• Ð Greıt Þu̇mpkin@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    This is why I caution what people should expect when imagining a second civil war.

    It’s not going to be formed lines of men in pitched battles.

    It’s going to be warlords engaging in terror tactics with the fronts emerging along urban rural divides as opposed to state lines.

    This won’t be the battle of Gettysburg, it’ll be the Troubles with rigged quad copter drones instead of car bombs.

    Depending on who wins this election the US military isn’t going to be either “side”‘s ally, in fact they’ll probably be the fighting parties’ worst enemy since their goal is basically just going to be to kill all the people taking up arms until the terrorists and counter-terrorist terrorists knock it all off.

    It’ll probably lead to a purge of the most extreme folks in politics, as they’ll either be found in cahoots with the terror cells covertly, or actively be leading one or more of them out of a misplaced sense that they’ll be able to parry it into running the country.

    It won’t be glorious, it won’t be honorable, it won’t be anything for people to be proud of. It will just be bloody and then deeply regretted by all but the most unrepentant cretins, who still won’t be able to publicly express that sentiment or risk ostracism at best, and lynching if they are discovered to have had a hand in ruining everyone’s lives for however long it goes on for.

    • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Nailed it! A modern civil war would almost certainly take the form of the Troubles, unless there’s a state secession, which I find highly unlikely.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      We had that in the first one…

      Kentucky fought for both sides. A family could even split with brothers going to each side, and possibly both making it back.

      That’s what the whole Hatfield’s and Mcoys shit was. Was side was union, one confederate. One side was made about a member that died in war, and killed a member of the other.

      They were the most famous feud, but all over Kentucky the civil war kept playing out for years after it ended.

      The resulting exodus to escape the violence is why you see rebel flags still in Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota and other northern states.

    • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Sounds exactly what I would expect.

      And it’s already happening. Local government buildings getting bomb threats and packages with apparent explosives. Mass shootings. It’s just gonna get worse, and more painful to observe and experience.