this post was submitted on 02 Mar 2025
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One of the things that happened with Germany post WWII was devolution to the states, partially to avoid this again, partially because, well, they were occupied. It was so weird to me when I'd get change in the '90s still reading Bank Deutscher Laender sted Bundesrepublik Deutschland.
I lived in Stadtkreis Hameln, Y'all have heard of this. The Pied Piper led kids into the Weser ... you just know it as Hamelin. I had to go over the Oberweserdampfshifffahrt to get to Gymnasium daily from Haverbeck. The three f's are not an error. German nouns are fun.
Why am I focusing on Germany? Well, it's a useful model. No one thought the Weimar Republic could collapse so fast, and, I mean ...
This is bad. There's precedent, and it's not good. This is alarming. And I keep saying that because it keeps being true.
Germany wasn't really fully formed at that point. They had the Alsace and parts of Poland (this is to be expected given the Prussian origins). The wars forced Germany into the shape it's in now, which is not an excuse the U.S. has to offer.
We're apparently considering Canada and Greenland as the Sudetenland?
I see no way around the country breaking apart. This is too far, too fast. Cascadia may result. Once California, Oregon and Washington (let the irony sink in) are uninterested in being part of the country any longer ... there's no longer any bulwark against endless GOP domination. That's why we wait until polls close on PST before making national calls. If you're just going to do it on Mountain, that's a thoroughly uninteresting result. Arizona's the only wild card there.