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- Nov 30, 2022
It works for me, but I keep getting warnings about unsafe connections. Maybe Ian has forgotten to update his security and your browser is refusing to expose you.
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Could be. Thing is, the forums were down too long for this actually be the case. Tested it with multiple browsers, tor, etc. I suspect some broken/old hardware and/or the software itself.It works for me, but I keep getting warnings about unsafe connections. Maybe Ian has forgotten to update his security and your browser is refusing to expose you.
My browser says the certificate is valid and is from 16 November.It works for me, but I keep getting warnings about unsafe connections. Maybe Ian has forgotten to update his security and your browser is refusing to expose you.
Seems that Ian finally got his slaves to fix itWebsite seems to be working well for me at the moment, despite the recent connection issues.
I read it a while ago, but I don't remember much. Didn't it descend into a Handmaid's Tale tier depiction of the Christian right? Regardless, IMO the author should have stopped with the earlier Fear and Loathing.Any of you ever read Rumsfeldia? It was an alt-history story where Donald Rumsfeld became president in the 80s and how everything went to shit from therd. Wasn't that good to he honest
Apparently Rumsfeld tries to implement Anarcho-Capitalism or smth, felt like a character assassinationAny of you ever read Rumsfeldia? It was an alt-history story where Donald Rumsfeld became president in the 80s and how everything went to shit from therd. Wasn't that good to he honest
Wasn't this guy also sperging out about Trump's comments about annexing Canada?
Yep. Pathetic.Wasn't this guy also sperging out about Trump's comments about annexing Canada?
LikeHumansFiveDo said it tried to turn America into anarcho-capitalism and like you and Skeletonized Cow said, it was genuinely not good - shock writing for shock writing's sake by that point. But it's worshipped by leftier members of AH.com as what will totally happen if Republicans keep winning elections.Any of you ever read Rumsfeldia? It was an alt-history story where Donald Rumsfeld became president in the 80s and how everything went to shit from therd. Wasn't that good to he honest
I now want him to do it so we watch this guy meltdownYep. Pathetic.
America collapses... because it has to alright!LikeHumansFiveDo said it tried to turn America into anarcho-capitalism and like you and Skeletonized Cow said, it was genuinely not good - shock writing for shock writing's sake by that point. But it's worshipped by leftier members of AH.com as what will totally happen if Republicans keep winning elections.
Aside from that, I've enjoyed reading it so far, Scheubner-Richter seems like an underused figureIs it just me and my now extant bias against ah.com, or have more retards shown up recently? I've been perusing the other WW2 Germany timelines and stumbled on this one. It literally opens up with the author spazzing out over the idea of writing a German victory, and then the first chapter literally opens on "Christians are to blame for Nazism."
Yeah, I somewhat recall that one all right. Shit story with increasingly little grounding in reality, but an illuminating look into the demented mind of the libtard and how such creatures perceive anyone to the right of George Soros. How Drew, the author, portrayed Rumsfeld was bugfuck insane character assassination - turned a frankly supremely boring & stodgy neocon, practically a Republican equivalent to Robert McNamara who wasn't ever particularly close to the Christian right faction and was certainly as loathsome to libertarians (and regarded them with similar enmity) as Dick Cheney, into King 'Christofascist'. IIRC the dude was written to lock his political enemies in asylums to be tortured & sedated in isolation (a Soviet tactic IRL), repeals environmental regulations and encourages coal mining like a Captain Planet villain, creates a 'Liberty Battalion' paramilitary that burns books & euthanizes wounded US Army troops in an occupied Cuba (I think) to save on medical costs (still more merciful than the real-life VA), etc. And that's all before he gets replaced by RL Evangelical bigwig Douglas Coe, who turns America into a theocracy and nukes cities that resist his rule.Any of you ever read Rumsfeldia? It was an alt-history story where Donald Rumsfeld became president in the 80s and how everything went to shit from therd. Wasn't that good to he honest
Definitely to Probably:Anyway, I've seen plenty of people asking the usual 'WI/can Germany win WW1/WW2' questions, or what if WW1 didn't happen at all, but how about a WW1 that ends in stalemate & compromise peace? How could this be achieved (well, I'm thinking no American entry late in the game will be one of the requirements, at least) and what might such a compromise look like?
100% agreed, the American intervention has to go. This whole thing might have to start with a POD putting someone, anyone other than extreme Anglophile and proto-neolib internationalist Woodrow Wilson in the White House - someone who isn't fishing for excuses to join the Entente from the start, taking every chance to stoke pro-Entente and anti-Central Power sentiment at home with incidents like the sinking of the RMS Lusitania, and willing to push the Entente to the peace table simply by not providing them with infinite credit.Definitely to Probably:
-America can't get in it, or be convinced to really make it more fair for Germany, somehow.
This is honestly probably the biggest stumbling block to get around in a stalemate-forged compromise, I do agree that the French would be absolutely repulsed by any peace treaty that doesn't give them the province they've been vindictively tardraging for nearly 50 years over (and have just lost 1 million dead, 4+ million more wounded for). But on the other hand, Germany will not cede it under any circumstance if the French aren't physically occupying the place (and if they are, then you're already looking at an Entente victory, considering the French never managed that IRL).-France will not rest till it gets Alsace-Lorraine.
Makes sense, this would be one of the main things Britain takes away from the negotiating table. Arguably the German decision to compete with the much better-established French & British colonial empires so late in the game was a retarded waste of resources in the first place, anyway.-German colonies go to Britain and France as in OTL.
Agreed, they could hold everything up to & including Liège/Lüttich (site of Belgium's biggest fort at the time) a their main gain in the West and compensation for having to give Metz up to the French. On the balance, between this & their eastern gains, even an armistice and negotiated peace would be to the Central Powers' advantage ultimately.-Germany doesn't lose German-speaking Belgium and Danzig and keeps the conquered Luxembourg (hey, it's the little things).
Yeah, probably. I could see Germany settling for the original, more limited Brest-Litovsk gains before Lenin/Trotsky went full retard and decided on a 'neither war nor peace' foreign policy which simultaneously shat on those terms while disbanding the Russian Army (that was how Germany grabbed Ukraine, Belarus & the Baltics IRL) - perhaps this is the deal that Kerensky's hung out to dry on by the Western Entente powers ITL, even - but then going for additional landgrabs when Russia spirals into civil war (almost certain with Kerensky in charge, that man was the archetypal feckless libcuck who had no idea what he was doing and alienated literally everyone on both the right & left wings within a few months of grabbing power).-Germany likely takes a stranglehold over eastern Europe via Brest-Litvosk.
This doesn't seem likely to me. Trento/Südtirol, maybe Kaiser Karl would give that up for the sake of peace, though it's a big ask post-Caporetto and pre-Vittorio Veneto when the Central Powers are still sitting on a fair bit of Italian territory (same problem as the French wanting Alsace-Lorraine while the Germans are camping on Belgium & much of northern France). But Istria would require a Vittorio Veneto-level collapse for the Italians to have any hope of taking/A-H to concede, and if that's happened then A-H is out of the war entirely and a total Entente victory becomes more likely. I think Italy being compensated with southwest Turkey as planned at Sèvres is more likely than even getting Trento. Probably will still have to deal with a lot of domestic discontent due to their failure to achieve even a 'mutilated victory', maybe the Red Biennium will escalate to a proper civil war in this timeline.-Italy takes Istria and Trent from Austria-Hungary.
I wouldn't be so quick to rule out the White Russians. Lenin was useful to get Russia out of the war, but Kaiser Wilhelm & his generals wouldn't actually want to share a border with a Bolshevik Russia either and the Whites increasingly got their shit together in late 1918-early 1919; by then they had finally united at least in principle under one guy, naval hero & polar explorer Aleksandr Kolchak, and one government. Not coincidentally, they also made their biggest advances against the Reds in 1919, with both Kolchak & the southern White generals coming alarmingly close to Moscow and the northern Whites of Nikolai Yudenich almost taking Petrograd (the Reds originally wanted to evacuate the city, but Trotsky personally forced them to fight for it & win).-Russia still gonna Russia and becomes the USSR.
I can't see this happening at all. Germany actually had plans on the books to ethnically cleanse western Poland for mini proto-lebensraum, would have the strength to enforce that plan in a 'negotiated end to WW1' scenario, and would absolutely not want to lose more ground in the east if they've had to give Metz away in the west. There's absolutely no reason for them to willingly cede Memel to a Lithuanian puppet kingdom either, IIRC the region actually had a plurality of Germans in the interwar period (about 40-45% of the population identified as German, 26% as Lithuanians and the rest were based enough to call themselves 'Memelanders').Possibly:
-I suspect Germany still loses its Polish territories and Memelland both due to nationalism of the time and sheer war exhaustion. Referendums see the Posen and Pomerania voivodeships and Memelland go to Poland and Lithuania. Humiliating as it is, they still are tied into the German orbit and Germany basically lets it happen to win the peace.
I think A-H might be able to avoid collapse if the armistice happens before Vittorio Veneto, but it will still be a very dicey proposition to keep the empire together for even another decade. Karl will have his work cut out for him and good intentions aside, I'm not sure the would-be saint has the chops to keep his still very volatile empire from imploding entirely. His own peaceable temperament aside, it's another very good reason as to why A-H might take little to nothing from the negotiating table (maybe reparations from Serbia for the Black Hand's assassination of Franz Ferdinand, if they could even afford to pay) even though they're technically still sitting on Italian/Serbian/Romanian territory, the Habsburgs absolutely can't afford to add even more hostile minorities to their fragile realm.-If Austria-Hungary splits up, you know the drill - German-Austria to Germany in time, Hungary tries to bullyboy around its old borders but probably gets held back by western Europe, etc.
If they can't get Istria from a non-collapsed Austria, I can't see an Italian Dalmatia happening either. But this could feed into a two or even three-part Italian Civil War for sure, depending on whether the disillusioned fascists still ally with the severely discredited monarchy or not. The Italian fascists were after all originally of a republican persuasion, Mussolini just changed his mind to get establishment support to bury the commies in 1922 historically, and if it's looking like aligning with the Savoia would hurt rather than help him politically, well...-Italy possibly gets Dalmatia in the above. Then again, maybe not, I'm sure not many looked favorably upon its opportunism in OTL either. If not, it'll still go fascist, maybe tie the angry Hungary into its orbit.
Agreed that a truncated & (literally) 'neutralized' Belgium with no further significant role to play in European politics is that country's likeliest future. They might still get Ruanda-Urundi as their compensatory penny for losing their eastern territories to Germany, but that & reparations is pretty much all I can see them reasonably getting with Germany still standing strong.-Belgium probably goes back to neutrality, this time ensured by Germany alongside the western allies. Possibly gets plenty of investment into it or reparations Germany won't be paying out otherwise to get a good seaport into the Channel.
Disagree with this.Agreed that a truncated & (literally) 'neutralized' Belgium with no further significant role to play in European politics is that country's likeliest future
That & Belgium having to concede its eastern regions to Germany are actually the reasons why I think Belgium will continue to try to stay aloof from a future WW2 (which I do believe would be just as inevitable in a 'stalemate-->tenuous compromise peace' scenario as it was historically). Britain is the only relevant power that would be OK with them continuing to exist; Germany and France can both use its geography to gain a flanking advantage over the other, and the Germans can use a pan-Germanic 'we must gather all der Germanic-speakers under our tricolor' excuse to justify grabbing everything up to & including Flanders while France has the 'we must gather all ze Romance-speakers under our tricolor' to justify going for Wallonia (as far as historical claims go, Germany & France are about even on that count).Disagree with this.
Belgium's location in the heart of western Europe and it's geography as a flat land (except the Ardennes) means it will always be a hotspot of warfare when there is an international conflict.
Additionally, Antwerp was a thorn in everyone's side.
The British saw its port as a loaded gun pointed at London, the perfect place to launch an invasion of the isles from.
The Germans saw it as a loaded gun pointed at the Ruhr, the perfect place for the British to unload from their troopships and launch an assault on the heart of German industry.
Belgium's ostensible neutrality OTL was purely the result of British Pax Britannica in the early 19th C, and with most of Belgium being occupied, with things like the front movement and Flemish, pro-german nationalism growing in strength, Belgium will probably shift its course from pro British to pro German, or with concessions to the Germans via the Flemish movement.
Charles de Gaulle fait une conférence à la Sorbonne au printemps 1934, sous l'égide du cercle Fustel de Coulanges, une vitrine de l’Action française65. Influencé originellement par la tradition monarchiste, Charles de Gaulle, militaire soumis au devoir de réserve, révèle dans sa correspondance privée son peu de considération pour le parlementarisme et lui préfère un régime fort, tout en se tenant publiquement à l'écart de l’anti-républicanisme d'une partie de l'armée66. Cette méfiance à l'égard du parlementarisme explique que Charles de Gaulle se soit senti avant la guerre proche de l'Action française, avant que la position de Maurras relative aux accords de Munich ne l'en éloigne. Ainsi, Paul Reynaud, qui rencontra en captivité en Allemagne la sœur du général de Gaulle, Marie-Agnès Cailliau, note dans ses carnets de captivité parlant de cette dernière67 : « Très franche, intelligente et bonne, [elle] nous raconte que Charles était monarchiste, qu'il défendait Maurras contre son frère Pierre jusqu'à en avoir les larmes aux yeux dans une discussion. Mais au moment de Munich, il a désapprouvé entièrement l'attitude de Maurras. » De même, Christian Pineau dira à André Gillois « que le général avait reconnu devant lui qu’il avait été inscrit à l’Action française et qu’il s’était rallié à la République pour ne pas aller contre le sentiment des Français »68. Lui-même résistant de gauche, Claude Bourdet qualifiera de Gaulle d’homme de droite, longtemps proche de l’Action française, devenu républicain par mimétisme69. Selon Edmond Michelet, de Gaulle subit l’influence de Maurras70,n 11.
Instead of building the Maginot Line and hoping to defensively fight the Germans in Belgium, I think it is almost certain that we'd see interwar French doctrine & capabilities developing in pretty much the polar opposite way as IRL, with De Gaulle & likeminded 'young guard' military thinkers in France pushing for as many new armored & mechanized units as they can afford (based on the usage of early armor in the Nivelle Offensive) as well as a much more aggressive strategy for the usage of such units (they're not going to get the rest of A-L, much less the Saarland & Rhineland, by sitting behind fortifications after all). It might seem strange that the French would seemingly disregard the lessons WW1 taught re: the apparent supremacy of defense over offense, and downright retarded that they would go for a modernized take on the 'cult of the offensive' that cost them so much in WW1's early days, but then you could say the exact same about Germany's embrace of blitzkrieg IRL.Charles de Gaulle gave a lecture at the Sorbonne in the spring of 1934, under the aegis of the Fustel de Coulanges circle, a showcase of the Action Française. 65 Originally influenced by the monarchist tradition, Charles de Gaulle, a military man subject to the duty of reserve, revealed in his private correspondence his lack of regard for parliamentarianism and preferred a strong regime, while publicly keeping his distance from the anti-republicanism of part of the army. 66 This distrust of parliamentarianism explains why Charles de Gaulle felt close to the Action Française before the war, before Maurras' position on the Munich Agreement distanced him from it. Thus, Paul Reynaud, who met General de Gaulle's sister, Marie-Agnès Cailliau, in captivity in Germany, notes in his captivity notebooks speaking of the latter67: "Very frank, intelligent and good, [she] tells us that Charles was a monarchist, that he defended Maurras against his brother Pierre to the point of having tears in his eyes during a discussion. But at the time of Munich, he completely disapproved of Maurras' attitude." Similarly, Christian Pineau would tell André Gillois "that the general had acknowledged to him that he had been registered with the Action Française and that he had rallied to the Republic so as not to go against the feelings of the French"68. Himself a left-wing resistance fighter, Claude Bourdet would describe de Gaulle as a man of the right, long close to the Action Française, who became a republican through mimicry69. According to Edmond Michelet, de Gaulle was influenced by Maurras70,n 11.
Has anyone found anything interesting from Ian's Usenet days?I might post more later, perhaps Ian's history on usenet, if it will be of any use. Probably clean this post up too, as I did most of the searching while writing this post. Honestly, I think this is all autistic, but eh, I was bored, and this information could be useful sometime in the near future.
That seems to be the end state of everyone who runs a forum, sometimes with lethal consequences as the case of Lowtax demonstrates. The only solution appears to be to sell the forum and vanish into the void like CJayC from Gamefaqs did.Has anyone found anything interesting from Ian's Usenet days?
For a guy who works with tech, he is one lazy thinned-skin piece of shit when it comes to managing a forum. I bet he's had decades of experience over his career, and yet he still can't update a simple xenforo forum?