Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1429606) wrote:Yamamaya... is your signature a picture of a girl with her throat slit?
Really freaky, man...
Edward (post: 1430529) wrote:What if Great Britain had given the American colonists representation in Parliment? Was the Revolution inevitable, or would it never have happened? Maybe we would eventually have gained our independence peacefully. How would this change other events, like the Civil War?
Edward (post: 1430529) wrote:What if Great Britain had given the American colonists representation in Parliment? Was the Revolution inevitable, or would it never have happened? Maybe we would eventually have gained our independence peacefully. How would this change other events, like the Civil War?
TWWK wrote:The Civil War...I dunno. It's possible that the U.S. would feel more a sense of union if British colonization was longer and ended peaceably. That's an interesting question...
Nate (post: 1430573) wrote:Not really. The Civil War had pretty much nothing to do with a sense of union since it was about slavery and states' rights in regard to slavery, which would have happened anyway regardless I'm sure.
TWWK wrote:Nate, it had EVERYTHING to do with union.
Nate (post: 1430610) wrote:Except it didn't. As I said, it was about slavery, and the fact that the South felt that the North was infringing on their states' rights because the North refused to return escaped slaves to the South.
TWWK wrote:Maybe we're arguing the same thing, but with different semantics.
However, this distrust may not have existed if there was no need for revolution. Perhaps, then, the U.S. may have industrialized the south, making slavery less of an issue, and maybe most southerners would have thought the idea of secession silly, as most would today, since the union would be stronger.
Midknight74012 (post: 1430636) wrote:What if no one invented waffles?
blkmage (post: 1430563) wrote:I think that the biggest difference would lie in the political culture. For all the flak that we get for being almost indistinguishable with you guys, if you take a deeper look at it, you'll find a lot of significant differences between Canadian and US political culture. I'm not even talking about fairly surface-level or obvious things like the setup of Congress versus that of Parliament. There's a fundamental difference in the core values that the two governments (and electorate) hold and place an emphasis on.
Hats wrote:"Frodo! Cast off your [s]sins[/s] into the fire!"
Hats wrote:"Frodo! Cast off your [s]sins[/s] into the fire!"
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