WI: Standard German dialect replaced with PA Dutch after WWII?

OTL First off, Alsace and Lorraine are not unilingual. Half the residents speak two or three languages. When I used to teach in Strasbourg, many of the locals spoke English to me. When I tried to converse in French, some shifted to German. Was my French really that bad back then??????
Personally, I prefer the Swiss dialects of French and German because they are pronounced far more clearly than regional dialects.

OTL Radio Free Europe did a great job of popularizing American rock and roll music in Europe.

WI Amish and Mennonite consciensous objectors were conscripted into the US Army and assigned to Radio Free Europe?
 
PA Dutch is, in essence, an Americanized/Anglicized 18th century Southwest German dialect.

What if the occupying Americans decided that it would be good to impose this Americanized language upon the defeated Germany in 1945?
The Netherlands actually wanted to annex larger parts of Western Germany. No PA Dutch but Dutch nevertheless.
 
OTL First off, Alsace and Lorraine are not unilingual. Half the residents speak two or three languages. When I used to teach in Strasbourg, many of the locals spoke English to me. When I tried to converse in French, some shifted to German. Was my French really that bad back then??????
Personally, I prefer the Swiss dialects of French and German because they are pronounced far more clearly than regional dialects.

OTL Radio Free Europe did a great job of popularizing American rock and roll music in Europe.

WI Amish and Mennonite consciensous objectors were conscripted into the US Army and assigned to Radio Free Europe?

My Mennonite great Aunt was a nurse during the war.
 
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