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This can't be entirely a coincidence...
That place we can't link to but which hosts a yearly convention of moonbats. | 08/06/2007 | Philistone

Posted on 08/06/2007 12:56:08 PM PDT by Philistone

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To: M Kehoe

Oops. Too used to writing my screen name!

:blush:

Yes, it is mental masturbation, but when it starts to take the same form all over the moonbat web, you have to wonder where the porn originated.


61 posted on 08/06/2007 2:20:24 PM PDT by Philistone (Your existence as a non-believer offends the Prophet(MPBUH).)
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To: Joe 6-pack

I used to own PB, but for an old Apple II I think. It was a fun game. Victoria, by Paradox in Sweden is much more detailed.


62 posted on 08/06/2007 2:46:47 PM PDT by Ingtar (The LDS problem that Romney is facing is not his religion, but his Lacking Decisive Stands.)
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To: Polybius
Without the involvement of the United States, what is now the European Union would today still be under the domination of either the Third Reich or the still existing Soviet Union as the Soviet Union would have otherwise "liberated" all of Western Europe either to the Pyrenees or to the Portuguese Atlantic coast.

I've tried to make that point. You know how hard it is to try to reason with people that think that the latter would have been a good thing?

63 posted on 08/06/2007 2:49:23 PM PDT by Ingtar (The LDS problem that Romney is facing is not his religion, but his Lacking Decisive Stands.)
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To: saganite
I agree with you, it is the Great Depression that has to be seen as the immediate cause of the rise of Hitler and the Nazis in Germany. The crisis led to the hyperinflation that wrecked the German middle class and collapsed popular support for the Wiemar Republic. (Ironically, in the interval between Hitler’s installation as Prime Minister in 1932 and his assumption of full dictatorial powers in 1934 (following Hindenburg’s death and the oh-so-convenient Reichstag fire), the economic reforms instituted by the Wiemar government finally took hold and began to turn the German economy around. But by then it was the Nazis that would get the credit.)

Hitler needs the Depression to make the German middle class sufficiently desperate to try anything to escape the economic and political chaos they were living through. No depression, and a prosperous Germany is unlikely to be susceptible to Hitler’s xenophobic, antisemitic propaganda line. No Hitler, no “Gathering Storm” (as Churchill termed it) in Europe in the late 1930s and 1940s. Germany remains prosperous and eventually pays off the reparations it owes to France and Great Britain. Mussolini finds himself isolated politically in Europe and his overseas adventures are opposed by an effective League of Nations.

However ... does Germany continue to rearm (something it was already doing in secret during the Wiemar Republic) and how does France and the United Kingdom react when it is finally discovered/revealed? How does all of Europe react to the nascient power of the Soviet Union once it gets through the bloody throes of collectivizing and industrializing Soviet society? How does Europe react to the civil war in Spain? Is there even a civil war in Spain? Without Germany and Italy to take some of the diplomatic heat off of it, does Japan eventually yield to international diplomatic pressure and withdraw its forces from China? Does Chang Kai Shek (sp) finish hunting down and killing every last Communist he can get his hands on in China (as he had been before being so rudely interrupted by the Japanese)? Without the growing threat in Asia and Europe, does the United States embark on the most massive military buildup in its history? Even more important, do I get still get to be born if there is no Baby Boom following the non-WWII?

Yeah, you’re right. You can play this game all day and it is fruitless. Better to think about the future and how the "real" past continues to influence it.

64 posted on 08/06/2007 3:10:26 PM PDT by Captain Rhino ( Peace based on respected strength is truly peace; peace based on weakness is ignoble slavery)
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To: Sherman Logan
Once the Soviets recovered from the shock and surprise of Barbarossa

I was talking about WWI where Germany was kicking the crap out of Russia but pulled back to send troops to the western front. If Germany had kept up the pressure Lenin would have never got back to Russia and the there would have been no October Revolution and no Red Army.

If the US had not entered WWII and helped supply the USSR, the USSR would have repulsed Germany but not have been able to finish Germany off.

65 posted on 08/06/2007 5:31:41 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Democrat Happens!)
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To: Mike Darancette
I was talking about WWI where Germany was kicking the crap out of Russia but pulled back to send troops to the western front. If Germany had kept up the pressure Lenin would have never got back to Russia and the there would have been no October Revolution and no Red Army.

Ummm...your history is a bit off there.

The GERMANS SENT Lenin back to Russia. Deliberately. To foment revolt.

The Russians, essentially, surrendered to Germany in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk - they gave up the Ukraine, Western Russia, etc. etc. The fighting Stopped. Then the Germans transferred troops to the Western front for the Spring 1918 offensives.

Without US involvement, the Germans would have won the war. Then the Germans would have eventually outbuilt the Britisn and defeated them at sea, and you likely would have had a long term cold (or hot) war for global domination between Germany and the US.

66 posted on 08/06/2007 6:17:49 PM PDT by Strategerist
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To: pacelvi

If you look at the Spring 1918 German offensives I think without the morale boost of knowing hordes of Americans were on the way, the Germans would have made a decisive breakthrough and won the war. As it was they did make huge gains.


67 posted on 08/06/2007 6:19:15 PM PDT by Strategerist
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To: Strategerist

You’re right about the effect on morale, and the American presence did cause Germany to put their attack window in the spring , knowing that by fall they would have no chance.


68 posted on 08/06/2007 6:24:51 PM PDT by pacelvi (Islam is the acid that will dissolve the nation-state and led to the total breakdown of civilization)
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To: wideawake
The idiot who wrote this is complaining that Germany’s defeat fueled fascism in Germany - why did Italy’s victory fail to stop fascism in Italy?

The Italians didn’t get everything they were promised for entering the war, such as the Austro-Hungarian province of Dalmatia, which was on the eastern coast of the Adriatic, and had belonged to the Republic of Venice. Also they expected to get Albania and parts of the German African and Asian colonies. And they got none of that. So Italy felt shortchanged, hence fascism.

But you’re right, the author is an idiot.

69 posted on 08/06/2007 6:26:35 PM PDT by Cheburashka (It's a _happy_ Russian novel. Everybody still dies, but everybody dies happy.)
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To: Mike Darancette
If the US had not entered WWII and helped supply the USSR, the USSR would have repulsed Germany but not have been able to finish Germany off.

Possible, even if I doubt it.
Britian would have been forced to come to an accommodation without US support. Without the increasing effectiveness of Bomber Command and the 8th Air Force, the Luftwaffe would not have been forced to pull back off of the Eastern Front in 1943, delaying the Red Army's offensive for as much as a year.
I do not see how the most effective aid (heavy trucks) that the US gave the USSR would not have gotten to them even without Lend Lease (would either have been bought on the open market, or given by leftists in US). The biggest wild card is what happens to Vichy France as the Wehrmakt is ground to hamburger in the east and stories of Soviet Atrocities are trumpeted by Germany throughout the non-communist world.

70 posted on 08/06/2007 6:30:29 PM PDT by Fraxinus (My opinion worth what you paid.)
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To: Strategerist

i liked how my WWI book ends:

It was over. The armistice went into effect at eleven A.M. on November 11. Not everyone on the Allied side was pleased. “No no no!” Mangin exclaimed when he learned of the terms. “We must go right into the heart of Germany. The armistice should be signed there. The Germans will not admit that they are beaten. You do not finish wars like this... It is a fatal error and France will pay for it!”


71 posted on 08/06/2007 6:33:41 PM PDT by pacelvi (Islam is the acid that will dissolve the nation-state and led to the total breakdown of civilization)
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To: BenLurkin
The big questions are 1) what would have become of the Bolsheviks (we were going to have to fight them sooner or later) and 2) Would the British Empire have survived.

I don’t have an opinion on what would have happened to the British Empire, but I expect that as soon as the fighting on the Western Front was completed, the Germans would have returned their armies to the Eastern Front and terminated their marriage of convenience with the Bolsheviks with extreme prejudice. Lenin and the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic would be as significant in world history as Robespierre and the National Convention. A nasty, brutish, and mercifully short episode.
72 posted on 08/06/2007 6:37:43 PM PDT by Cheburashka (It's a _happy_ Russian novel. Everybody still dies, but everybody dies happy.)
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To: Mike Darancette

Okay, I get your point. However, there really was no Red Army in existence in 1917/1918, so I assumed you were referring to WWII, when it was very much in existence.


73 posted on 08/06/2007 8:38:32 PM PDT by Sherman Logan (It's not the heat, it's the stupidity.)
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To: Captain Rhino
I agree with you, it is the Great Depression that has to be seen as the immediate cause of the rise of Hitler and the Nazis in Germany. The crisis led to the hyperinflation that wrecked the German middle class and collapsed popular support for the Wiemar Republic.

The hyperinflation peaked in 1923 and the depression started in 1929. The Weimar Republic had its best years in between.

You are correct that the depression led to the rise of Nazism to power, but the depression neither caused nor was caused by the hyperinflation.

(Ironically, in the interval between Hitler’s installation as Prime Minister in 1932 and his assumption of full dictatorial powers in 1934 (following Hindenburg’s death and the oh-so-convenient Reichstag fire), the economic reforms instituted by the Wiemar government finally took hold and began to turn the German economy around. But by then it was the Nazis that would get the credit.)

Hitler became Chancellor on Jan. 30, 1933. The Reichstag fire (which really wasn't planned by the Nazis, though they took full advantage of it) occurred on Feb. 27 of '33, and the Enabling Act giving Hitler dictatorial power was passed on March 23 of '33.

Rather than two years, all these events took place in less than two months.

74 posted on 08/06/2007 8:48:44 PM PDT by Sherman Logan (It's not the heat, it's the stupidity.)
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To: Strategerist
The GERMANS SENT Lenin back to Russia. Deliberately. To foment revolt.

But they didn't feel the need to do so until the USA was definitely entering the war. The October revolution and Treaty of Brest-Litovsk directly followed the return of Lenin and I postulate that this happened because of Germany's well founded worry over the entry of the USA into the war.

75 posted on 08/06/2007 10:15:13 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Democrat Happens!)
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To: Sherman Logan
Okay, I get your point. However, there really was no Red Army in existence in 1917/1918, so I assumed you were referring to WWII, when it was very much in existence.

The Red Army (Russian: Рабоче-Крестьянская Красная Армия, Raboche-Krest'yanskaya Krasnaya Armiya; RKKA, full translation Workers' and Peasants' Red Army) were the armed forces first organized by the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil War in 1918 (Jan. 28) and that, in 1922, became the army of the Soviet Union. -Wikipedia

These were the forces led by Leon Trotsky against the White forces. Had Germany not been defeated in 1918 they would have been in Trotsky's rear as he tried to defeat the White forces.

76 posted on 08/06/2007 10:37:17 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Democrat Happens!)
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To: pacelvi
Germany was spent. It would not have been able to conquer France.

Ludendorff was two days' march from Paris before the US became a factor.

Odds are quite good that he would have been able to take Paris.

Had he done that, all bets are off.

77 posted on 08/07/2007 5:35:12 AM PDT by wideawake (Why is it that so many self-proclaimed "Constitutionalists" know so little about the Constitution?)
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To: wideawake

I’m sure they would have made a mistake which would have caused them to fail in their objective.. just like almost every other offensive had ended the same way.

But who knows.


78 posted on 08/07/2007 5:43:32 AM PDT by pacelvi (Islam is the acid that will dissolve the nation-state and led to the total breakdown of civilization)
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To: Philistone

It’s pretty easy to tell the future 90 years after it’s already taken place.


79 posted on 08/07/2007 5:53:10 AM PDT by Manic_Episode (Some mornings, it's just not worth chewing through the leather straps...)
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To: Philistone
Niall Ferguson has written a lot about First World War counterfactuals. What If? and What If? II are other examples.

You can say it's all nonsense, and the people who indulge in it have a lot of time on their hands to waste, but "What if WWI never happened?" "What if the Germans won the 1914 war?" and "What if the US never entered WWI?" are classic counterfactuals, along with the ever popular "What if the South had won the Civil War?"

My guess is that these are the kind of questions people ask after particularly destructive wars. If it all seems like science fiction, it's very much that as well. The only SF I could stomach as a kid was the historical stuff: time travel and counterfactuals.

80 posted on 08/07/2007 1:20:50 PM PDT by x
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