The Rebel Flag | A Modern Confederate Timeline

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August 2022 Edit: Going to redo this later, just don't enjoy how it came out!
Axis China?
 
Presidents of the CSA - Part 1
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* Douglas Wilder is one of, if not the most, controversial of our Presidents. During the Constitutionalist domination of the 90s and early 2000s the election of 1999 was thought to be an easier task than it really was, Clinton was a very popular man at the time and finding a worthy successor was difficult as the guy Clinton backed was Wilder. Wilder was the last person anyone would've chosen, racially and politically he was not seen favorably but Clinton was adamant about it famously saying; "It will change us for the better." The Constitutionalists had to pull every trick, give every favor, and practically bend over backwards for even the slimmest chance to get Douglas Wilder elected to office, though while they did succeed in a narrow victory historians site this as the end of their dominance in Confederate politics.
 
Presidents of the CSA - Part 2
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* The death of Strom Thurmond is seen as the tipping point for Confederate politics. Despite his death happening as he was about to leave office, the effects it had on the political scene boosted the popularity of the militant, and sometimes seen as semi-fascistic, Dixie Dignity Party. The Dixie Party was quick to point at the African American community as the blame for his death, as well as saying that the Confederacy lost its way. They are responsible for having a racial separation till 1988, the crackdown on Cuban nationalism, involvement in Belgian Congo, and the funding of local state and town militias. Its's theorized that if Thurmond lived on that the party would remain a rather small force throughout the 50s and 60s or even have died off, some 'Alternative History' Media outlets posited that if Thurmond survived Segregation could've ended earlier than '88!
 
Sounds like the death of Thurmond created a cloud of pure racism...
Yeah, the CSA after WWII was somehow worse than before and during the war. Even their chance of progress was cut short as Coverdell, the man only really known for officially ending segregation, was killed before he really could do anything else... and this has followed the CSA into the 2000s and effecting the war.
 
Yeah, the CSA after WWII was somehow worse than before and during the war. Even their chance of progress was cut short as Coverdell, the man only really known for officially ending segregation, was killed before he really could do anything else... and this has followed the CSA into the 2000s and effecting the war.
Was Coverdell assassinated because he ended segregation, per chance?
 
Ngl what is the status of black confederates in the CSA? Are they generally supportive of the current war effort or ambivalent?
While the war has given them work in production and manufacturing, the fact is that they are still poorer than any other race. The domination of the Dixie Party stunted a lot of progress for race relations, basically 20 years that could've been used for a possible civil rights and progressive movement was snuffed out before it took hold.

I guess it depends really, I'd imagine many would be pretty Pro-America, seeing how the nation is stereotyped to be a Progressive Liberal Commie state in Connie media.
 
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