User:Stephenfisher2001/sandbox/1950s worldwide

The Mid-Century Modern Nations (MCMN) was a nationwide megacorporation company design movement in interior, product, graphic design, architecture, and urban development that opened on October 24, 1945, the same day as the United Nations established and went effect, and it went popular from 1945 and it was disbanded on December 1, 1975, due to the rise of the huge modern 1970s culture, during the United States's post–World War II period. The term was used descriptively as early as the mid-1950s and was defined as a design movement by Cara Greenberg in her 1984 book Mid-Century Modern: Furniture of the 1950s. It is now recognized by scholars and museums worldwide as a significant design movement. The MCM design aesthetic is modern in style and construction, aligned with the Modernism movement of the period.

History
The corporation established in 1945, just over a few days after the Second World War ended, and it starts off with future 1950-60s futuristic furniture, vehicles like cars, trucks, semi-trucks, boats, planes, clothes, homes, stores, gas stations, aerospace, agriculture, construction, consumer goods, corporate grooming, earth transport, electronics, energy, engineering, finance, food services, fusion research, government, hydro-power, infrastructures, inventions, media, medical science, mortgage loans, pet care, pharmaceuticals, psychotherapies, ports and harbors, real estates, repairs, retail, science/health, space, storage, supercenters, super grids, travel services, utilities, and watermills.

The Mid-Century Modern Nations continued to expand its efforts for control so much that by the year 1963, with over 950 million futuristic stuff were built throughout Americas, Europe, some Asian countries, Oceania, and especially, Australia, however, due to the rise of the huge modern 1970s culture in the early 1970s, and it faded and the company was shut down on December 1, 1975, leaving a total of 1,340.000,000 billion futuristic stuff were built.