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#5651 | |
Join Date: Dec 2012
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EDIT: To my understanding, in Japanese culture of that era, the Emperor is metaphorically best represented as 'somewhere between where the Pope and Jesus are in Catholicism.' Maybe not the best or most accurate metaphor, but I think it conveys the idea.
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Warning, I have the Distractible and Imaginative quirks in real life. "The more corrupt a government, the more it legislates." -- Tacitus Five Earths, All in a Row. Updated 12/17/2022: Apocrypha: Bridges out of Time, Part I has been posted. Last edited by Prince Charon; 07-11-2021 at 11:16 AM. |
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#5652 | |
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: West Virginia
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Lacking an Imperial Heir the people of Japan are in deep and profound mourning. But they've decided to face the situation as it is. More than a few Homeline Japanese people are eager to avenge what they see as brutal cruelty.
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Per Ardua Per Astra! Ancora Imparo Last edited by Astromancer; 07-11-2021 at 12:46 PM. |
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#5653 |
Join Date: Jun 2006
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There are *now* but much of that was imposed by the Americans in their 1947 rewrite of the Imperial House Law, and a good deal of the rest is historically recent (adopted by Emperor Meiji modeled on the Prussian House Law). There are a couple dozen people who would've been considered reasonable heirs in 1946, and more than 100 who'd have been candidates in 1868. Recent succession "reform" proposals in Japan generally focus on marrying some of those people to one or more of the currently 6 available princesses and adopting them, but I can't imagine the Japanese wouldn't sit one of them on the throne if everybody allowed in the current House Law dropped dead even now, let alone just after World War II. Of course the American occupiers might try to stop them (maybe all the sane people in the planning loop were dead too) but it won't end well. Strictly speaking I suppose this isn't the same thing as not becoming a Republic - maybe the occupation could make a religious ceremonial Emperor who wasn't technically also Head of State fly without *too* much violence if you insist - but it seems weird. It's not like the Emperor (or the monarchical heads of state of other developed countries) retains much political relevance. Why go to the trouble to remove them?
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-- MA Lloyd |
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#5654 | |
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: West Virginia
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Okay? Mind you the profound shock of this world's Japanese people and the determination of Homeline Japanese to punish the culprits remain.
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Per Ardua Per Astra! Ancora Imparo |
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#5655 |
Join Date: Dec 2012
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Oh, yes, absolutely. Also, a lot of people on Homeline would be very concerned about finding the culprits to make sure this wasn't a trial run for an attack on Homeline, and that would include the Homeline Japanese.
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Warning, I have the Distractible and Imaginative quirks in real life. "The more corrupt a government, the more it legislates." -- Tacitus Five Earths, All in a Row. Updated 12/17/2022: Apocrypha: Bridges out of Time, Part I has been posted. |
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#5656 |
Join Date: Jan 2014
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Wunderwaffen worlds are worlds where advanced technology was deployed in a war that happened in Homeline, but generally had minimal impact in that particular war.
Wunderwaffen-1 (Q6, 1949): Diverged with the deployment of V2 armed submarines. The half-dozen attacks on the East Coast had more of a psychological impact on the United States than it did in material damage (though the replacement for Lady Liberty has had many cost overruns). Isolationism (or at least a strong anti-war lobby) has re-emerged in the post-war United States, so much so that it appears likely that Soviet adventurism will go unchallenged, at least for the early cold war. Wunderwaffen-2 (Q6, 1953): Diverged with the development of a Japanese atomic bomb in 1944. Deployed at Leyte Gulf, the destruction of the 7th Fleet certainly hurt, but all this resulted in was the clearing out of the Soviet spy-ring (the Americans cleaned house, assuming the Japanese had somehow penetrated their project) and several Japanese (& German) cities being A-bombed. Nuclear weapons are more seen as very large bombs here, which has led to a reunified Korea, and the Soviets have just finished their first Atomic Bomb. |
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#5657 |
Join Date: Apr 2020
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On Sisyphus-1, (299 BCE; Q3; TL2) death died a hundred twenty three years ago. It is no longer possible for native inhabitants to die. Violence still produces injury, diseases can still wrack the body, hunger still worms in the stomach, but death and age come for no one. In Greece and the Alexandrian territories, there is a widespread belief that Alexander locked up Death itself. At first a celebrated fact, the now immortal population has grown incredibly large and the torment of hunger, injury, and disease no longer seem minor, even as violence has become more acceptable. Death cults pray for deliverance from their agonies even as ever more immortals enter the ranks of the living.
An early experiment by Homeline showed that removing a native renders the effect inert, often killing them in the process, there is now significant controversy within the Miracle Workers as to what should be done to help Sisyphus. Mass relocation risks death, but many Sisyphusians would welcome it. Homeline could intervene to provide medical and agricultural technology. Either way, natives are facing an increasingly miserable eternity if something isn’t done. |
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#5658 |
Join Date: Mar 2008
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Would be a great place to build a trauma center. You have all the time needed to do the surgery needed.
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#5659 | ||
Join Date: Jun 2006
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Having somebody "successfully" attack is not the kind of thing that I'd believe encourage it, though I suppose I might buy it if you turn your entire country into a militarized fortress state to be sure you could ward off any attack at the same time. Seriously I'm pretty sure no state has ever suffered a minor attack and decided that means they should go insular. Minor attacks make people furious. If you want them to decide to withdraw you have to inflict *severe* trauma. Quote:
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-- MA Lloyd Last edited by malloyd; 07-16-2021 at 08:08 AM. |
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#5660 | ||
Join Date: Jan 2014
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Wunderwaffen-1A (Q6, 1955): Diverged with the deployment of V2 armed submarines. The half-dozen attacks on the East Coast had more of a psychological impact on the United States than it did in material damage (though the replacement for Lady Liberty has had many cost overruns). American rage at these attacks helped advance the Morgenthau Plan, which led to the full scale deindustrialization of Germany. The Wirtschaftswunder was effectively aborted, German economic refugees accounting for about half of its population are scattered around the world, and dissent in Germany against Western occupation forces is reaching at tipping point. Quote:
1) Emphasizing there are few if any butterfly effects 2) Emphasizing Infinity is not omniscient; most of the Japanese records were blown up and the records in the United States (of the selling of the equipment) are probably classified out of embarrassment. |
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ideas to share, infinite worlds, infinity unlimited |
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