Possible effects of longer-living USCA

What are some of the major effects a longer lived-(not necessarily still existing) United States of Central America have on both its member states and its neighbors? Would any historical events be majorly changed, or might some of the events still occur?

I think I've asked something like this, but not much was generated on it. I really would like to see more talk on this, even if it doesn't actually have the potential to cause major change in history.
 
It would be hard to have Central America stay United. I think eventually it would all turn out like Yugoslavia did......
 

Zeldar155

Banned
It would be hard to have Central America stay United. I think eventually it would all turn out like Yugoslavia did......

Hardly, from my knowledge of Central America isn't the region far more connected linguistically and in religion than the very diverse Yugoslavia?
 
If far larger, and more diverse, Mexico could remain united, then why not the USCA? It actually to surprises me the USCA did not stay unified, for that very reason.
 
I don't see any reason why it couldn't survive. Central America is lingually and religiously very homogenous area so it shouldn't be problem. UCSA could survive if this has stronger central government and army. I don't see any reason why it wouldn't last longer than it lasted.
 
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