A 2025 Retrospective.
-
wrote on 2 Dec 2020, 19:59 last edited by
Declaration of UACo Independence in December 2020
Not a lot of time left, then.
-
wrote on 2 Dec 2020, 20:15 last edited by
Ah, so he's six weeks off...
-
wrote on 2 Dec 2020, 22:29 last edited by
He makes a good point here, Jolly, doncha think?
As Lincoln had long insisted, the controversy that brought on the Civil War was the question of whether slavery was right or wrong. The seceding states took a stand for its rightness, and the Union states took a stand for its wrongness.
-
wrote on 2 Dec 2020, 22:55 last edited by Doctor Phibes 12 Feb 2020, 22:56
I tell you what, if the same crack team organizes the secession as organized the lawsuits, you're going to be drinking your own urine before Easter.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 01:34 last edited by
I've seen the scenario war gamed out multiple times...Unless the American military can be talked into the wanton, wholesale killing of rural Americans, the cities will not last 12 months.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 01:46 last edited by
Personally, I prefer fantasizing that I'm B J Blazkowicz. Killing Nazis is way more fun than killing Americans.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 01:58 last edited by
I wouldn't mind it if California and the New England area got kicked out.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 02:34 last edited by
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 03:05 last edited by Doctor Phibes 12 Mar 2020, 03:06
@Larry said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
I wouldn't mind it if California and the New England area got kicked out.
You'd probably want to lose New York too, if it wasn't the birthplace of the Great Man.
-
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 12:03 last edited by@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
-
@Larry said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
I wouldn't mind it if California and the New England area got kicked out.
You'd probably want to lose New York too, if it wasn't the birthplace of the Great Man.
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 12:04 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@Larry said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
I wouldn't mind it if California and the New England area got kicked out.
You'd probably want to lose New York too, if it wasn't the birthplace of the Great Man.
Sacrifices must be made.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 12:12 last edited by
The idea that New England doesn't contribute significantly to the success of the US as a whole is a pretty foolish one.
-
The idea that New England doesn't contribute significantly to the success of the US as a whole is a pretty foolish one.
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 12:15 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
The idea that New England doesn't contribute significantly to the success of the US as a whole is a pretty foolish one.
Didn't say that.
Read the scenario again.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 12:22 last edited by
I realise that's not what the scenario says.
"Tom Trenchard is an American professor"
I wonder what he's a professor of. I'm guessing it's not history.
-
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 14:01 last edited by@Jolly said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
I am sure they is true, but I think it is also true that independent rural US + independent city US is much less than the two combined as one actual country.
-
@Jolly said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
I am sure they is true, but I think it is also true that independent rural US + independent city US is much less than the two combined as one actual country.
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 14:03 last edited by@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@Jolly said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
I am sure they is true, but I think it is also true that independent rural US + independent city US is much less than the two combined as one actual country.
But the question is which one can do without the other?
-
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@Jolly said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
@taiwan_girl said in A 2025 Retrospective.:
Kind of fun "what if " article, but that is all it is.
Each part of the US contributes to the success of the US, and without each other, the rurals and the cities would not be able to survive.
Not really.
There's more industrial capacity than you might think in smaller cities and towns, far away from the coasts. And a lot depends on how the more rural areas of California .
I am sure they is true, but I think it is also true that independent rural US + independent city US is much less than the two combined as one actual country.
But the question is which one can do without the other?
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 14:15 last edited by@Jolly Neither.
-
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 14:17 last edited by
Most of the wealth and substantially all of the creativity is in the blue areas.
The red have farms and natural resources.
We become Singapore on steroids. United counties becomes..... Kazakhstan?
-
@Jolly Neither.
wrote on 3 Dec 2020, 14:33 last edited by