From the old place:
Discuss the "What If's" of historical events.
Discuss the "What If's" of historical events.
skankhunt42 wrote:I'll bite. What if Hillary Clinton wins the 2016 election. How different were the last few weeks of our lives.
I'm not trying to be facetious, seriously, what is happening?
I should have been more clear. What if Hillary Clinton was our President-Elect. Where are we now, and where are we going.Heraclius wrote:skankhunt42 wrote:I'll bite. What if Hillary Clinton wins the 2016 election. How different were the last few weeks of our lives.
I'm not trying to be facetious, seriously, what is happening?
Does she win both popular and electoral votes? Then nothing really happens. Some protests that don't get much news coverage probably. There will be a lot of discussions about how this is a triumph for women and how Clinton will be a model for generations.
If she wins electoral but not popular; that would be where things get interesting.
I take it back further than that. What if the Prince of Bavaria had done like he was supposed to, and not attacked, driving the French into retreat before the German Army had them cut off from behind. The war ends in 1914.Heraclius wrote:There's always the question:
Would the world have been better off with a WW1 that was won by Germany?
The time period of the war victory would likely be some time around the 1917s after the Russians have surrendered, the French military deciding to mutiny at the additional divisions being sent their way, and the Germans never engaging in unrestricted submarine warfare/sending the Zimmerman telegram.
GrumpyCatFace wrote:Dumb slut partied too hard and woke up in a weird house. Ran out the door, weeping for her failed life choices, concerned townsfolk notes her appearance and alerted the fuzz.
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I don't know, I'd personally see a German WW1 victory as significantly more chaotic. The Austrian-Hungarian Empire was on its' last legs and with the death of Joseph there was nothing really holding the Austrians together. The German Empire is going to try and keep the Austrians in power as I really doubt they're the type to support self-determination. This means a pre-war period where the Hungarians and other minorities in the empire are going to be fighting a bloody conflict against the Germans and Austrians.katarn wrote:For WWI:
So many things change... the US still becomes a major power, but never a superpower. I think the world (by the 30s or so) ends up with a few powers, just like before the war:
The German Empire, with swathes of old France and area, probably taking all of Belgium if France fully mutinees. They don't invade Britain, at least not for a long time in some WWI-like conflict, but reduce its economic hegemony.
With Germany winning, not sure how that effects rise of Bolshevism and formation of Soviet Union (a bit weak there personally), so maybe Russia/Soviet Union. Whichever one would probably keep it a power, especially with the track of industrialization they start on foreseeably no matter the war's outcome. With France out of the picture, Northern Italy possibly gets swallowed too, but the Germans might just settle for ending things by this point.
The USA- mostly a regional and hemispheric player that isn't motivated to leave isolationism as a habit and is largely safe because of being on another continent.
Technology certainly develops differently, and its possible ideology like Nazism never gains popularity in Europe without the economic conditions of the Germans being so poor, although a reparation-levied France might be fodder for those ideals. Perhaps we don't get computers at all/ for a lot longer, since the 'father' of computers is often considered to be Alan Turing and his Enigma code-breaking machine.
WW1 and WW2? Yes.AndrewBennett wrote:I'm of the mind that WWI is still recent enough that we aren't able to truly even grasp how different the world would have been if Germany had won. We're still dealing with and feeling the ramifications of that war.
I also think that in a couple hundred years WWI and WWII as well as the Cold War will be lumped into a single conflict by future historians