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Cali-Texas and big florida fighting the feds over who gets to be the true Heir of Hitler while the northwest has a Maoist Insurgency lol red-sun

    • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      3 months ago

      The only upside to another American civil war is that its capacity for imperialism would be decimated. The entire capitalist world order would fall apart.

      • WayeeCool [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        3 months ago

        The real downside for the rest of the world is without a doubt a second US civil war will result in minimum a few hundred nuclear weapons being detonated. Civil wars are one of the most brutal and nasty forms of warfare where some of the worst crimes against humanity regularly are played out.

        Due to the nature of the US nuclear triad all sides of a second US civil war will end up with hundreds of nuclear warheads. Washington state has the US Navy nuclear weapons for the Pacific and Virginia state has the nuclear weapons for the Atlantic. States in the middle of the nation like Montana and the Dakotas have the ICBM nuclear weapons. California and Nebraska have large numbers of US Air Force nuclear weapons with the rest of the Air Force nuclear weapons being kept at dozens of US Air Force bases around the globe. All of the officially inactive but still functional nuclear warheads, numbering in the thousands, are stored in underground vaults at the PanTex facility in Texas.

        • KoboldKomrade [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          3 months ago

          I was going to say that there could be some theoretical match up that would be unlikely to use nukes… But the only reasonable ones are:

          1. A right wing uprising, in which the CHUDs would nuke the big (where the liberals are to own them) cities as soon as they had the chance.
          2. A left wing uprising, in which the feds would nuke any communist either as soon as they looked like they were losing, or immediately to snub it.
          • WayeeCool [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            And being a civil war where the other side has access nuclear weapons, it will result in nuclear retaliation. When a crime on the scale of nuclear weapon deployment is committed, it has to be responded to with nuclear retaliation against the parties responsible. It’s the problem with weapons like nuclear warheads that can wipe entire cities off the map in an instance, in that instance a million plus innocent people die and create ten million plus grief filled loved ones demanding swift revenge.

            So if the CHUDs nuke the liberal cities, it will result in a nuclear carpet bombing of key rural areas and most of the southern United States. If it is the feds using nukes to put down some kind of successful left-wing uprising, it will result in at minimum Washington DC, Maryland, Virginia, and the Carolinas being wiped off the map in retaliation with a hundred or so nuclear weapons.

        • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          3 months ago

          For the rest of the world, assuming the targets are the former states, the downside is similar to the open air nuclear testing done in the Pacific. There have been over 500 atmospheric nuclear detonations already.

          Not that it’s good, but it is comparable and lesser than the global violence of capitalism.

          • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            downside is similar to the open air nuclear testing done in the Pacific

            no it isn’t. they specifically did it in the pacific because the consequences are different. a nuclear detonation in a major city is kicking up way more dirt & starting fires. there’s enough kindling in the US to cool the entire planet.

            • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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              3 months ago

              Conventional warfare and firebombing has the same risks. The only unique things about nukes is radiation/fallout and the speed with which you can destroy many large targets at once rather than requiring a larger mobilization.

              • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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                3 months ago

                and the speed with which you can destroy many large targets at once rather than requiring a larger mobilization.

                wow the only thing different from conventional weapons are the characteristics that make them non-conventional 🙄. shockingly its actually very different when hundreds of kilometers of shit go up at once than over months and years

                • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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                  3 months ago

                  With how fires work it’s really not different. One firebombing is the same as a several nukes in that regard, which is the (condescending) yet misguided point I’m responding to.

                  • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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                    3 months ago

                    i’m not saying nuclear weapons make special magic fire, i’m telling you a big concentrated fire has different effects on the environment than smaller, spread out (geographically or chronologically) ones. because two processes work the same on a micro level does not mean you can conflate them. campfires over a long enough period might produce the same amount of smoke and particulates as a volcanic eruption, but only one of those is blocking out the sun

          • booty [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            surely a nuclear bomb is a nuclear bomb, i cant imagine that it’s completely impossible to make an alternate way to detonate them. i mean, they can be built in the first place, it’s gotta be much easier to detonate them than to build them

            • WayeeCool [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              3 months ago

              Yeah. Washington DC doesn’t have some magic key that is the only thing that can launch or detonate US nuclear weapons. All the US executive branch has are codes that the nuclear weapons armed crews of the US military use to confirm orders are legitimate. All of those crews are able to launch or detonate their weapons. This is necessary because when the US military goes to a high defcon level, if the US nuclear command and the executive branch become unresponsive, doctrine calls for local commanders to start launching nuclear weapons without orders on the assumption a decapitation strike has been made against the US. Russia and the UK also have similar fail-deadly nuclear doctrines.

            • Tabitha ☢️[she/her]@hexbear.net
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              3 months ago

              I kind of hope, perhaps naively, that because the US military generally does take self-preservation and safety somewhat seriously, especially in terms of the big stuff like nuclear, that the actual steps to targeting US territory and then actually launching the nuke on US territory, would have several “I’m not launching the first nuke on US citizens” types to stand in the way. There’s even already a historical precedent for refusing to launch nukes on US citizens. I’d like to think, in the case of internal political instability, most launch sites and non-national guard bases will focus on keeping civilians away and telling dumbass governors to fuck off.

      • roux [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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        3 months ago

        This is a great point. Regardless of the outcome, a great deal if the global south would more than likely become a power vacuum and the “new” United States wouldn’t have nearly the leverage it did before.

        • AnarchoAnarchist [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          3 months ago

          A generation after the end of the first Civil War the American Empire was sailing ships into Tokyo Bay to force trade concessions, 30 years after the Civil War the American Empire was invading the Philippines and Cuba.

          If anything, American society rebuilding itself around militarism instead of treat acquisition, would result in a new dark age, where the American Empire emboldened by the defeat of its domestic enemies would seek to oppress everyone in its reach.

          • CarmineCatboy2 [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            3 months ago

            The way I see it the singular problem of nuclear weapons is what makes a Second American Civil War unworkable. It would immediately involve half of the world’s armies cooperating with the US Army to secure those nukes.

      • AnarchoAnarchist [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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        3 months ago

        As horrific is the first American Civil War was, the US was flexing its imperial muscle 20 years after hostilities ended.

        A Civil war would only militarize American society, it might weaken the Empire in the short term but very soon the rest of the world would feel the consequences of an American society that had been re-oriented for war instead of treats.

        • Maoo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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          3 months ago

          The US recovered due to the war being short and there being a full Northern victory for reunification, with the north increasing its industrial capacity in the process. Industrial capacity was leveraged to create systems of unequal exchange in America’s new colonies, particularly the Philippines and much of Latin America.

          We live under neoliberal capitalism where industrial capacity is already developed in other countries and they wouldn’t just wait for the US to reunite, if it ever did. They would construct their own systems at the expense of the US order. The empire would be headless and the entire rest of the planet would act accordingly. Sure, the former US would still make weapons, weapons to kill each other with while they blow through stockpiles and can no longer afford imported materials. But the US isn’t going to reindustrialize in five years, it has already lost industrial advantage, it only has financial and military power that would be thrown into internal chaos.

          The rest of the world would reel from the collapse of the US, trying to find footing with the loss of the current order. Financial systems, food systems, energy would all change overnight. They’d build their own alternatives out of necessity and that means building alternate power structures. Everything would get worse (for years) but the balance would change.