposals and, and the proposals they vote on, these projections effect their Envelope. Those with good half, 2 and 5 year projection records are given the chance to pen a law, which must still pass a vote in the legislature by other high scoring projectors, and of course the lawmaker themself must submit a prediction suite for their own laws. In this way the outcome of any law is directly reflected in the envelopes of its writer and all who voted on it.