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  1. Dan1988

    What would a Communist Britain name things?

    Well, all of the exotic names all have a clear English translation in "council", so "All power to the Councils" can fit. What matters more, to me, is absolutely simple - will it remain a monarchy or not? If a monarchy, then there would be some continuity with the existing regime (so a lot of...
  2. Dan1988

    Was it possible for Portugal's monarchy to be restored in 1968 if Salazar died then itself?

    Well, it's not like Salazar could have tried - made all the more easier by the fact that there was one main pretender to the throne (Duarte Nuno) and all the other claimants (sorry, Brazilian Braganzas) were largely marginal to begin with. However, by that point, things had changed so that if...
  3. Dan1988

    AHC: Make Russian an accepted part of the west.

    Be that it may, at least to me it certainly shows potential - at least for TTL purposes - to be far more than it became IOTL, hence not a dead end. Having at least one part of the Russia-as-cultural-region that is not autocratic by default, as Novgorod was, is a great start to having at least...
  4. Dan1988

    AHC: Make Russian an accepted part of the west.

    My thinking is basically what if, instead of a single entity that called itself Russia, three was instead a continuation of the preceding situation, albeit a bit more consolidated, where there was more than one principality (or, in Novgorod's case, republic) that covered that same space without...
  5. Dan1988

    AHC: Make Russian an accepted part of the west.

    Even if that was the case, certainly an independent surviving Novgorod Republic would have made a difference and helped shore up its connections with the European world - particularly since (as far as I'm aware) it was never subject to Mongol rule.
  6. Dan1988

    AHC: Make Russian an accepted part of the west.

    Just wondering, as a thought exercise - while it was important to defeat the Mongols and end their occupation of what would ultimately become Russia, part of me wonders what would happen if, say, the Novgorod Republic was still alive and kicking (which would probably necessitate a somewhat more...
  7. Dan1988

    How could've Trotsky took power?

    The one thing underlying all those options and how they would dictate how Trotsky governs the Soviet Union is path dependency and whether the Communists try to break that or find it comfortable. Many of the USSR's leaders grew up under an autocratic system until 1917, hence having little...
  8. Dan1988

    Musings on Britain holding New England during the American Revolution.

    Honestly, for me, to pull that off means having a pre-Revolutionary POD more Puritan immigration to (most of) the other 13 colonies rather than just Massachusetts (including Maine as the Massachusetts Bay Colony held that at the time) and Connecticut. One of the reasons why the Revolution...
  9. Dan1988

    The United States with a British Deep South

    The anti-slavery lobby in Britain was still a thing; it could be delayed from OTL, but at some point it was going to happen as a compromise between the slaveholding interests and the anti-slavery lobby. Of course, what made the difference was that a lot of the Caribbean colonies based their...
  10. Dan1988

    The United States with a British Deep South

    Except that similar sentiments were not unusual throughout the Anglophone Caribbean - hence compensation plus a six-year period of apprenticeship for the ex-slaves as the price for abolition, so it's a gradual process that doesn't change much in terms of the social structure, as racialist and...
  11. Dan1988

    The United States with a British Deep South

    Well, at least we know which areas will be going on a hybrid South Africa + generic LatAm historical trajectory. But since the 13 in general had overwhemlingly become prosperous through the slave trade (how else did that cotton make it to New England's textile mills?), one has to temper it with...
  12. Dan1988

    British Motor Industry plausibility check

    Just a minor quibble- Morris bought Riley in 1934, not any time prior in the 1920s.
  13. Dan1988

    US tries to win the Cold War with kindness?

    If we're going for a kinder US during the Cold War, the GMD is a big obstacle here due to Jiang 's authoritarian rule of both the party and state, so it would prefer to seek alternatives here. The main way I could see the US back the GMD early on is if somehow it and not the Soviet Union was...
  14. Dan1988

    British Leyland insanity options 1968-86

    Sure. There's, of course, possibility for designers to freelance around if need be - for example, IOTL, the design of the Marina was in part due to a Ford designer who was quickly brought on by BL management to do a quick fix, hence the strong similarities with other contemporary Ford products...
  15. Dan1988

    British Leyland insanity options 1968-86

    ^ @Giant Man Eating Rabbits : Keeping in mind, of course, that not all of the models in the Austin stable would have to exactly follow Vauxhall's development and exact naming. One example that comes to bat for me would be the Kadett A/Mk1 Viva - which is actually contemporary with the OTL BMC...
  16. Dan1988

    British Leyland insanity options 1968-86

    By that point, Bantam got out of building vehicles altogether and was more focused on building trailers and the like, so that might not work out. In any case, if GM purchased Austin as originally planned, then American Austin would not be necessary as that niche would have already been covered...
  17. Dan1988

    What if motorized transportation was severely restricted?

    The problem with the premise laid out in the OP, as far as North America is concerned, is that is buts up against the resentment many Americans and Canadians felt towards the railway companies, the epitome of all that was wrong with capitalism (even though it was those same railways, through the...
  18. Dan1988

    British Leyland insanity options 1968-86

    Hmm, another thought - when watching Ruaridh MacVeigh's first video on BMC history, he makes a passing mention of Morris' purchase of Wolseley in 1927 - which, IIRC from Graham Robson's book, was bitterly contested between Austin and Morris Motors (geez, I wonder why? :rolleyes: ). Had GM -...
  19. Dan1988

    British Leyland insanity options 1968-86

    It was Austin, not Morris/Nuffield, that GM was thinking about purchasing instead of Vauxhall, primarily because of Austin's #2 position in the British automobile industry at the time (due to the popularity of the Seven). Already with a GM/Austin tie-up, I can see one immediate butterfly -...
  20. Dan1988

    The Cyrillic script and Brest-Litovsk's finer consequences

    Yaryzhka proper was actually more or less limited to the period between 1876 and 1905, as beforehand variations of it were used that used a lot of diacritics to mark where there were differences in pronunciation - and ultimately stems back to an earlier Church Slavonic orthography from a few...
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