No video

10 Alternate Scenarios That Are Actually Dumb

  Рет қаралды 897,498

AlternateHistoryHub

AlternateHistoryHub

Күн бұрын

Sign up for a 14-day free trial and enjoy all the amazing features MyHeritage has to offer: bit.ly/Alterna...
For every scenario with an interesting and plausible twist there are a dozen more that are on the wacky side. Here are 10 of the most popular and often suggested scenarios, that just don't make any sense once you look into them
/ alternatehistoryhub Become a patreon and double your diet of alt history scenarios, while supporting the channel
/ discord Join the discord community for unique challenges, video suggestions and much more
/ @altremer 4th crusade alternative history visual novel
Chapters
00:00- Intro
02:20- Alexander invades Rome
03:34- Rome industrializes
05:31-Harald Hardrada conquers England
07:38-Ming sails to America
09:07-Sunset invasion
10:53-Trent Affair leads to a Confederate win
13:09- Italy joins Central Powers
15:01-Republicans win in Spain
16:31- Operation Downfall
18:40- Man in the High Castle

Пікірлер: 3 700
@AlternateHistoryHub
@AlternateHistoryHub Ай бұрын
Sign up for a 14-day free trial and enjoy all the amazing features MyHeritage has to offer: bit.ly/AlternateHistoryHub2
@ArousedRat1
@ArousedRat1 Ай бұрын
nuh uh
@AlexMitchell-ct8tt
@AlexMitchell-ct8tt Ай бұрын
Can you do a what if napoleon gifted Brazil to his brother who was king of the Netherlands making Brazil a Dutch colony after he occupied Lisbon, but the Britain annexes it along with South Africa and Sri lanker after 1812, giving us British Brazil
@darkdragon7210
@darkdragon7210 Ай бұрын
Yes, which ones wont work!?
@AlexMitchell-ct8tt
@AlexMitchell-ct8tt Ай бұрын
Just a wacky idea
@TheRezro
@TheRezro Ай бұрын
What I personally don't like in alternative history communities, is when they ignore logic. Yes, sometimes we can make outrageous scenarios. But in principle it is asking about cause and effect and how specific changes would impact history. And not space Nazis taking control over America, just because space magic! (too common)
@aidangordon2713
@aidangordon2713 Ай бұрын
"What do you mean, China and Russia won't unite to invade America?" -Every Call of Duty dev ever
@Kaarl_Mills
@Kaarl_Mills Ай бұрын
"It'll totally be North Korea!" *Homefront devs after snorting a long line of bad cocaine*
@arthurbriand2175
@arthurbriand2175 Ай бұрын
Meanwhile the new Red Dawn had North Korea invade and occupy the U.S.
@Edax_Royeaux
@Edax_Royeaux Ай бұрын
I think Fallout was more realistic in that China would only really be able to strike at Alaska, but then still lose.
@starmaker75
@starmaker75 Ай бұрын
​@@Edax_Royeaux that or to take over Hawaii and it becomes a cluster f'cker of ships, bombs and blood. Well then again the USA couldn't really invade China or take major gains. So I guess it would be a battle of stalemates in the Pacific Ocean.
@MalcolmIIofCaledonia
@MalcolmIIofCaledonia Ай бұрын
@@Edax_Royeaux*MAYBE* LA but besides that,yeah.
@LedosKell
@LedosKell Ай бұрын
The Mongolian-Yugoslav-Confederate States-Carthage Entente is, sadly, not a viable competitor to BRICS.
@Ussonan-Foderation2016
@Ussonan-Foderation2016 Ай бұрын
Yes is
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
The Confederacy and Carthage would probably fight each other enough to destabilize the alliance. Does this make them the China and India of this analogy?
@dlxmarks
@dlxmarks Ай бұрын
Can't make a decent acronym out of that.
@daniellewis5533
@daniellewis5533 Ай бұрын
"Those Carthaginians worship Satan, which means we must burn their Capital to the ground. Our Mongols allies are brave men, and raise fine horseflesh, though." --J.E.B. Stuart, maybe. Source: Trust Me Bro
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
@@daniellewis5533 I mean the Confederates would have thought Spartans to be based, never mind pre-Christian polytheism. Whenever I hear about Sparta it reminds me a lot of antebellum South Carolina, where the majority of residents had to toil for a wealthy few, and those on top were constantly fearful of being annihilated by a major revolt. I can’t even be sure Spartan citizens were the original settlers of Laconia and Messenia. I’m willing to bet that references to Sparta appear in some Confederate literature or speeches.
@benbarltrop2006
@benbarltrop2006 Ай бұрын
Being totally honest, the scenario where the dual invasions of England result in two separate English kingdoms (with the north being aligned with Norway and the south being aligned with Normandy) sounds more interesting than "England has vikings now".
@-._A2._-
@-._A2._- Ай бұрын
And it very well could have happened. Why does Hardrada a Norseman have to go to London when York has more significance to Norway. He can just stay in York. What is William gonna do? Send his Calvary to attack essentially a castle? Yeah nice try there.
@SusCalvin
@SusCalvin Ай бұрын
England had a whole slew of little kingdoms, city-leagues and a romanized London already. Even the Danelaw for a while. These are now gone.
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana
@UniDocs_Mahapushpa_Cyavana Ай бұрын
The Normans were Vikings anyway.
@PhoenicksUK
@PhoenicksUK Ай бұрын
Yep, totally agree here. Hardrada defeats Godwinson at Stamford Bridge & takes the Earldom/Kingdom of Northumbria & probably the 5 Boroughs of the East Midlands (where there's a lot of common bonds between the Scandinavians & the local population). William lands unopposed in Wessex & takes the south. Earls Edwin & Morcar (grandsons of Leofric & Godiva of Mercia) are stuck in the middle wondering what to do next. Do they submit to William who has effectively crowned himself King of England or throw their hand in with the Norse? Either way, being young & inexperienced they would get manipulated/killed off by the 2 new powers & there'd be a few years (decades) of chaos/raids/civil war until a new unified kingdom of England emerges. Two probable outcomes: no Harrying of the North (it being too strong); a lot less French influence, especially in language and land ownership north of the Trent.
@thunder5496
@thunder5496 Ай бұрын
If we are tweaking history slightly, in favour of Hardrada, why not have the Norman's arrive slightly earlier and as such the Anglo Saxons are ready, waiting and not tired and more likely to beat them then have to trek North quickly to beat Hardrada. That produces a Hardrada win more easily than beating two armies.
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV Ай бұрын
I have an alt-hist where Rome industrialized, but I literally had to bring in an undead time-traveler with the book "How to invent Everything. A survival guide for the stranded time traveler." to even make that happen.
@arnowisp6244
@arnowisp6244 Ай бұрын
As cool industrial Rome was. They dont even have the Metal work to even make a Usable Boiler.
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV Ай бұрын
@@arnowisp6244 Exactly! Which is why they need a timetraveler and that book, it tells you how to get to radio from practically scratch.
@AaronOfMpls
@AaronOfMpls Ай бұрын
@@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV And now I'm curious; it sounds kinda like a modern version of _Lest Darkness Fall._ (For those who aren't familiar, _Lest Darkness Fall_ (by L Sprague deCamp) is a novel where a 1930s time traveler keeps Ostrogoth _post-_ Roman Italy together enough to fend off the Byzantine invasion and its years of devastating war from OTL. He also manages to introduce the printing press and double-entry bookkeeping centuries early, though his attempts at clocks and gunpowder are failures.). And for those who haven't read it, I _highly_ recommend _How To Invent Everything,_ by Ryan North (author of _Dinosaur Comics_ and a number of other things*). (Reposted with revisions.) * He's written for a few comic book series too. And he wrote the books _To Be or Not to Be_ and _Romeo and/or Juliet_ -- which are funny choose-your-own-adventure retellings of _Hamlet_ and _Romeo and Juliet._
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV
@BasicallyBaconSandvichIV Ай бұрын
@@AaronOfMpls Oh, you've also read the book? It's a very good read! But I haven't really written any story for it. I've got a vague idea of how it would come to be, but the most I have currently is a 4th century map with a very big Rome indeed.
@Godyeater
@Godyeater Ай бұрын
Sounds like Ancient Aliens.
@EmperorTigerstar
@EmperorTigerstar Ай бұрын
Ain'tHappenin'Hub strikes again
@PakBallandSami
@PakBallandSami Ай бұрын
@@EmperorTigerstar emperor of mapping videos Strikes again
@olafsassi2498
@olafsassi2498 Ай бұрын
lmao
@void_fruit212
@void_fruit212 Ай бұрын
​@@PakBallandSami Rep. Of Pakistan and Sami polandball strikes back
@Captain-Feeneey
@Captain-Feeneey Ай бұрын
Haha⚛️
@AltraHapi
@AltraHapi Ай бұрын
Nothing ever happens
@RJKilroy
@RJKilroy Ай бұрын
The anarchists weren’t even “with” the republicans, they considered themselves a separate faction that was fighting alongside the enemy of their enemy
@megakillerx
@megakillerx Ай бұрын
Well they were technically part/aligned with the republican government in the first few months of the war before the CNT-FAI briefly took over eastern parts of Iberia for itself.
@shibasaurus322
@shibasaurus322 Ай бұрын
Tsundere anarchists
@chickenlover21
@chickenlover21 Ай бұрын
didnt yugoslavia fight in the cnt?
@seanmcloughlin5983
@seanmcloughlin5983 Ай бұрын
I still don’t think it was IMPOSSIBLE for the Republicans to beat the nationalists. Like the nationalists very much were also divided between facists, monarchists, Carlists. And I could see it where someone who wasn’t as good as Franco at uniting them also dividing into civil war. Note how the monarchist and Carlists had pretty opposing views on what a restored Spanish monarchy should be. Not to mention the Falangists who believed in a Nazi germany style republic. I’m just saying it would’ve been very easy for the Nationalists to lose.
@U9DATE
@U9DATE Ай бұрын
@@seanmcloughlin5983It’s a lot easier to get monarchists, fascists, and centre right groups to unite then communists, socialists, anarchists and centre left wing factions to. Even without Franco, the right side would still be very close
@SetrinSkyheart
@SetrinSkyheart Ай бұрын
I did my bachelor's paper on the German bomb and boy howdy the story is even sillier than people realize. On top of what Cody said, we have: Discounting uranium as a viable atomic energy source. Insisting that more Neptunium (their alternative) than actually physically existed would be needed to get anything done with atomic energy. Backtracking everything in the 60s and insisting that they knew all of Einstein's stuff all along and that they were "this close" to completing a functional bomb before the German surrender. It was wild.
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 Ай бұрын
''I was just pretending to not know ha ha''
@loughlan775
@loughlan775 20 күн бұрын
um...I hate to ask, but can you link that paper? It sounds like an interesting read; I've heard a lot of theories on Germany and the bomb it would be nice to have some factual clarification.
@testname5042
@testname5042 5 күн бұрын
1) Germany had plans and prototypes for kamikaze bomber jets called "New Yorkers." 2) The German nuclear program was plagued by sabotage from the director, who went full Thomas Edison on it, insisting they keep pursuing and pushing ideas that he knew would go nowhere, just to use up money and encourage Nazi high command to abandon the project. Oscar Schindler somewhat famously did something similar: using his munitions factory to produce intentionally defective ammunition while expropriating Jews slated for Auschwitz (including children) to "work" in his "factory."
@lars573
@lars573 4 күн бұрын
Nazi's lied and were incompetent, colour me shocked!
@Gefehhka
@Gefehhka 2 күн бұрын
Just replying so if you ever decide to link the paper I'll be informed.
@MajoraZ
@MajoraZ Ай бұрын
As someone into Mesoamerican history/archeology: While obviously Sunset Invasion is impossible, the "mindset of warfare" point isn't really true. Firstly, grouping in the Inca and Maya here just doesn't work: The Inca are an Andean civilization, the Maya, Aztec etc are Mesoamerican. The two regions had very little contact and are as far apart as London is from Baghdad: They don't share cultural practices much. Even for the Aztec specifically, captive taking, while a part of their warfare, was not the primary goal, and Flower Wars are heavily misunderstood/not normal warfare. To clarify on the Aztec: Their main goal in expansionism was getting economic resources and goods like gold, cacao, jade, fine feathers, obsidian, etc by forcing city-states and kingdoms into relatively hands off tax-paying arrangements. Asia isn't my area, but from what I understand about the Mongols, it's sorta similar to that where if you cough up taxes, you mostly got left alone to self-manage, but if you didn't, you'd get invaded. Even when a city did refuse/resist though, or even when subjects stopped paying taxes, the Aztec response was (usually) not instant escalation to razing, massacres, and mass enslavement: They did that stuff sometimes (especially if a city incited OTHERS to also stop paying taxes), but usually just demanded steeper and steeper taxes the more a city resisted prior to it finally surrendering, and even in those cases still usually left local rulers and laws and infrastructure in place, though sometimes they did place military governors onto subjects or soldiers in garrisons to dissuade rebellions. The goal was to get economic goods, but specifically without them needing to assert hands on administrative effort and manpower to do so: Mesoamerican did not have draft animals, and the terrain is basically mostly either inland arid to temperate valleys and mountain ranges, or lowland and costal jungles and swamps. Long distance administration and military campaigns were difficult, you really could not directly govern a wide empire easily: it's more efficient to be hands off and leave local power in place and coerce it, then to order things in a top down manner. But if you're razing cities, burning fields, enslaving or sacrificing whole populations, how are they gonna cough up the cacao, gold, etc? You'd be expending valuable political and military force to trek, on foot with no draft animals, across that terrain just to annihilate the place you're trying to take advantage of and then have to rebuild or repopulate it. If what they cared about was mostly collecting captives for sacrifice, then that wouldn't be a concern. But the primary goal was economics (not just for the sake of it, but also because having a big economic network was part of courting alliances/political marriages and getting voluntarily vassals: Constant expansion also flexed military power and kept subjects in line: Since their political model was hands off, nothing was actually stopping subjects/vassals from seceding other then these forms of influence), and we see the Aztec specifically target city-states and kingdoms with rich economic resources during their expansion, not just areas with people to capture: A fantastic example of this is Soconusco/Xoconusco, which is all the way down in Chiapas, almost in Guatemala, which was secured as subject province as a source of Cacao. Demanding captives/slaves as taxes tribute wasn't common either: It only shows up ONCE in the Codex Mendoza compared to the dozens and hundreds of listings for tax demands of the other economic resources i've mentioned, for example, and the one time it does come up in the Mendoza, it's for some towns in the province of Tepeacac, where they're not being told to give up their own people as taxes/tribute, but rather the demand is that they supply captured soldiers taken from Tlaxcala, Huextozinco, Cholula etc: States the Aztec were enemies with: This was an indirect demand to help the Aztec besiege those states. (That being said, slaves/captives of noncombants were often given, in addition to soldiers captured in the battle, as part of offer by a state when it surrendered after losing to an invasion: It's just regular payments of captives as annual taxes after that point was rare) Okay, so what IS the deal with taking captives? It was certainly a common and important practice in warfare, to be clear, but at least for the Aztec, the consensus is now that it was secondary to actual tactical military objectives and goals. In general, these were organized armies with proper unit divisions and ranks, who had actual armor (this channel yet again shows Aztec soldiers wearing Jaguar pelts like cave men, when they had padded gambeson and then thick warsuits and tunics worn over that just made to look like jaguar spots and other patterns via via a mosaic of differently colored feathers), bespoke weapons (swords/macuahuitl, different kinds of clubs, maces, axes, spears, glaives, pikes, bows, atlatl, slings etc) and we have records of complex tactics like pincer formations, feigned retreats, ambushes, and so on. Captive taking seems to have primarily happened after enemy lines broke as a "mop-up" thing, and you probably wouldn't have seen soldiers going out of their way to avoid killing during the middle of a battle. The fact that captive taking was so important to rank advancement itself suggests that it was a rare/impressive feat, rather than it being the norm instead of killing an enemy: We actually know that different Aztec kings would give decrees where captured soldiers from different states would then be "worth" more or less in terms of granting rank promotions, based on how strong or how much of a desired military target they were perceived to be. Finally, Flower Wars: As I alluded to before, not all wars were Flower wars. In fact, they seem to not even be that particularly common: While i've read some contradictorily information on this, the Mexica seemingly only regularly employed them against Tlaxcala, Huextozinco, etc in an offensive capacity. They were sometimes done between the Mexica and existing subjects, but sources assert these were mutually agreed on in special circumstances like to cement alliances (though this fact allegedly was kept secret from commoners, so they wouldn't know their lives were being spent on political pageantry). Next, these were not just ritual conflicts about getting captives (in fact I've seen some assertions that they did involve killing in battle too, or that captives were released, etc), but also had pragmatic military utility. As applied against enemy states, Flower Wars were a way to dip your toes into the water with lower intensity warfare, which could then escalate into full normal warfare, or could be called off: We see this with the wars against Chalco which gradually evolved from Flower Wars to become increasingly pragmatic and serious over time. Inversely, their smaller scale meant they could be waged year round (unlike normal wars) or longer, and therefore could be used as a sort of extended siege to wear enemy states down (Traditional siege warfare wasn't as much a thing in Mesoamerica, tho this is debated somewhat). Flower wars also kept soldiers trained and fit when they might otherwise not have been in the field, and provided opportunities to collect captives and to keep soldiers invested in a military career as a result. Actually, some researchers even believe the entire idea of Aztec flower wars against Tlaxcala etc was just revisionism by Aztec sources to justify when they could never conquer the state(s)! There's more I could say, and again, there is some details around how Flower Wars functioned or what I said with sieges/garrsions that are debated by different researchers or there's inconsistent information on, and to be clear, again, captive taking WAS still important and there were ritual elements to it/warfare in Mesoamerica (some researchers have argued that the view currently common by Aztec historians which is that Aztec warfare was mostly pragmatic, which my comment is based on, has overcorrected prior literature and now ritualism is downplayed too much vs before where it was overemphasized/pragmatism was downplayed) but tactical and economic pragmatism was also important too, is my point, and certainly the overall objective in Aztec expansionism was primarily economic and political.
@shinyagumon7015
@shinyagumon7015 Ай бұрын
@@MajoraZ Great analysis. I never even knew that Aztec warriors wore armour before
@novachrono1341
@novachrono1341 Ай бұрын
This is great. Ive always wanted to learn more about Azteca culture and history and learning about any common misconceptions we have about them.
@MrGksarathy
@MrGksarathy Ай бұрын
@@MajoraZ Good to know. I did know about the armor and weapons, but not all this stuff about actual flower wars.
@berbrick1902
@berbrick1902 Ай бұрын
Holy book essay Batman
@freshwaterwaterfall4003
@freshwaterwaterfall4003 Ай бұрын
Just wanted to let you know that your review on Aztec motivations & means was a very interesting read, the depth of your knowledgebase is evident. This also makes me question more on how well-reasearched Cody's other videos or even other scenarios in this very video may be.
@LadyViscera
@LadyViscera Ай бұрын
The fact Nazi Germany handicapped themselves by being antisemitic towards nuclear fission never fails to kill me 😂
@Nobody-zl3kk
@Nobody-zl3kk Ай бұрын
They also had the lead scientist of their version of the Manhattan project being... Oddly incompetent whenever something could have been done for the project. Which is just what you said but moreso to an individual level.
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
Poetic, ain’t it?
@timb83
@timb83 Ай бұрын
​@Nobody-zl3kk he (Heisenberg) almost fucking killed himself in his first criticality experiment and never really got close again, though he did try. Based on his failure and hubris (japanese did this too) they figured if he can't do it there was no way anyone else could. Then America went freedom on their fascist asses!!
@ordinaryrat
@ordinaryrat Ай бұрын
In all fairness, it wasn't like they would have made much progress anyways. The US would have always beaten them in an atomic race and not bothering would have freed up some much valuable resources, even if the resources would just be wasted on wunderwaffe.
@hanneswiggenhorn2023
@hanneswiggenhorn2023 Ай бұрын
Ironically any form of nuclear development would probably be a disadvantage for the nazis, because they lack a good method of deployment with the air supremacy of the allies and it would be a huge resource sink
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 Ай бұрын
Alternate History Hub: Here's a list of the most unrealistic alternate history scenarios Wolfenstein:
@crusader2112
@crusader2112 Ай бұрын
If maybe unrealistic, but by golly if it ain’t fun. 👍
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 Ай бұрын
​@@crusader2112True
@Nobody-zl3kk
@Nobody-zl3kk Ай бұрын
I mean, in Wolfenstein the Nazis essentially acquired sci-fi level tech/magic at some point, right? I also think that Napoleon may win his invasion of Russia if he's handed mechanized horses or some shit. lol (Hyperbole but you know what I mean)
@oliversherman2414
@oliversherman2414 Ай бұрын
@@Nobody-zl3kk Yeah I just see it as dumb fun
@Nobody-zl3kk
@Nobody-zl3kk Ай бұрын
@@oliversherman2414 Oh no I agree. I also just wanted to point out to anyone who wasn't aware (saying it as if I was an expert on the lore, I am not lol) that Wolfenstein only gets to be as wacky because the alternate history in this case is not caused by a divergence but by injecting future tech into the past. Lol
@patrickobrian9669
@patrickobrian9669 Ай бұрын
I think the Hadrada scenario could work if the change is that he lands in England later, so that he fights the Harold's army after the battle of Hastings rather than before. This way he doesn't have to defeat both armies consecutively, but rather only the now weakened victor of the William and Harold.
@PosisDas
@PosisDas Ай бұрын
I was actually going to say the same thing. From what I gathered, it was a fairly close battle against William the Conqueror. If he had landed first, he very well might have been defeated by the English still fresh from not having already fraught. Which then would have to quickly march north to face the Vikings that landed.
@jayd8091
@jayd8091 29 күн бұрын
Was going to say, if you just have William land first then there's a decent chance that William fails and then English forces have to march North, but then I think there'd be a good chance that English forces are reseted before marching North before fighting a longer campaign.
@benlewis4241
@benlewis4241 8 күн бұрын
I think if one of the Northern lords, like Edwin and Morcar had defected he would have had a chance
@jacklang3314
@jacklang3314 7 күн бұрын
@@PosisDas Yeah, King Harold had assembled like 20,000 men to fight William before bad weather had prevented William from crossing, after which Harold disbanded them to collect the harvest.
@agonistadenoche7806
@agonistadenoche7806 Ай бұрын
Now we need 10 real historical scenarios that would probably be on this video in an alternate timeline in which they were considered too dumb to happen.
@antoncabotta5364
@antoncabotta5364 27 күн бұрын
Prussia winning the 7 Years' War
@helloimskip
@helloimskip Ай бұрын
To be good at Alternate History is to be great at History in the first place. So many new people creating alternate history "scenarios" who have little knowledge of history makes the wildest and most out-of-character events ever.
@lego007guym8
@lego007guym8 Ай бұрын
I've always had the opinion that you've got to make it sci-fi in those cases, kinda like how Fallout does
@mrjaman3752
@mrjaman3752 Ай бұрын
Cof cof *Whatifalthist* cof cof
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
On the other hand, it’s a great litmus test to see how good someone actually is at history.
@helloimskip
@helloimskip Ай бұрын
@@mrjaman3752 Cof cof *Monsieur Z* cof cof
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
Alexander the Great is my favorite personal example: the casual, first impulse is to wonder what would happen if he lived longer; but the far more realistic question is what if he got his brains turned into soup at the Granicus?
@matteomellozzini4392
@matteomellozzini4392 Ай бұрын
As an Italian, trust me, you would have more luck convincing a fish to fly than us to join Austria in WW1
@schwarzenegger_arnold
@schwarzenegger_arnold Ай бұрын
Even if you get most of the territories you wanted beforehand? Sure, Austro-Hungarian policians would have never let that happen but just pretend they would.
@andreamarino6010
@andreamarino6010 Ай бұрын
​@@schwarzenegger_arnold Even if we ignore the deitalianization policy by Austria-Hungary, the attempted austri-hungarian invasion after the earthquake in Messina in 1908, the non respected articles of the triple alliance by Autria-Hungary which annexed balkan territories without italian compensation (yes it was an article), the austri-hungarian unwillingness to even think about giving up more than Trentino, the anti austrian sentiment of the italian population Even if we ignore that you have colonies left to die in Africa, an economy paralyzed (90% of our coal was from Britain) and a defensive approach against the french not an aggressive one which the germans asked (one of the reason why Italy was so fragile at austrian offensive was because we spent 40 uears fortifying the french border only to fight the austrians).
@Peregrine1989
@Peregrine1989 Ай бұрын
@@schwarzenegger_arnold And even if we ignore ALL of the factors andreamarino mentioned, which are reason enough to make it so Italy would NEVER join the Central Powers... People who think that Italy joining the Central Powers would lead them to win WW1 cannot answer HOW Luigi Cadorna actually is useful to the Central Powers. Like when he was on the Entente side, he was near useless, had no defense in depth and just wasted men and moral attacking across the Isonzo. The only reason the Austria's didn't push him off his position earlier then they did in our timeline was they were busy elsewhere. And that's Austria, who are considered one of the more incompetent sides in the war, even if the Italian front general was more intelligent then most. In what universe does Luigi Cadorna have the skills and knowledge to best Joseph Joffre or Ferdinand Foch.
@schwarzenegger_arnold
@schwarzenegger_arnold Ай бұрын
@@Peregrine1989 I never thought of them as a competent ally to the Germans, but maybe as enough of a distraction for the Schliefen-Plan to work. If that would have led to the capitulation of France is debatable. Of course I know there was no way the Italians joined the Central Powers, but I just wanted to know if there would have been a chance if the Austrian government would have been more lenient. A question that has know been answered.
@Kaarl_Mills
@Kaarl_Mills Ай бұрын
The only way Italians would've hated Austrians more is if they broke their pasta before cooking
@JackAttack1776
@JackAttack1776 Ай бұрын
Harald Hadrada won multiple victories for the Byzantines, he would have been familiar with the concept of heavy cavalry as the Byzantines had cataphracts.
@kingofhearts3185
@kingofhearts3185 16 күн бұрын
Also the version I know has him invade after William is defeated, only beating a single enemy that was already exhausted. Basically flipping the real series of events.
@camulodunon
@camulodunon 9 күн бұрын
Exactly
@benlewis4241
@benlewis4241 8 күн бұрын
@@kingofhearts3185 Why not a defection of one or both of the northern lords Edwin and Morcar? An alliance with Tostig might be unlikely but it is far from unheard of. Osulf could be popular and is waiting in the wings too. Malcolm III might be persuaded for the right price. The English born Sweyn II of Denmark is a wild card as well.
@admiralthrawnstein9943
@admiralthrawnstein9943 3 күн бұрын
Familiar with the concept or not, his army that he brought to England had no way to deal with said cavalry. So he could be as familiar with the cavalry as he wanted to be, wouldn't change anything
@JackAttack1776
@JackAttack1776 3 күн бұрын
@@admiralthrawnstein9943 there are strategies and tactics he could have used to counter the cavalry, Godwinson stationed himself on a hill, Hardrada would have done something similar to negate the enemy calvary,
@rainydaygaming5507
@rainydaygaming5507 Ай бұрын
So the alternate history I want to see is this: during the US Civil War the king of Siam offered Lincoln a bunch of war elephants for the campaign. I want the movie mostly historically accurate until like Antietam, and then suddenly Elephants.
@David-b9q7j
@David-b9q7j Ай бұрын
I read somewhere that the Roman writer Pliny wrote one of the first althistories wondering if Alexander invaded Rome. Being a good Roman, he said he would lose.
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 Ай бұрын
Whilst inflating Rome's contemporary military and extent, since he might as well.
@yaldabaoth2
@yaldabaoth2 Ай бұрын
My man, at the time of Alexander Rome was barely in control of all of Latium. They fought with neighbouring italic tribes over a few hills to graze their sheep. They needed a century more until they fought Carthage for the first time and barely won. For Alexander Rome didn't even exist. Just another village.
@fallingcrane1986
@fallingcrane1986 Ай бұрын
⁠@@yaldabaoth2Great insight, you should tell Pliny that
@nukesomething5518
@nukesomething5518 Ай бұрын
@@yaldabaoth2 not to mention they got slapped around phyyrrus who was alexander light and only won because they had more manpower alexander would of rolled them so hard it would of been comical
@Bickdickrandy
@Bickdickrandy 29 күн бұрын
@@nukesomething5518Pyrrhus did in fact NOT “slap the Romans around” the Romans would’ve won both battles if not for Pyrrhus war elephants which turned the tide in both battles (battles which Pyrrhus was badly losing before using his elephants.)
@TheWhiteDragon3
@TheWhiteDragon3 Ай бұрын
The whole "Rome industrializing" thing really ticks me off every time I see it, because it took a mega-uber-nerd named Whitworth to finally establish the principles of close-tolerance-manufacturing needed to properly ramp up production, and even then it was the final hurdle in centuries of iterative changes in manufacturing techniques. Everything before then, even close-tolerance machining for complex machines like clocks and steam engines were each bespoke projects hand-fitted to purpose and incredibly precious and irreplacable (at least not exactly 1-to-1 replacable).
@PP-ok2xt
@PP-ok2xt Ай бұрын
It also doesnt help that Rome lacked the system of international banking we had, a huge part of the industrial revolution hinged on financing and logistics. Slavery was a huge issue too, you really had no reason to industrialize if you could just enslave more people to do things for free.
@generalchaos6
@generalchaos6 Ай бұрын
I read somewhere that someone actually pitched the idea for a steam locomotive back in ancient Rome but they laughed it off because at the time, they said it just couldn’t be done
@ijn4438
@ijn4438 Ай бұрын
There's also the fact that the industrial revolution kind of occurs in a way that's just things happening at the right place at the right time. The steam engine was not initially meant for anything other than pumping water out of coal mines, which then led to steam engines being used to drag out coal from the now expanded coal mines, which finally led to someone considering we can use those coal movers to move things other than coal.
@lovelywii
@lovelywii Ай бұрын
Also isn't the idea that the whole of humanity went backward after the fall of Rome, like mentionned in the video, complete bullshit ? Europe sure did, the rest of the world was fine, multiple golden ages for different civilizations happened in that time period. Kinda irks me to hear "dark ages" type bullshit on a history channel.
@die1mayer
@die1mayer Ай бұрын
@@PP-ok2xt Rome had wealthy families which were patrons of the arts and extensive logistics to supply its army and people. Slaves weren't free, they were a valuable good and needed food and training. Rome used many machines which increased the power of human labor.
@cmpork7145
@cmpork7145 Ай бұрын
That more "realistic" Man in the High Castle idea about America becoming fascist after an Axis victory would be an interesting concept for a video for your channel
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 Ай бұрын
Possible History did a really good video on that, I recommended it for a pro-axis US scenario.
@strategossable1366
@strategossable1366 Ай бұрын
I'd recommend checking out The New Order mod for Hearts of Iron 4 (There are videos and wiki entries about it). The Americas remains independent but lots of Europe is under German occupation, same with Asia and the Japanese. It's a really well thought-out setting because the geopolitics largely make sense and it doesn't feel like the creator just gave the Germans laser guns or a cheat code to the universe in order to win. The Germans have immense political and economic instability, and the old allies like Italy are actually considering swapping sides.
@bc_7644
@bc_7644 29 күн бұрын
The whole premise is unrealistic from the start though, so whats the point?
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 29 күн бұрын
@@strategossable1366 HOLY FUCKING SHIT IS THAT A MOTHEFRFRUKIN TNO REFERENCE??!??!?!??!
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 29 күн бұрын
@@strategossable1366 motherfucking tno reference
@anwatts1
@anwatts1 Ай бұрын
These scenarios seem pretty likely when compared to a multi-book series based around a race of alien lizards arriving during WW2.
@Emdee5632
@Emdee5632 Ай бұрын
I have all Harry Turtledove's novels about the invasion by The Race and its aftermath.
@ThatGuy-a48
@ThatGuy-a48 29 күн бұрын
Tbf the world war series is more just straight up fiction and can be fun to read if you don't mind skipping though some sections
@Emdee5632
@Emdee5632 29 күн бұрын
It's the same with all of Turtledove's books. Lots of repetitions, lots of mentioning how things cannot be helped etc. It does make his novels easy to read.
@0th_Law
@0th_Law Ай бұрын
Hardrada conquering England, to my understanding, is more typically justified by Godwinson fighting William first, winning, then getting defeated by Hardrada
@Arwilus
@Arwilus Ай бұрын
Yeah, isn't it that but in reverse what allowed William to win, also?
@solsunman383
@solsunman383 Ай бұрын
And William winning against Godwinson was by no means a given. He NEARLY lost. And that's if he even lands. The only reason he was able to land in the first place is because Harold Godwinson spent ages waiting for him to arrive. Unfortunately, William was trapped in port, due to bad weather. So Harold Godwinson sent his army home (as it was expensive keeping a semi-professional militia in place, when they were needed for farming). Then Hardrada lands in the North. Godwinson has to high tail it all the way up North, gather a new army from Northumberland and do battle with the Norwegians. William then has a stroke of luck and the weather unexpectedly changes, allowing him to sail before Godwinson can make it South again. This means the fyrd, the semi-professional militia that would have prevented William from making a safe landing was never able to be called up again. Instead, Godwinson had to march his exhausted army on a forced march all the way back down South ... where he still nearly manages to beat William. So, an easy way for Hardrada to win is ... just to change the weather. Either, 1) the weather is worse. William is trapped in port for longer. Hardrada wins at Stamford Bridge and takes London. He consolidates his position and is elected King by the Witan. (England was an elective monarchy under the Saxons. If Hardrada can bully the Ealdormen to elect him, he will be the legitimate king in the eyes of the saxon nobility.) Hardrada inherits Godwinson's position, except he has more soldiers and less opponents. It is entirely plausible he could beat William in a battle. 2) The weather is better. William sails on time and meets Harold Godwinson in battle. Godwinson had a very long time to plan the battle site and signal fires to rapidly respond. William has enough supplies to land and campaign for less than a week. After securing a landing site, he must fight Harold Godwinson on a site of his choosing, or withdraw back to Normandy. With the addition of the Wessex Fyrd, and rested troops, as well as a strong defensive position, it is highly unlikely William wins. At Hastings, William's knights will be forced to charge up a muddy hill, against a larger and more professional force than in Our Timeline (a battle William nearly lost). It's very unlikely William emerges victorious. Hardrada can then land unopposed in the North. The North of England at this time was inhabited by the Anglo-Norse. These were the descendants of the old Danelaw, and has only recently risen against the Godwinsons of Wessex. The Godwinsons were Saxons, and were seen as foreigners by the Anglo-Norse. By contrast, Hardrada was a Norwegian. It's entirely plausible that he would be seen as the successor to Harold Harefoot, the last native viking king of England, to whom Hardrada was actually distantly related. Hardrada could well have been seen as a liberator and established York as a strong base, sparking an English Civil War.
@levinsimon1052
@levinsimon1052 Ай бұрын
I love all of you so much
@levinsimon1052
@levinsimon1052 Ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing
@TheCsel
@TheCsel Ай бұрын
I could see Hardrada seizing some northern lands, while William was busy pacifying the. South. They might avoid fighting each other initially to secure their new possessions. And then the Saxon lords would be forced to try to unite or choose sides.
@TetsuShima
@TetsuShima Ай бұрын
*Fun fact:* Speaking of Alexander, there's a cancelled a tv show in which the macedonian was played by William Shatner. Only the pilot was made and can be found on KZbin. It's pure 60's style
@purplecat4977
@purplecat4977 Ай бұрын
I want the alternate history where that show happened and got as big as Star Trek.
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
Yesssss ​@@purplecat4977
@daniellewis5533
@daniellewis5533 Ай бұрын
Ironically, he could still meet Apollo onscreen 😂
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
@@purplecat4977 Yesssssss
@shanweeboy
@shanweeboy Ай бұрын
Oh yeah. Wasn't that the one where he wore a short tunic and no pants?
@HonkyKong258
@HonkyKong258 Ай бұрын
19:06 the fact that Panama and its canal aren't even mentioned in this world where the entirety of Africa and Latin America are divided between imperial powers is pretty stunning.
@alang.bandala8863
@alang.bandala8863 Ай бұрын
Fun fact: The Germans DID try to make a nuclear bomb, but when the Allies invaded the facilities they found that it looked more like a garage than an industrial laboratory. When the war ended, they put all the German scientists in a house with hidden microphones and played radios that gave the news of the bombings in Iroshima and Nagasaki, to which one of the Germans responded: "How did the Americans get 200 tons of plutonium just for one bomb?" It's not just that they weren't interested, it's that when they tried it they didn't even know how to make one.
@thomaspunt2646
@thomaspunt2646 Ай бұрын
I've heard this guy talk about Roland Emmerich movies so much it's weird hearing him actually talk about alternate history.
@aidangordon2713
@aidangordon2713 Ай бұрын
@@thomaspunt2646 Emmerich directed Wolfenstein movie when?
@luks715
@luks715 Ай бұрын
Or transformers
@mando9364
@mando9364 Ай бұрын
​@@aidangordon2713 That would actually be interesting.
@PrimarinaBay
@PrimarinaBay Ай бұрын
What are Roland Emmerich movies but the alternative history takes of a madman
@JeditheScribe
@JeditheScribe Ай бұрын
He's been talking about alternate history for longer than he's been talking about Roland Emmerich movies. This is his main channel, PointlessHub is his secondary channel that he barely created four years ago.
@moonmoon4537
@moonmoon4537 Ай бұрын
What if Hitler was betrayed by Kami and trapped in the Hyperbolic Time Chamber
@operandwriter
@operandwriter Ай бұрын
What If Hitler was tossed to Mr. Popo?
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
Mr Popo takes his place Pecking Order replaces that of the New World
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
Two words: Mr Popo
@lego007guym8
@lego007guym8 Ай бұрын
The Hyperglycemic Lion Tamer
@lore9828
@lore9828 Ай бұрын
And then has kids with Vados por .. Some reason
@Youtubeisntlettingmeuseczech
@Youtubeisntlettingmeuseczech 21 күн бұрын
Putting Downfall and a Republican victory in Spain in the same list as fucking Sunset Invasion and Man in the High Castle is a bruh moment, even for you
@natestarkovich4893
@natestarkovich4893 Ай бұрын
0:03 my mango
@space__idklmao
@space__idklmao 24 күн бұрын
his mango
@DinoRicky
@DinoRicky 18 күн бұрын
Cyn stop replying on ur alts
@space__idklmao
@space__idklmao 18 күн бұрын
@@DinoRicky ?
@dropandy1453
@dropandy1453 10 күн бұрын
mang0 the goat
@Bismark1815
@Bismark1815 5 күн бұрын
What all of these are his alt accounts… what if I’m an alt account… dear god
@bogardsfoxhole
@bogardsfoxhole Ай бұрын
This video should be called "10 Alternate History Scenarios Cody is TOO SCARED To Consider For Videos"
@Sky_Guy
@Sky_Guy Ай бұрын
(NUMBER █ WILL SHOCK YOU!) _thumbnail shows red circle around AltHist with large arrow for clarity_
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
The horror
@johnfraire6931
@johnfraire6931 Ай бұрын
The funny thing is he DID cover some of these scenarios
@RossWilson-tr5rm
@RossWilson-tr5rm Ай бұрын
Either a 10 year old or an Indian
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
@@RossWilson-tr5rm What
@MultiMal3
@MultiMal3 Ай бұрын
Kinda surprised Operation Sealion didn't make the list, talking about military operations where step one is "three miracles happen in close succession."
@jeffreygao3956
@jeffreygao3956 Ай бұрын
Would've been the dumbest idea in the history of sucking.
@tz8785
@tz8785 Ай бұрын
That one already has its own video: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qnfTlWuVYtOefpo
@QuentinofVirginia
@QuentinofVirginia Ай бұрын
Short answer: Laughs in Royal Navy Long answer: The British actually war gamed this and set best case scenario for the Nazis and the only option for the Nazis would have had is to control a small section of the channel and feed men into a meat grinder of machineguns, artillery and airstrikes if troop carriers and supplies weren't sunk by the infinitely more power Royal Navy. The fact that the Nazis themselves called it off as impractical even after the British Army was operationally gutted due to losing all that equipment at Dunkirk speaks volumes about how dumb Operation Sealion was, hence why they went with terror bombing which itself is operationally questionable in terms of strategic value but way more practical.
@MultiMal3
@MultiMal3 Ай бұрын
@@QuentinofVirginia Well yeah, that's kinda what I meant. Sealion's been the gold standard of Impossible AH since the days of Usenet. (Yeah, I'm old.) I'm just a little surprised it didn't make the list.
@alanpennie
@alanpennie Ай бұрын
Bizarre that the Germans actually prepared for such a ridiculous operation. Their navy kept telling them it was impossible.
@noahp9
@noahp9 Ай бұрын
This video reminds me of a book series I read once called The Clash of Eagles. Romans have conquered Europe and have remained stable so they sail across the Atlantic and start trying to conquer the Indigenous American people. It’s absolutely crazy, especially when the Mongols get involved because they went across the Pacific, so it felt right in line with everything else in this video.
@ismaelnehme379
@ismaelnehme379 Ай бұрын
You can make a decent argument that the Japanese would have surrendered without the nukes, but putting operation downfall-a real plan that was scheduled to take place-on the same list as susnet invasion and man in the high castle is just absurd
@coh2conscript851
@coh2conscript851 Ай бұрын
Cody is a really hardcore nukes bad guy and that gets in the way of his better judgement.
@sirboomsalot4902
@sirboomsalot4902 22 күн бұрын
@@coh2conscript851Yeah, I kinda got those vibes. I kinda disagree that the Soviets invading Manchuria was as big as he makes it out. In his surrender speech, Hirohito specifically says the nukes were the reason. He only mentioned Manchuria in the surrender speech specifically addressed to the Japanese Army.
@FreedomPuppy
@FreedomPuppy 20 күн бұрын
The nuclear weapons were the most significant part of convincing the civilian part of the government to surrender. After all, the army had been fighting the entire time, what’s so different with the Soviets? The Soviet invasion was the most significant part of convincing the army part of the government to surrender. After all, the Home Islands had been getting bombed the entire time, what’s so different with these nukes? The nukes were necessary, and it’s so tiring to see people pretend they weren’t.
@coh2conscript851
@coh2conscript851 20 күн бұрын
@@sirboomsalot4902 Didn't respond to you yet but the latest comment pretty much says everything. The Soviets coming in AND the nukes affected both sectors of the government in negative ways.
@comradewindowsill4253
@comradewindowsill4253 18 күн бұрын
susnet, while being obviously a type, is still a very funny word to me
@mattdavis7876
@mattdavis7876 Ай бұрын
Thank you for debunking the "Man in High Castle" thesis. The number of people who in the 21st century still cry the "WE'D ALL BE SPEAKING GERMAN!!!" hysteria is truly astonishing.
@delly2088
@delly2088 Ай бұрын
Well, not everyone is America so for a lot of those who says this, it's true
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
Midwestern American communities where many people _were_ speaking German before the 20th century:
@Trekpanther
@Trekpanther Ай бұрын
Even those that love military history end up forgetting that "unfun, boring" things like logistics, geography, and planning exist.
@jdotoz
@jdotoz Ай бұрын
Yeah, I have come to understand that WWII just wasn't an existential war for the US in any way. Maybe it felt that way to some people at the time, but the idea that Japan was going to invade the US when they couldn't even pacify China is laughable. Same for Germany, at least after the Battle of Britain (which ended before the US entered the war).
@KingshukMonsur
@KingshukMonsur Ай бұрын
Yes everyone in this world will have been speaking German if Germany had won, just as like I'm typing in English right now.
@jlvfr
@jlvfr Ай бұрын
I always laugh out loud when I see scenarions that involve an actual invasion of the US. The sheer magnitude of the logistics and support required is mind boggling. We'd be talking of something that would make _Downfall_ look small. And yet, we still get these ideas thrown around...
@Wraithfighter
@Wraithfighter Ай бұрын
I'm reminded of the first two episodes of Enterprise Season 4, where Manny Coto had to figure out how to salvage the "Time Traveling Space Nazis Help Germany Invade the USA in WW2" cliffhanger. Because one thing that the episodes do bring up is that, even with some Time Traveling Space Nazi technology backing them up, the Nazis are still getting bogged down like hell in America, only having taken a small section of the nation, and are very vulnerable to a conventional counter-attack. Interesting things can happen when a good writer is forced to salvage a dogshit premise :D.
@jlvfr
@jlvfr Ай бұрын
@@Wraithfighter yep, that was a good one.
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
implying there is not a pseudo-pacifist 5th column working hard to sabotage an effective response or planning for open civil war...
@Bulls3ye86
@Bulls3ye86 Ай бұрын
My favorite one is Homefront, where America is conquered by Kim Jong Un and North Korea.
@noname117spore
@noname117spore Ай бұрын
I pulled it off in Strategic Command WWII once that should totally represent how easy it is /s
@Alpha-zb8sp
@Alpha-zb8sp Ай бұрын
I think Hadrada could be more plausible with a different PoD, the normans were delayed about a month by storms, if that didn’t happen, the would put the battle of Hastings before Hadrada’s arrival, leaving the victor worn down, and possibly defeatable.
@ieremias77
@ieremias77 Ай бұрын
I recognize that you were just glossing it over and weren't going into detail, but there is a common misconception many people have about Japanese Manchuria that I hope wouldn't be inadvertently reinforced by what you said. - Firstly, the Japanese didn't care about Manchuria as such. I mean, they did, but with Allied naval supremacy by that point, they could hardly make any use of its resources (at that point). The loss of the territory was not a serious factor. -They clearly didn't care about loss of the army there; they had lost hundreds of thousands of men along with their materiel in many battles up to that point without considering surrender. -The idea of any Japanese concern about Soviet invasion of the home islands is also absurd; they had neither the materiel nor the experience, and everyone knew it. BUT, the Japanese had been hoping to broker a negotiated peace through the Soviets. The important effect of the Soviet invasion was to dash that hope. That, along WITH the atomic bombs, pushed the Japanese to surrender. I liken it to if the US had invaded, say, Venezuela, and made use of its resources for a decade. Then Brazil (through whom the US was negotiating with its enemies) invades Venezuela, and separately, Columbus, GA and Norfolk, VA get nuked. While the loss of Venezuela isn't nothing, it would be absurd to say that the nukes had no effect on the decision to surrender. (Yes, a ridiculous scenario, but I hope it helps people understand that the weight of the Soviet invasion was diplomatic, not strategic.) Again, not that you were making those assertions, but I wouldn't want others to think you were implying them. Whatever the morality of the use or threat of atomic bombs, it does not have to be related to their effectiveness as a tool of persuasion. Terrorism can be effective, for example, but it is still evil. We do ourselves a disservice when we twist historical realities to support a particular moral narrative.
@TheFizzler38
@TheFizzler38 Ай бұрын
I find it hilarious how you said “it’s like overanalyzing blade runner as not being realistic.” Philip K. Dick wrote the book that inspired blade runner
@AHumanBeingNamedAlex
@AHumanBeingNamedAlex Ай бұрын
While Blade Runner is kinda fast/loose with the specifics of Androids, I do think it is fair to say that it is based on it, I’d be hesitant to say it’s adapting the book, but the story is absolutely based on it
@TheFizzler38
@TheFizzler38 Ай бұрын
@@AHumanBeingNamedAlex I agree there
@StickWithTrigger
@StickWithTrigger Ай бұрын
Not inspired it’s literally an adaptation of “do android’s dream of electric sheep” but they thought that name wouldn’t sell so they gave it the name blade runner which is a different book about a scifi dystopia. Also he’s point was Philp k dick is a scifi author who didn’t worry too much about realism which is why he used the man in the high castle and blade runner two examples of his work.
@mikitz
@mikitz Ай бұрын
Let's not forget about Total Recall either.
@boobah5643
@boobah5643 Ай бұрын
Did you think that was an accident? That was entirely the point. Although it's a malformed point; how cogent it is depends on whether you're talking about a premise for your story (which can be handwaved away) or a result of that premise (which needs must be grounded in reason, given your premise.) _The Man in the High Castle_ isn't about how occupied!America came to be; it's about what happens after. By the same token, _Blade Runner_ isn't about androids, but how the creation of disposable people changes humanity.
@sollitdude1
@sollitdude1 Ай бұрын
imagine us living in one of these weird timelines, where alternatehistory in another timeline tells us "what if alexander lived the longest. i know, weird as hell. we all knew he died of a random arrow at deladonin when he was 12 years old"
@enisra_bowman
@enisra_bowman Ай бұрын
what do you mean, we already live in the Bad 1985 from BTTF
@lego007guym8
@lego007guym8 Ай бұрын
Alexander the Pretty Alright
@hashtagrex
@hashtagrex Ай бұрын
if alexander had died earlier he wouldnt be worth talking about
@loganroy3381
@loganroy3381 Ай бұрын
When a random 12-year-old prince dies in the 4th century bc, we usually barely know their name. He'd have been long-forgotten even 50 years after his death.
@g.ricepad9470
@g.ricepad9470 Ай бұрын
The timeline is kinda skewed in the downfall scenario. The Soviet invasion came in between attacks not after Nagasaki, yet the council vote to not surrender. So I don’t find it compelling for a surrender reason
@g.ricepad9470
@g.ricepad9470 Ай бұрын
At least not alone
@eccentricthinker142
@eccentricthinker142 Ай бұрын
@@g.ricepad9470 And it took all that to push the needle to surrender, it's not unlikely that it's simply not enough to force the surrender. And then Downfall.
@zhongjiang7083
@zhongjiang7083 Ай бұрын
Also addendum on the impossibility of Ming Dynasty in America: To note it's not that China doesn't have any interest in other places overall, as most dynasties pre-1200s were highly engaged with other countries, but by Ming dynasty it definitely reached a point where there wasn't as much of a significant interest anymore, couple with the Ming dynasty having no real adversaries that could feasibly overtake it so there's also less priority to compete with neighbours, though obviously trade and diplomatic relations were still upheld and frequent.
@SOAVGaming
@SOAVGaming 10 күн бұрын
This assumption was made with the idea of the emperor being a fool with money, which isnt the case, it was rather practically a armed diplomatic trade mission. Go to a south eastern prince, negotiate trade, leave. If that emperor instead considered the benefits of establishing foreign settlements, or was just about as obsessed with it as he was trade (which other emperors were scared of, due to a fear of a rising merchant class) could instead change the direction of imperial rule, and spur a direction of increasing free trade, such a change in decision, if not reaching California, is a snowball of changing winds in the East.
@nekoking8330
@nekoking8330 Ай бұрын
Reminds of that cancelled alternate history show for HBO called “Confederate” that was gonna be about the confederacy winning the American Civil War and surviving all the way to the 21st century, still practicing slavery…somehow???
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
By 1895 even Brazil would be wondering why the Confederates wouldn’t emancipate under that scenario. I’d expect if the Confederacy won, and even if they were able to expand to the Caribbean, they’d have to emancipate eventually, but it would be gradual and compensated and civil rights would be a farther way off than they were in our timeline unless some major shake-up in government occurred. I’d also expect the Richmond government to be unusually centralized and industry building to be in some part state-directed, which could cause tensions in politics, and going into the late 20th century the CSA would be as much an international pariah as South Africa unless significant government reform happened.
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
that was a satyrical work rather than actual counterfactual history
@TheAussieBlue
@TheAussieBlue Ай бұрын
As a very cynical person, I'd like to note that the Confederates planned to keep slavery going as far as possible, even through industrialization, and even expand it into the south americas through conquest, due to both the wealth brought by slavery, and the idea that if the blacks were freed they'd be violent savages that would attack civilized white people and live as criminal thugs due to "inferior natures". The idea that the Confederacy would give up slavery without a massive fight is laughable.
@saucevc8353
@saucevc8353 Ай бұрын
I don't think the concept of a modern day Confederacy still practicing slavery that far fetched. I mean nations like China basically use slave labor in all but name. Slavery would look different, sure, they wouldn't have black people tilling the fields with 18th century farm equipment while being whipped, but they could have unpaid black laborers in industrial factories and the system would function just "fine" (for a given definition of fine).
@MrGksarathy
@MrGksarathy Ай бұрын
@@nekoking8330 It could happen, especially since the Confederacy was built around slavery, they were extremely reactionary for the time, and they already had plans in place for industrial slavery.
@amazingstorm2783
@amazingstorm2783 Ай бұрын
So about the Viking one, why couldn’t the point of divergence just be the weather of the English Channel meaning that William would be the one fighting first and Harold would land mostly unopposed?
@warlordofbritannia
@warlordofbritannia Ай бұрын
That’s…that’s basically already what happened. Harald landed without opposition; Harold Godwinson had to rush his army north and then back south.
@tyronedavis3534
@tyronedavis3534 Ай бұрын
So basically if Harold godwinson fought the Normans first and won then fought Harald and lost?
@megarockman
@megarockman Ай бұрын
OP meant the other way around -- Godwinson's army was already in the south when Harald landed first because he was anticipating William to fight him first, but the latter didn't because the winds prevented him from sailing from Normandy. OP is asking what if the Channel weather had been different so that William landed first rather than Harald, so that Hastings (or its equivalent) takes place first and gives Harald the bye for the title bout of King of England.
@riograndedosulball248
@riograndedosulball248 Ай бұрын
Thought about that too, now that's the interesting and plausible scenario we want!
@jackmcglion8337
@jackmcglion8337 Ай бұрын
Also the norse did have horses.
@freshwaterwaterfall4003
@freshwaterwaterfall4003 Ай бұрын
I usually don't do this, but do you have some sources on Japan being ready to give up? Even in books about WW2 & classes in college, I've been taught that Japan's supreme council were unwilling to surrender until the emperor himself decided to intervene (post Okinawa). To this end, the Soviet invasion of Manchuria & the atom bombs both act as significant factors influencing a Japanese unconditional surrender. Are there any sources from the Japanese supreme war council that demonstrate an unwillingness to conduct a Downfall-esque defense of Japan? Further, are there any that can point to the Soviet invasion alone being substantial enough to force Japanese surrender?
@anna-flora999
@anna-flora999 8 күн бұрын
Unwilling to surrender unconditionally, yes. Unwilling to surrendered at all, no. To quote Dwight Eisenhower post war: “I was against it on two counts. First, the Japanese were ready to surrender, and it wasn’t necessary to hit them with that awful thing. Second, I hated to see our country be the first to use such a weapon.” There's also records of communications between Kyoto and the Japanese ambassador to the soviets of the former urging the latter to get the soviets to help them negotiate a peace. Besides, from the point of few of Japanese high command, what's the difference between a nuke completely destroying a city, and a normal bombing raid completely destroying a city? Also, Noone said the Japanese government wouldn't have fought on if invaded. The point is that an invasion would have been unnecessary to get a negotiated surrender. And additional fun fact, the minium conditions some in the council were pushing for are exactly what Japan got anyway, the primary ones being immunity for the emperor, preserving the imperial institution, and keeping the home islands.
@Sloth416
@Sloth416 Ай бұрын
16:31 So Cody is basically saying that the nuclear bombs weren’t the reason for Japans surrender, and instead it was the Soviet invasion of Manchuria. This is a somewhat controversial topic among historians but I’m just going to say that Cody is cherry picking here. The reason for Japanese surrender was because of the atomic bombs *and* the invasion of Manchuria. There is usually not one single reason for a country to surrender and that statement is the same in the case of Japan.
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 Ай бұрын
What's this? Someone leaving an actually nuanced comment on that part of the video? Unthinkable.
@JohnBickner
@JohnBickner 14 күн бұрын
The US dropped the demand for unconditional surrender and offered to let Japan keep their emperor.
@TysonRex37
@TysonRex37 13 күн бұрын
The US had been firebombing them for a bit by then, they didn’t care about the nukes. It was the realization that the Soviets wouldn’t help them combined with the US finally nudging them to accept the Surrender by sneakily saying that sure it’s Unconditional but the Emperor will play a role in the after-war period.
@theworstchannelyouhaveever9573
@theworstchannelyouhaveever9573 Ай бұрын
Do what if the plane crash that killed Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Booper didn't happen?
@pixelproductions150
@pixelproductions150 Ай бұрын
This I like pop culture alternate history and wish it was done more Player Two Start is a good one though
@wetwillyis_1881
@wetwillyis_1881 Ай бұрын
Well, I don’t think we’d have the absolute master piece that is “American Pie.” The song that is.
@theworstchannelyouhaveever9573
@theworstchannelyouhaveever9573 Ай бұрын
​@@pixelproductions150 Never heard of Player Two Start, can you tell me what it's about?
@GarrettEulett
@GarrettEulett Ай бұрын
​@@theworstchannelyouhaveever9573Sony and Nintendo's SNES CD peripheral is made. Real good shtuff
@peterroberts4415
@peterroberts4415 Ай бұрын
American Pie (the classic song) would never be made
@PakBallandSami
@PakBallandSami Ай бұрын
You forget to mention the scenario where my parents start loving me 😢
@PunishedvenomPatrick-s6f
@PunishedvenomPatrick-s6f Ай бұрын
Lmao
@lendasgamer4403
@lendasgamer4403 Ай бұрын
Wow, that's surely even more unrealistic than The Man In The High Castle (jks).
@jdotoz
@jdotoz Ай бұрын
Unrealistic perhaps, but also insignificant?
@JuanGonzalez-bm1dj
@JuanGonzalez-bm1dj Ай бұрын
F
@NamelessvonIrgendwo
@NamelessvonIrgendwo Ай бұрын
What if in an alternate timeline my dad came back with the milk?
@charliesmith4072
@charliesmith4072 12 күн бұрын
Your analysis of the Ming Dynasty trip to the West Coast is spot-on. During the Eastern Han Dynasty, about 200 A.D., a group of Buddhist monks sailed north around what is now Russia and followed the Aleutian Islands to the North American mainland and south along the coast to Monterey Bay in what is now California. They drew detailed maps, contacted the natives, found nothing of interest, and sailed back the same way.
@mimorisenpai8540
@mimorisenpai8540 11 күн бұрын
They never sailed to siberia
@anonimanonim2710
@anonimanonim2710 29 күн бұрын
8:13 "Everyone shall be interested in our conveniently priced dishware!"- The Emperor 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@charlieputzel7735
@charlieputzel7735 Ай бұрын
I do think the Hadrada scenario could still be different. Maybe he doesn't take all of England, but beds down around York, fortifying while William deals with local revolts, leading to England being split in two long-term.
@crusader2112
@crusader2112 Ай бұрын
A divided England. ***Alfred the Great and his son making sad noises***
@kristijanmadhukar516
@kristijanmadhukar516 Ай бұрын
I don't think Hadrada's pride would let him be satisfied with keeping only the north. The Normans were the ones that brought many of the innovations that made England such a hotbed for castles and fortifications. So it wouldn't be as defensible being held by the norwegians. The south is also more fertile and can raise larger armies than the north with Normandy also being closer than Norway for reinforcements. Fun fact, the Duchy of Normandy had a larger population than the Kingdom of Norway at the time.
@charlieputzel7735
@charlieputzel7735 Ай бұрын
@@kristijanmadhukar516 I'll grant most of the geography, but I'm not saying the intent would be to split England, just that that's what might have happened. Hadrada waiting for the right opportunity, William having more trouble with the locals (especially if Hadrada is giving them support). If they can survive the first century, the southern kingdom would probably be more interested in holding on to it's more valuable French possessions until the 1500s.
@MrGksarathy
@MrGksarathy Ай бұрын
@@charlieputzel7735 True. That being said, the Norman army landing in England was definitely a superior force to Hadrada's mostly infantry army, and in our timeline, he got defeated handily by Harold Godwinson, a seemingly more able commander than himself who was in turn defeated by William. I think in a few decades, William could have easily taken back the North. Of course, a stalemate is possible.
@charlieputzel7735
@charlieputzel7735 Ай бұрын
@@MrGksarathy Very true, though I think there's also a lot of credit to be given to luck at Stamford bridge. The Norsemen were caught unprepared. The soldiers were arguably better than the Anglo Saxons one on one, they were just out numbered and unprepared, with their leader dying mid battle. Of course a better timeline sees William cross the channel sooner, defeating Harold Godwinson (but probably coming out much worse due to facing a fresher army) before he can even go North in the first place.
@NinjaMan47
@NinjaMan47 Ай бұрын
EU4 having China colonize America has always been one of my favorite memes and ways to show just how cursed the world had become
@christiandauz3742
@christiandauz3742 Ай бұрын
Only if a Time-traveler Industrialized Shang Dynasty China
@whaleofdarkness
@whaleofdarkness Ай бұрын
Actually, if you play a colonizing Ming you see how ludicrous it actually is. You either have to settle parts of Siberia and go for Alaska or you have to go through dozens of small islands to get to the Americas. While you are better of to settle the unsettled areas of Indonesia because the provinces are better and you can secure a very powerful trade node. Also you can turn a lot of nations in this area into tributaries which greatly boosts your mandate.
@NinjaMan47
@NinjaMan47 Ай бұрын
@@whaleofdarkness You are 100% correct and as he said logically it would make zero sense for any Chinese dynasty to bother with the Americas. Which only drives the EU4 player to do something just completely insane for the hell of it!
@christiandauz3742
@christiandauz3742 Ай бұрын
@@NinjaMan47 Only if a Time-traveler Industrializes the Ming
@emberfist8347
@emberfist8347 28 күн бұрын
Paradox alt-history scenarios are hilarious. There is even an acknowledgement that a democratic Japan is unthinkable with the title of that focus.
@conserva-chan2735
@conserva-chan2735 Ай бұрын
Luckily my recommendation for if the Sino-Soviet Split never happened or was patched up wasn't shat on.
@comradewindowsill4253
@comradewindowsill4253 18 күн бұрын
idk, how would you deal with the issue of the 2 countries having separate reform movements? it'd be pretty difficult to time things so that reformists emerged at the same time in both countries & were successful, and otherwise whichever country is later to reform will view the other as vile revisionists betraying communist principles.
@BZAKether
@BZAKether Ай бұрын
This is why I started liking more and more your channel over other alt-hist. There are so many factors that made history turn into what it is today, that alternate history is almost preposterous. There are plenty of moments where a single decision could have changed history, but they are still insignificant to the huge amount of factors, conditions, resources, ideology, social development, and other things that I can't imagine that set the course of events as we know them. I am not sure if the future can be predicted, but it does have a huge element of determinism.
@MarcieParcie
@MarcieParcie Ай бұрын
we do actually in the alternate timeline where alexander the great actually defeated persia and didn't die on some godforsaken battlefield trying to be achilles at age 14
@moritamikamikara3879
@moritamikamikara3879 Ай бұрын
Yeah, Alexander the great is fucking whack, dudes insane!
@alanpennie
@alanpennie Ай бұрын
Alexander single - handedly creating Hellenistic civilization is so freaky. He profoundly altered the history of the world.
@Spongebrain97
@Spongebrain97 Ай бұрын
What if Cody did a list of his favorite fictional settings in media that he likes and talks about the factions and characters that are featured?
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
That's literally PointlessHub
@eatingworld7192
@eatingworld7192 Ай бұрын
I'd love For All Mankind to make an appearance. Season 2 is ripe for such a video.
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
Hey KZbin, let me know when you shadow ban my comments so I don't waste my time. @@Spongebrain97 He already does that. Its called PointlessHub.
@joaquincobas2223
@joaquincobas2223 Ай бұрын
"What if the aztecs tried to conquer Spain?" They would be turned into swiss cheese in the first battle
@andrewspears8891
@andrewspears8891 Ай бұрын
Alt history idea: all of these in the same time line.
@censored4680
@censored4680 Ай бұрын
i wanna note, i think there is a strong chance that Operration Downfall could have happend, but not in the way we think. The nuclear bomb played a pivitol role in convincing the Japanese populace and civilian goverment to give up, the military was convinced by the Manchurian invasion I think that there was a real possibility that, if the atomic bomb was not developed the Japanese as a whole would not surrender until US troops were on Japanese Soil. I dont think it'd be thousands of loyal japanese citizens kamakaziing themselves, but a short battle in the south, a beachhead being made and then a surrender from the japanese citizen goverment and the Emperor telling his subjects to stop.
@jackthorton10
@jackthorton10 Ай бұрын
That makes sense to me considering what I know of this part of of the WW2 History
@leonardooliveira4627
@leonardooliveira4627 Ай бұрын
The war would stop the moment the Soviets got foothold in Hokkaido for a very simple reason: The Emperor. Operations Coronet and Downfall would be massive but in the Japanese minds the Americans could be reasoned with, the military goverment believed they could still reach *some* agreement with the USA(and they did), meanwhile the Soviets on other hand were not known to return ANY territory they occupied, and you know, communists and Emperors don't mix well together, they would surrender to the allies the instant the Soviets could realisitic threaten the Emperor and the home islands.
@ethanweiss1141
@ethanweiss1141 28 күн бұрын
I disagree, there cities were leveled by the firebombing campaigns. Why would the atomic bomb really make that much of a difference? I really think the invasion of Manchuria is what truly broke the Japanese resolve.
@drakron
@drakron 27 күн бұрын
@@leonardooliveira4627 No, Japan wanted to negotiate using the Soviets as a intermediary and we know this. The Americans also knew that as Stalin simply let the Japanese think that since he needed time to move the troops for the follow up operation. There is a huge flaw with the idea that is that it hinges on the "unconditioned surrender" being acceptable terms, they werent because the previous war Germany did surrendered after the Hindenburg Line was breached as the Kaiser wanted to spare the civilian occupation (as well they already being close to a civil war) and Japan had a first row seat to the negotiations, they expected to get a worst version of the Versailles Treaty and that one is also a big reason why Japan ended up making the decisions they made. This is why WWI ended when neither the German or Austrian armies were any shape to continue to fight and why WWII ended when they almost reached their bitter end. I could say thank the French and their desire for revenge as well a return to their position as a European power (that they lost to the German Empire) but good old Teddy is also a cause since this is when Japanese attitudes towards the West turned sour. ... in fact, Alternative History, what if Teddy accepted the racial equality clause that was rejected because of the Jimmy Crow laws? Japan didnt want to surrender since they still had hopes over a negotiated deal, with the Soviets entering the war that was pretty much over and it would be over the moment they entered the war, also there are a few other things. The occupation of Japan also was similar to the occupation of Germany, the Soviet troops did move towards their occupation goals and yes, Stalin would been very happy if Soviet troops managed to reach the Home Islands and their posturing post-war in the occupation was more if they could maybe get a bit more but they never really expected anything out of that as well they werent *interested* in anything like that, a Soviet Japan would be nice but a Soviet China and a Soviet Korea was more that enough, they were buffer states and the Far East was not the Soviet primary concern, Eastern Europe was. In short, its true the Soviet entry into the Pacific War had a great deal of weight on the Japanese decision to surrender but not because they were afraid Soviets would make the People's Republic of Nippon in their occupation zone but rather that it ended any idea of a possible agreement with the Allies since it required the Soviets to act as intermediaries. And honestly, they werent entirely wrong on that reasoning., the Soviets had a non-aggression pact with then and didnt hold much of a interest in the Far East, they simply didnt seeming had a horse in that race (since they werent aware of what happened in Yalta the Japanese could know) and entering the war would mean having to move their armies across all of Asia ... of course there were already signs as their build up in preparation for the occupation of their assigned zones as well being informed of the non-renewal of the Neutrality Pact in 5 April 1945 even if they assured then they would respect the 12 months as other signs, like recalling their embassy staff and their families but I can understand why, after all ... things just worked out due to Hirohito being more useful in the throne for the occupation so what the Japanese wanted ended up being what they got in the end.
@Szgerle
@Szgerle 25 күн бұрын
It was less about the nuclear bomb and more about the Soviet Union declaring war too. Up to that point, the Japanese were counting on the neutral soviets coming to their aid to hem in growing US influence or atleast aid them to negotiate a less than total defeat. When they attacked and their intention to also invade Japan was revealed, defeat was inevitable.
@GafferPerkele
@GafferPerkele Ай бұрын
Anyone who thinks you can just "invade" USA has played too many Paradox games and has no idea how logistics work. The US troops landing in Europe worked, because they have this slightly industrialized island nation just a swimming distance from the mainland away as an ally. Even then operation Overlord was a huge mess. Same issues would've popped up with any actual invasion of Japan to be fair, the supply lines would have been very taxed and any troops on land would've most likely spent more time building infrastructure and logistics than actually fighting the Japanese.
@andyf4292
@andyf4292 Ай бұрын
the other allies listened to what the British were saying at overlord, and did pretty well. but admiral King knew better!
@mxn1948
@mxn1948 Ай бұрын
but japan had korea and russia and china next door that was very much in Allied hands, plus various islands the US had conquered, while japan itself is very poor on resources and its navy and airfroce was basically broken and without fuel. in the case of Europe, besides britain, the largest number of axis troops were stuck fighting the soviet union and could not devote the resources nor the man power to really defend the west. plus the germany navy could not control the waters nor could the german air force defend the skies. invading the us would be harder than both, you would have to conquer Mexico and/or canada and use them as a spring board or be able to decisively suppress the US navy and air force in order to be able to build up in say, cuba for an invasion and even then, you would want the us army to be distracted else where in the mean time instead of building defenses.
@SusCalvin
@SusCalvin Ай бұрын
I think the "isolationist USA" thread used to be more common. The war in Europe is still going on, but Lend-Lease and/or a US entry in the war never happens. The war in Europe and the Japanese expeditionary wars still drag on, none of them immediately becomes a superpower. The USA is still a giant industrial power, but much more isolated in a world with shrinking liberal democracy.
@TuShan18
@TuShan18 27 күн бұрын
I bet there’s also the idea that Japan is a smaller nation, so a landing and subsequent conquest could be more possible. Still extremely difficult if it proceeded, but nowhere near what it would take to conquer the US.
@SusCalvin
@SusCalvin 27 күн бұрын
@@TuShan18 The Imperial Japanese command has a lot of rosy optimism, but they talk about delaying the USN with island garrisons or culling the carrier build up.
@lordhenrywotton95
@lordhenrywotton95 Ай бұрын
11:45 In December 1862, the Lancashire cotton workers wrote to Abraham Lincoln saying they supported his campaign against slavery, despite the hardship it was causing in the local economy. At the time, Britain’s industrial working class was very powerful and an intervention by the UK on the Confederate side could have led to massive unrest.
@Hendricus56
@Hendricus56 Ай бұрын
The WW1 Italy in the Central powers scenario could work, if Germany had convinced Austria somehow to give up the territories Italy wanted
@arthurbriand2175
@arthurbriand2175 Ай бұрын
Our own timeline had Samuraïs vs Conquistadors in 1582 so we're already stranger than fiction. We had so many weird events and plot armored/ASB conquerors. Could you predict the mongol empire if it wasn't in History ? Could you predict Napoléon ?
@Patton1944
@Patton1944 Ай бұрын
Jeanne d'arc is my favorite, "Look how weird actual history is," person. Random French maid finds an actual buried sword and then rallies the French army to her banner.
@riograndedosulball248
@riograndedosulball248 Ай бұрын
Francisco Pizarro on a killing streak of 7000 - 0 against the Inca because plate armor made him invulnerable:
@ordinaryrat
@ordinaryrat Ай бұрын
@@riograndedosulball248 Virgin Plot Armor vs Chad Plate Armor
@jb-ch7ug
@jb-ch7ug Ай бұрын
What’s so outlandish about Conquistadors v Samurai? Portuguese colonialism was still at large in the far east, and Samurai were a warrior class. There’s nothing weird about them meeting and even fighting.
@Poseidon4862.
@Poseidon4862. Ай бұрын
Most of actual history is weirder than anything our imaginations can come up with, honestly. The British and Mongol Empires, the emergence of Industrialization, hell even the fact that humanity developed civilization in the first place is something we still can’t entirely explain. Scenarios where the most likely outcome occurs are honestly the ones with the most amount of changes.
@shinyagumon7015
@shinyagumon7015 Ай бұрын
Your idea about Alexander already getting as close to a perfect outcome as one can in our timeline is really fascinating to me. Makes me wonder what history would look like if people like Alexander the Great never lived up to their full potential. Like the inverse of the (outdated) Great Men Theory of history, where history is dominated not by the achievements of great men, but by their utter mediocrity. A timeline where Alexander failed his conquests, where Caesar never became dictator for Life, where Napoleon flunked out of officers school, etc.
@SammyWhiteley
@SammyWhiteley Ай бұрын
I mean for everyone with Alexander the Great level plot armor there were probably a good number of potentially world-changing people who history didn't remember because they never got the chance to change the world. I consider it a near certainty that every potential alternate timeline has at least a few "Great Men" who achieved Alexander-level significance.
@erraticonteuse
@erraticonteuse Ай бұрын
Flunking out of officer school wouldn't necessarily hamper Napoleon. Ulysses S. Grant was in the lower half of his West Point class and had been discharged from the Army for drunkenness before the Civil War. Then he won the Civil War, in part because he wasn't held back by preconceptions of how wars should be fought.
@concept5631
@concept5631 Ай бұрын
Other great people would've taken their place
@Batmans_Pet_Goldfish
@Batmans_Pet_Goldfish Ай бұрын
Where Hitler failed to get into art school... wait.
@firstnamlastnam2141
@firstnamlastnam2141 Ай бұрын
There would just be other people other people to replace them that we either wouldn't know of, or weren't (as) important to us. Like if Chamberlain didn't get sick and step down, meaning Churchill didn't get his position.
@jensphiliphohmann1876
@jensphiliphohmann1876 Ай бұрын
10:30 Additionally, the Atzteks would even lose their advantage of numbers they still had back at home.
@larsquestionmark
@larsquestionmark Ай бұрын
Lovely video, the operation downfall part has a few inaccuracies though 1. The soviet invasion of Manchuria did not play a role in the surrender of Japan, this is for a few reasons. The Japanese were aware of a soviet plan to invade. This is corroborated by a diary entry from one of the big six (supreme war council), stating that the soviets invaded earlier than expected, or something along those lines anyways. Many Manchurian forces were moved to southern Kyushu to bolster forces for the Olympic invasions, which meant the forces still remaining were ordered to do a fighting retreat into northern Korea. You are right that Manchuria supplied a lot of food to the Japanese mainland, but that was before the American naval blockade stopped any trade with Japan way before the soviet entry into the war. 2. Easing up on the terms was a very unlikely option considering Truman was against it, he believed unconditional surrender would not be victory, and repeat the mistakes of the end of WWI. It’s true that the calculations of the troops on southern Kyushu were inaccurate in early stages of the planning, which was discovered soon before the end of the war. This would mean a reconsideration of the plan. General MacArthur was still trying to get the operation going for the glory of commanding the largest naval invasion of the war, but especially the navy was against the plan. George Marshall was looking at using up to 9 nukes in Kyushu and then going in with marines. The navy was in favour of a continued naval blockade and bombing. This would’ve meant the death of possibly millions more in the Japanse co-prosperity sphere and would starve Japanese civilians. The reality is that the nuke posed the idea that a decisive battle in the homeland might not take place, which was the hope of Japanese leaders, because that would mean that they could inflict as much casualties as possible to ease up the surrender terms. Access to a nuke meant that they could destroy entire cities at a distance, with a single b29 bomber. That’s why Japan would’ve ultimately surrendered.
@larsquestionmark
@larsquestionmark Ай бұрын
I am so sorry for this essay
@Okada_Caelun
@Okada_Caelun Ай бұрын
Fun fact, you made the "Chinese name for Los Angeles" but that IS the actual Chinese name for the city. 洛杉磯 (Luò-shān-jī) Basically, the Chinese language can and will use it's own name for you and/or your city/country rather than whatever you came up with. Perhaps the most "well known" historical example is when Marco Polo asked the Chinese what that island off their coast was called, they said it was named the land of the rising sun, or "Ja-pon", despite the locals of the island calling it "Ni-hon" instead.
@FlamingKetchup
@FlamingKetchup Ай бұрын
Why'd you put "(Cantonese)" right after the pinyin for the, you know, Mandarin?
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
Italianized in "Cipango" remember this was XIII century mandarin
@Okada_Caelun
@Okada_Caelun Ай бұрын
@@FlamingKetchup i thought I had google translate set to "chinese (Traditional)"
@FlamingKetchup
@FlamingKetchup Ай бұрын
@@Okada_Caelun Traditional does not equal Cantonese. Traditional is the writing style while Cantonese (very roughly) is the spoken dialect. HK uses Traditional plus Cantonese, but Taiwan uses Traditional plus Mandarin. I believe Guangdong (province of Mainland China) uses Cantonese plus Simplified.
@Okada_Caelun
@Okada_Caelun Ай бұрын
@@FlamingKetchup Fair enough then.
@Marconius6
@Marconius6 Ай бұрын
In the CK2 version of Sunset Invasion, the idea was actually that the Aztecs (and generally Mesoamerica) somehow teched up faster than in real history; so they actually discovered Europe BEFORE Columbus and were on par with them technologically. If you import a CK2 save with the invasion enabled to EU4, you actually find a big, advanced Aztec Empire in America that has tech on par with Europe. Which y'know, also probably not very realistic, but "what if Mesoamerica had technology on par with Europe when it was discovered?" is a fun scenario to consider too.
@Azraeltheangelofdeath
@Azraeltheangelofdeath Ай бұрын
To be fair, too, the whole point of the sunset invasion was to counterbalance the Mongol invasion of the east, which left the western half virtually untouched so now you have to contend with an Aztec invasion
@Arwilus
@Arwilus Ай бұрын
If I Remember correctly, its the Vinland explorers that learn from the local tribes that a powerful kingdom (the Aztecs) exist to the south, encroaching into the plains. The Vinlanders then journey south anyway, get interrogated about Europe, and their ships reverse engineered. The ship part is why the cover art here in the video has an Aztec style longship.
@RvEijndhoven
@RvEijndhoven Ай бұрын
Mesoamerica _did_ have technology on par with Europe when it was 'discovered'. What it didn't have was the local resources that Europe did. You have to remember that for a couple centuries there, Western history writing was 90% people coming up with reasons why Europeans came to dominate much of the world that wasn't just 'we lucked into it'... But 'we lucked into it' was absolutely the actual answer. The coastal areas of Western and Northern Europe were, before humans started draining them, almost completely composed of bogs and swamps. Which is a huge advantage, because a bog, when drained, provides very fertile soil. It also has another very valuable resource: Bog Iron. Created by iron-rich water flowing from mountains meeting the acidic waters of a bog. This, with the assist of specific microbes, causes big porous clumps of iron oxides close to the surface. Bog iron is much easier to find, work and refine into decent quality iron than iron ores mined from deposits in rock. Even then, early European iron wasn't much to write home about, being inferior in every way to the high quality bronze used in the Fertile Crescent, Minoan Greece and Egypt. The methods that Europeans would eventually use for refining iron of genuine quality were first developed around 2000 BCE somewhere in the Middle East. The Middle East didn't have bog iron, but it did have some areas with iron ores in solid rock close to the surface. The amount of ore they could extract was limited, but they developed techniques for making maximum use of what little they could. While it took almost a millennium and a half for Middle Eastern iron smelting techniques to reach Europe, once they did Europe's ability to produce and use iron, and the quality of said iron, increased exponentially and even outpaced that of the Middle East. Having access to a lot of iron ore that was easy to extract and refine let Europeans make lots of tools to get at iron that was harder to extract and refine, but produced even better quality iron (and steel). The European Iron Age was only made possible by knowledge from the Middle East eventually filtering through to Europe through the powerful nations during the Mediterranean Bronze Age. And, likewise, the Age of Sail was only made possible by the fact that the native evergreens of the Northern hemisphere, like spruce and pine, make excellent material for large sea-going ships (especially when held together with iron and brass fittings). The various nations of West Africa (also rich in bog iron, also got those Middle Eastern refining techniques, a little earlier than the Europeans even) were on-par with or ahead of Europe 'technologically' for most of history _until_ the Europeans started sailing the open sea. While the spruce and pine so common in Europe made for excellent sea-going ships, the more fibrous, less straight-grained woods of afro-tropical climates did not, so the ships of West African empires were restricted to rivers, lakes and local coastal waters. Meanwhile, on the other side of the Atlantic, the species of microbe that created the massive bog iron deposits of Europe wasn't present. There was another microbe from the same family in the bogs of what is now New England, but it didn't produce nearly as much (to the point that while there is still bog iron to be found in the soil of Europe in various locations, nearly all the bog iron in the whole of the Eastern Seaboard of North America was dug up and smelted by European Colonists and their descendants before the end of the 19th century). Native Americans never had access to metal in any significant amounts besides copper (and arsenic bronze) and gold, neither of which make for very good tools. So without metallurgy to focus on, the various cultures of the Americas developed in other areas. When Europeans first arrived in Mesoamerica, the locals were, for instance, light years (heh) ahead of them in terms of astronomy and mathematics. And a lot of people don't get how significant that is: Europeans only arrived in Mesoamerica in the first place because Christopher Columbus sucked at both, assumed that the earth was smaller than it was based on his bad calculations and believed that the distance between Europe and the East Indies (Indonesia) was smaller going west than it was going east. And the only reason he managed to convince the royal family of Spain to fund his expedition was that the development of this kind of knowledge was still relatively new in Europe and while they were fairly sure he was wrong, they weren't 100% sure it was impossible for him to be right. If Europe hadn't been much more _primitive_ in those areas of knowledge than the Mesoamericans, Europeans would never have colonised the Americas.
@Stroggoii
@Stroggoii Ай бұрын
@@RvEijndhoven Mesoamerica was barely recovering from the cataclysmic events that wiped the Tehotihuacan culture and caused the Aztec migration. As impressive as Tenochtitlan was, it was the exception, not the rule. They clearly maintained an advanced understanding of engineering and math through the famine and migrations. But their technology and logistics was at a stone age level. In a fair fight simulacrum, age of discovery mesoamerican armies could have defeated bronze age armies, maybe. Probably even iron age armies. But not medieval european armies, much less Spain in it's golden age.
@RvEijndhoven
@RvEijndhoven Ай бұрын
@@Stroggoii I'm not saying they could have won any kind of war, I'm saying that judging 'technological advancement' solely by how good a nation's weaponry is, is incredibly gamer-brained. Europe wasn't more technologically advanced than any of the nations it colonised, it was simply in a better position regarding local natural resources. And the whole thing that kicked off the rise of European dominance of the globe was a technology that Europeans didn't even develop themselves, but that was developed in the Middle-East and took nearly two millennia to filter down to Europe, but it was one that Europeans were in a much better position to exploit than its original developers. Tech levels are bullshit, is what I'm saying.
@KYTechGuy
@KYTechGuy 24 күн бұрын
Cody are you okay man. What happened to your personal Twitter.
@camygael
@camygael 22 күн бұрын
He got bored and decided to delete his Twitter
@kyleolson8977
@kyleolson8977 Ай бұрын
The "surrendered because of Russia" is exactly the kind of history you claim to be debunking. It's a quick shortcut for pop-war history, based purely on a post hoc ergo propter hoc reading. Here's an important detail you're missing: We don't have to use the timing of the bombs and the Russia declaration to guess what was true. We have the diaries and histories and internal communications of those involved. And they paint a different picture than the one you claim.
@KasumiRINA
@KasumiRINA Ай бұрын
BTW, calling Soviet Union russia is a literal red flag. 10 millions of Ukrainians and every fourth Belarusian died in WW2 but somehow russians get all credit... Insane.
@majorplothole2620
@majorplothole2620 25 күн бұрын
Ah yes. the "sOvIeT sTrOnK" argument. Its like if a gang of thugs picked on a rich dude. and the rich dude gets told: "hey by the way, like the backyard for your summer home is being invaded" - (Manchuria) - versus the Rich dude getting told by his wife and bodyguards that "Someone just chucked two molotov cocktails into the dining room and upstairs bathroom." - then the rich guy concedes, surrenders and when is asked "hey, what really caused you to surrender when your house was burning down?" and he goes "Oh. someone was outside my summer home with plans of possibly invading it." - yeah. no. totally believable. super intelligent theory whoever originally came up with it. The only argument was that the generals on the ground in asia still, so one, they didn't see the bombs go off and two, they didn't give two shits that there were people dying to one bomb - after all they'd lost hundreds of thousands if not millions of people to fire bombings already. No, the generals were too preoccupied with their fight with the chinese and then now suddenly a threat from the soviets - they thought the Emperor was pussin' out - when he said they were going to surrender... Hell, there was even a coup attempt to prevent the Emperor and civilian government from surrendering the war completely.... like that doesn't strike me as though they feared the communists more than the unleashing of more suns.
@TrueFlameslinger
@TrueFlameslinger 21 күн бұрын
​@KasumiRINA I mean, most people should generally understand that, at that point in time, it was the USSR. However, just like Yugoslavia, it was heavily dominated by a single ethnic group/country. Russia, while not strictly correct, is still passable in most contexts
@xenopug6390
@xenopug6390 21 күн бұрын
​@KasumiRINA it was a Russian empire where Russians dominated and Russian was the official language. Referring to it as Russia is misleading but not really incorrect, in the same way that many people refer to the Empire and Commonwealth forces in the same war as British
@ilmari1452
@ilmari1452 20 күн бұрын
​@@xenopug6390Linguistically, it was definitely Russian, but some of the SSRs like Ukraine were disproportionately represented in the Soviet elite (thanks to the large urban centres full of educated intelligentsia and industrial power).
@williamleonardreesejr.1992
@williamleonardreesejr.1992 Ай бұрын
Harold Godwinson defeating the Normans sounds like a pretty fascinating alt-history to be honestly. The Battle that changes the world
@KasumiRINA
@KasumiRINA Ай бұрын
If Harold won, you'd be speaking English and not French... Wait.
@friedrichweitzer3071
@friedrichweitzer3071 Ай бұрын
@@KasumiRINA Only to be invaded by the somehow unified Germans I guess... English (Anglisch) would be a German dialect... as intelligible as the Swiss...
@wyrdwulf999
@wyrdwulf999 17 күн бұрын
@@KasumiRINA English would't have such a large Romance vocabulary, but more Norse influence.
@ShadowOfCicero
@ShadowOfCicero Ай бұрын
When I heard your Harald Hadrada scenario, I thought, "Stamford Bridge is not the correct point of divergence." William the Conqueror was ready to cross as early as August 12. If the wind had been favorable, he might have. King Harold would not yet have dismissed his militia, which means Hastings becomes a much harder battle for William. In turn, this leads to possible scenarios: Suppose King Harold actually wins, but has fewer troops once he still dismisses the militia on September 8. Does Harold still win Stamford Bridge with a diminished force? Suppose William still wins, but again, has fewer troops. In our timeline, it took William over two months to stabilize his position enough to even be crowned. He would have six weeks before he would have to respond to Hadrada. Does he still have it then?
@-._A2._-
@-._A2._- Ай бұрын
Plus why does Hardrada have to go south when he had control of York. York has more significance to Norway. Is closer to Norwegian controlled territories in Scotland and he could easily garnered support from the Northumbrians whom had Norse influence plus he ignoring the possibility of Hardrada potentially getting more allies. It's not unreasonable for hardrada to ask king of Scotland that if he joins, Scotland can have Sutherland or Hebrides. Or ask Gwynedd and give back some of land Mercia took from them. Normandy couldn't do that with Scotland as he has no territory to give nor the ability to take. But hardrada did.
@yaldabaoth2
@yaldabaoth2 Ай бұрын
@@-._A2._- If Harald Godwinson was slain at Stamford Bridge, the northern Anglosaxon lords could well have crowned Hardrada as the next king. His claim was just as flaky as William's. "My uncle thought he should be king here, so..." vs. "The previous king told me that I would be king, no witnesses but for real bro".
@undeadfrak
@undeadfrak Ай бұрын
In the hands of a good writer, even the most nonsensical alternate history scenarios can still be good. The Man in the High Castle is not a realistic, but its purpose was to tell the story of Americans living under fascism. Since that is the point of his story, it doesn't matter how dumb the actual scenario is. ...and that is why the Industrialized Rome story I am writing ISN'T dumb! If Archimedes wasn't killed at Syracuse and instead was brought to Rome alive he would have totally propelled Rome into an industrial revolution!! (I'm joking, but this was an idea I had a few years ago that I still think could make a fun, if unrealistic, story)
@stevenchoza6391
@stevenchoza6391 5 күн бұрын
Actually, the Japanese received word of the Soviet Invasion BEFORE they learned of Nagasaki’s destruction. I think you put too little stock in the importance of the nukes.
@SirFarty-hh6lk
@SirFarty-hh6lk 17 сағат бұрын
Yes
@FCGroningen1987
@FCGroningen1987 Ай бұрын
Devil's advocate: scenario 3: What if Hadrada landed in England after the Normans? Part of what delayed William was the unfavorable wind that kept him anchored in Normandy. What if instead the wind was favorable to William but bad for Hadrada which meaning he would land after the other 2 parties exhausted themselves?
@ewadfe3705
@ewadfe3705 Ай бұрын
william would be in no rush to defeat hadrada because he hasnt done his harrying of the north by then, so he practically didnt really control it.
@oranjethefox8725
@oranjethefox8725 Ай бұрын
I still think Operation Downfall isn't completely implausible. If you consider a more complex scenario involving the Kyujo incident succeeding, American leadership refusing to allow the emperor to remain, etc. While improbable (like most althistory), i wouldnt say it is nearly as impossible as the Sunset Invasion, Man in the High Castle, or most of the others on this list
@forickgrimaldus8301
@forickgrimaldus8301 Ай бұрын
Also the Plan was basically to Bleed the Allies for a more "acceptable" Peace term so they were planning for Downfall to happen, its just that the Emperor and Government made up their mind that they would surrender after both the Bombs and the Soviets invalidated Ketsu-go. So while not likely had the Government or the Emperor been delayed Downfall might still have happened its just that Japan would have still surrendered and not fought till Tokyo explodes or gets occupied because that was never the plan, the plan was to fight the Allies to a Peace negotiation not have the Allies occupy it because the Japanese resisted till the end.
@eccentricthinker142
@eccentricthinker142 Ай бұрын
It would only take a small string of mistakes by a small group of people, and that would be a plausible tragedy. After all, the Japanese High Command was willing to lead their country to the bitter end. And the fact the Kyujo incident even happened showed at least a chunk of the military wasn't shocked to surrender by the successive bad news.
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
Japan was even more prepared than the allied intelligence thought it was. They would have find it the hard way and then oh man, debate should be what would have NOT being used...
@GG-ir1hw
@GG-ir1hw Ай бұрын
Hard agree. You could also simply have the Manhattan project delayed. Any easy way to do this, is no Tizard mission from the UK. Einstein never writes his letter urging the US to start work and the refugee German and Commonwealth scientists in the UK never urge the US to do the same or share how plausible it is along with their research in Tube alloys not being folded into the Manhattan project. With the Belgian government in exile following British directives the Uranium sources are mostly held by Britains empire (Canada) and the Belgian Congo. With a delay in the atomic bombs the shock factor is decreased and the land war in Manchuria maybe seen as less pressing, after all the Russians can’t invade the home islands on their own, they don’t have naval logistics or experience for such an ambitious amphibious assault. You could also have a scenario where US progress to bombing range of the Japanese home islands is way slower. Again adding more time for the invasion. Ultimately they were planning and preparing for it. It’s not that unrealistic. I think dropping of the bombs was worth it over losing thousands of your own men. Particularly when level fire bombing swarms of B-29s were doing the same damage as a single nuke, perhaps more initial casualties even and again still civilian bombing…
@gokbay3057
@gokbay3057 Ай бұрын
Yeah, Downfall is entirely possible. Mayhaps unlikely but certainly in no way deserving of being ranked alongside Sunset Invasion and Man in the High Castle.
@benjaminmorris4962
@benjaminmorris4962 11 күн бұрын
Alexander conquering Italy is actually the most realistic one here. He would've easily done it, and the only POD necessary is that he heads west instead of east into Persia... However, that is a big POD as it if often said he wanted revenge against Persia, and then later became obsessed with finding "the end/edge of the world." He had no motive to go west.
@rfvtgbzhn
@rfvtgbzhn 6 күн бұрын
21:49 this is still an unrealistic scenario as it assumes an axis win, which was impossible because the Soviet Union had much higher production capacities. It is often assumed in Alternate History scenarios, that Germany winning some battle like Stalingrad would have made them win WW2, but that isn't realistic either.
@aaaaaaaaaa7862
@aaaaaaaaaa7862 Ай бұрын
For the timeline where Harald Hardrada conquers England: What if Harold Godwinson just meets the Normans in battle first, defeats them (like he almost did) and is then defeated by the Norwegians? Hardrada doesn’t have to meet the superior Normans and might actually stand a chance against the Anglo-Saxons. Bob‘s your uncle
@MegaBanne
@MegaBanne Ай бұрын
Yeah, even if the Normans won against the Anglo Saxons they would still lack the benefit of having a fresh army that wasn't weary from battle. A far easier challenge no matter what. I mean this one should have been the more obvious alternative history example. The Normans where greatly delayed because the winds where going in the wrong direction. So the Anglo Saxon forces had to travel far to the north east, to fight the Norwegians first, and then travel far back again to face the Normans. This contributed greatly to the Norman victory. The troops where weary from battle, travel, and having to wait for the Normans in the first place.
@hashtagrex
@hashtagrex Ай бұрын
@@MegaBanne and the anglo saxons nearly won after all that as well. despite the fact that godwinson didnt wait for much of his army to be ready, despite the long march and previous battle. william won basically by pure luck, as he was kind of an idiot
@MrGksarathy
@MrGksarathy Ай бұрын
@@hashtagrex In this case, I'd say Harold was still more of an idiot for not withdrawing and regrouping when his entire army was present. Still, what probably really screwed him over was getting that arrow to the eye.
@wilsonli5642
@wilsonli5642 Ай бұрын
As I understand, the events of 1066 turned out the way they did because prevailing winds led to a Viking invasion before a Norman crossing of the Channel. Had the weather allowed a Norman invasion first, maybe things could have turned out the way you described.
@dosdoomguy2285
@dosdoomguy2285 Ай бұрын
I feel like the dumbest is actually WWII being an Axis victory. American production by 1944 and 1945 had been so massive that there was over 300,000 planes in the U.S. military and over 7600 ships in the USN including 99 aircraft carriers and 23 battleships by VJ Day. Just for some sort of Axis stalemate where it’s not an unconditional surrender would require extremely different circumstances.
@sharpspoon7371
@sharpspoon7371 Ай бұрын
Depends on what you call a victory, like do the axis conquer the USA? Or does Germany win against the Soviets? It's nuanced
@TheEmperorYTP
@TheEmperorYTP Ай бұрын
Production ain't all there is to winning wars. Just ask the Vietnamese. Worse decision making by the allies and better decision making by the axis could have changed the outcome of the war.
@dosdoomguy2285
@dosdoomguy2285 Ай бұрын
@@sharpspoon7371 I’m talking about something more realistic like a stalemate where the Axis doesn’t take Moscow but the Axis isn’t driven out of Eastern Europe or some other end where there’s still Fascist Italy/Nazi Germany/Imperial Japan surviving in some form. Like nothing like Wolfenstein ever was gonna happen where the U.S. itself gets conquered. Just something a lot more realistic like a stalemate in Eastern Europe would be something that required things to be a lot different.
@Snp2024
@Snp2024 Ай бұрын
Only way I can see it is Germans somehow take over Soviet oil fields and a badly planned D day failed so badly USA go full non intervention in europe. Even this is very unlikely.
@marceltelang7825
@marceltelang7825 Ай бұрын
that is why the man in the high castle says that the Great Depression never ends, that would destroy the US production
@that_Dominic_guy
@that_Dominic_guy Ай бұрын
I’m glad I found this channel, you teach more history (ACCURATELY) than my entire history portfolio in school
@user-bh1ol5zc7x
@user-bh1ol5zc7x 6 күн бұрын
About rome industrializing: i think it's more plausible than it's given credit for, it sounds dumb but a possible scenario is that one person thinks "hey, this steam thing is producing force, maybe a bigger steam thing could propel an aquaduct wheel" and that would lead to something? Or maybe im just dumb idk
@TheDanEdwards
@TheDanEdwards Ай бұрын
18:12 " they never anticipated that the allies and commies would work together" - that's a silly statement by Cody. The Allies had worked with the USSR for years by the time the USSR invaded Japanese territories. If anybody wants a better take on WWII, go watch the World War Two channel.
@PlatinumAltaria
@PlatinumAltaria Ай бұрын
Japan's leadership was in denial about that. The ambassador tried to convince them that Russia wasn't going to help but they didn't listen. Imperial Japan's leaders were not smart people.
@ismaelnehme379
@ismaelnehme379 Ай бұрын
Absolutely correct. FDR had started recognizing and improving relations with the USSR as far as 1935.
@fulcrum2951
@fulcrum2951 25 күн бұрын
Years of the Soviets and the Western Allies coordinating with each other and the Japanese didnt anticipate them working together?
@PlatinumAltaria
@PlatinumAltaria 25 күн бұрын
@@fulcrum2951 Yes, the Japanese high command were deeply out of touch at this point.
@uss_04
@uss_04 Ай бұрын
Cody walking back Operation Downfall is wild
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
he should really walk back the walking back, revisionism has just been busted again
@MouldMadeMind
@MouldMadeMind Ай бұрын
@@FlagAnthem are you arguing against learning new things, because its revisionism.
@samg.5165
@samg.5165 Ай бұрын
@@MouldMadeMind Not inherently so, but in this case, it's an over-correction. There were many factions within the Japanese government, many of which favoured do-or-die resistance (or at least, conditional surrender). Others were convinced to give in to the Allies' terms either by the atomic bombings, the Soviet invasion or both. Some even attempted to take over and continue the war even after the Emperor's capitulation (the Kyujo incident). Most importantly, while not every Japanese was cartoonishly devoted to the Emperor, they were statistically far, far less likely to voluntarily surrender than any other participant in the war. It's likely that most would have fought to the bitter end if ordered to do so. All in all, I'd say Operation Downfall was unlikely, but to compare it to "Sunset Invasion" scenarios is just bad history.
@balabanasireti
@balabanasireti Ай бұрын
​@@samg.5165 Meh
@spaceracer6861
@spaceracer6861 Ай бұрын
@@samg.5165 It's not like a Spanish Republican victory is on the same level as a Roman industrialisation either. This is a ''dumb scenarios'' video, not an ''equally dumb scenarios'' one.
@Stapledonite
@Stapledonite Ай бұрын
I feel like I'm missing something with the Rome scenario. Why would the Romans need calculus or other advanced theoretical mathematics to industrialize? If the Romans attached the primitive steam engine to a moving cart, and saw cart go fast, wouldn't they have realized the potential? Obviously they wouldn't be able to have the optimized, computer-sculpted machinery that we do without advanced mathematics, but surely they could've gotten a long way through simple trial and error, and landed upon imperfect but functional designs for trains, guns, steamships, and mining devices. It's not like a conductor performs a differential equation in his head every time he pulls a train into a station. Also the argument that they didn't have the economic theory or a middle class seems a bit myopically capitalistic. Most of the communist world industrialized directly from agrarian feudalism, without a significant caplitalist phase (yes I realize the knowledge was already there, but Rome lasted centuries couldn't there have been a century of experimentation, followed by a century of implementation)? Also, couldn't the slave labor have actually supercharged their industrialization, like the Soviet gulag system a hundred times over?
@AdjectiveBlazkowicz
@AdjectiveBlazkowicz Ай бұрын
I think Rome Industrializing is a great alternate scenario EXACTLY because of what you stated. Its idea captures the student as the teacher leads them through the concept of history not being linear and the conditions for the industrial revolution to actually happen. This should be taught in schools!
@thewanderingmistnull2451
@thewanderingmistnull2451 20 күн бұрын
The absolute biggest problem is the metallurgy required for steam power to not be impossibly impractical simply wasn't possible until much later.
@laurencewinch-furness9450
@laurencewinch-furness9450 Ай бұрын
If the Chinese treasure fleet had gone west, i think you're right that they wouldn't have conquered America. However, a brief diplomatic visit to the Aztecs would have introduced them to Eurasian diseases. Fast forward 100 years, snd Cortez encounters Aztecs who are now somewhat immune to those same diseases, and things could go very differently...
@Eidolon1andOnly
@Eidolon1andOnly Ай бұрын
It would just mean that 90% of the Amerindians would've passed before Cortez's first contact.
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
Or he finds Aztecs with significantly reduced populations (though not nearly as much as they would have reduced under Spanish control) and it’s still about the same difficulty to conquer the empire unless they acquired Chinese technology and weapons.
@Eidolon1andOnly
@Eidolon1andOnly Ай бұрын
@@laurencewinch-furness9450 Cortez would find a lower population size and the civilizations either fully collapsed or close to it.
@SirAntoniousBlock
@SirAntoniousBlock Ай бұрын
Or Columbus finds Chinese merchants and Indians using Chinese goods, confirming that he had indeed found a sea route to China.
@tomfeng5645
@tomfeng5645 Ай бұрын
​@@SirAntoniousBlock Now *that* would be hilarious, given he'd actually have 'proof' in some trade goods Although it feels like the reality would've been found out soon enough There wouldn't be consistent, if any, trade to the New World. There's nothing really worth getting for a journey that long. But I'd still find it absolutely hilarious for the head-scratcher of "how did we find chinese goods **here** ???"
@_Devil
@_Devil Ай бұрын
How to make High Castle the perfect alt-hist show: 1. Dump the universe meditation transfer shit. This isn't Fringe, we don't need that in a Nazi show 2. Get rid of the BCR in its entirety. If you think for one second that Hitler would allow a group of non-German Communists to exist anywhere near the Reich's borders, I have a collapsed bridge to sell you in Baltimore 3. Kill Juliana in the first season and base the rest of the show around John Smith and his family 4. REWRITE THAT ENDING. I would prefer an ending where Smith, after gaining control of all of North America, reinstates the United States and a cold war begins against the newly freed America's and the old Reich in Europe, but I'll take literally anything except an ending where a portal to our reality opens up for Time Tourists
@Croz89
@Croz89 Ай бұрын
I wouldn't have minded the BCR if they didn't feel like the result of some rushed executive meddling halfway through. And do they really think the other rebel groups would be friends with a bunch of people who basically want to cleave off their own ideologically opposed ethnostate after the occupation ends? At best they'd barely tolerate each other, more likely they'd be gearing up for a post occupation civil war.
@FlagAnthem
@FlagAnthem Ай бұрын
It's Philip Dick material. After having read Valis this would sound even more solid
@SusCalvin
@SusCalvin Ай бұрын
I think Philip K. Dick wasn't a very factual author. Reading Dick is always like reading a multi-level drug hallucination. I like how Deckard is trying to retire a replicant but gets busted by a cop. And suddenly he is arrested, hauled to a secondary LAPD headquarters he never knew about, complete with staff and cells and arrested suspects, gets booked and held. And none of them have any idea the "real" LAPD headquarters he works at even exists. So if you want to go the Dick route, make it even more weird and unexplained. A Scanner Darkly is another Dick movie adaptation that embraces the weirdness of it all. And Total Recall does it pretty subtly, at all time you remember that this Mars spy plot is very close to the dream-trip he ordered at the beginning.
Ай бұрын
About the Sunset Invasion, there is an uchrony that uses that point but with a twist: Columbus dies when returning to Spain, leaving some people in America. They teach all they know about weapons, sailing, sea faring, ... and decades later comes the invasion. And without the resources from America and being at war on Europe, the outcome is not nice for the European countries. The saga is called "Chronicles of the Feathered Snake", from Edgardo Civalledo.
@user-ri1pl3ek9q
@user-ri1pl3ek9q Ай бұрын
I have a dumb alternate scenario aswel: what if Belgium joint the central powers when Germany wanted to get to France through Belgium.
@thefatherscott
@thefatherscott Ай бұрын
What if there is a Cody in another universe saying that our history couldn't happen in his timeline? AltAlthistory
@richardarriaga6271
@richardarriaga6271 Ай бұрын
Surely people wouldn't be THAT stupid with a contagious virus, right?
@1FatLittleMonkey
@1FatLittleMonkey Ай бұрын
To be fair, scenarios like Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Cortes' conquest, Napoleon, the tangle of alliances that led to WWI, Hitler even ruling Germany let alone the Nazi's coming as close as they did to taking Europe, Russia becoming a superpower, and the Apollo Program are all completely nuts. Also Trump. I mean, come on. That's just bad satire.
@delanceysamuel4770
@delanceysamuel4770 Ай бұрын
New idea for an alt history: What if you did one of these scenarios?
@runeanonymous9760
@runeanonymous9760 Ай бұрын
If the Ming sailed to America, I think it would have to have been in some way because of the Polynesians? If they made contact with Polynesians, who may have had trade with Amerindians, they could have learned about them there, and decided to show off to them. It’s incredibly contrived, but it’s a way that contact could have happened, no matter how implausible.
@DiamondKingStudios
@DiamondKingStudios Ай бұрын
@@runeanonymous9760I also think it would have been the likeliest way for any Chinese contact with the Americas, but I think it relies on too many coincidences happening together. Without European travel, it may have happened eventually, but I’d put a timeframe around 1650-1800. But the absence of Europe in any interaction with Eastern Asia or the Pacific would alter the course of Chinese domestic policy so much that any action by then would be nearly unpredictable.
@retnavybrat
@retnavybrat Ай бұрын
21:29 -- I don't know why I never thought of this before, but what would happen with Canada and the European Caribbean territories if the Axis managed to conquer and control Europe?
@Bricky_88
@Bricky_88 29 күн бұрын
Literally what happened to france, the main part, in europe was conquered and the african collonies and some french generals created Free France and continued to fight with the allies.
@matthewryan9323
@matthewryan9323 3 күн бұрын
Canada's a good question (would it fight on itself, would George V and family retreat there to fight on, etc.), but the threat of Nazis in the Caribbean real close to America was one of the ways FDR helped get I think the "destroyers for bases" deal through Congress and the isolationist types - they didn't want to intervene, but apparently, they weren't too keen on the idea of having the swastika flying just off their doorstep (relatively speaking) either.
@datnoob4394
@datnoob4394 Ай бұрын
On point on the japanese surrender, I don't think you took into account the Kyūjō incident were half the Japanese government unironically thought they could win a civil war and then beat the USA and USSR.
@GojiMet86
@GojiMet86 Ай бұрын
That whole _Civil War_ (2024) movie premise of California and Texas joining together.
@martinsriber7760
@martinsriber7760 Ай бұрын
We don't know history of that setting, so it's impossible to tell. Perhaps their Texas is blue.
@worldofdoom995
@worldofdoom995 Ай бұрын
if the presient was killing people on mass and drone striking cities they would very likely be on the same side.
@guyman1570
@guyman1570 Ай бұрын
​@@martinsriber7760doesn't matter. Reality, It'd be locals vs federals and the federals wins by a landslide
@joeyjojojrshabadoo7462
@joeyjojojrshabadoo7462 Ай бұрын
For the last time, they're both in rebellion against the Federal government.
@BigBoi678
@BigBoi678 Ай бұрын
They both were fighting together against the Loyalists. They had no intention of any union
@mechs_with_hands
@mechs_with_hands Ай бұрын
I always get a chuckle over these "America Invasion" scenarios. On the West Coast, you have highly urbanized areas hemmed in by mountains, rivers and passes, with a massive mountain range blocking access to the heartland. On the East Coast you have highly urbanized areas hemmed in by mountains, swamps, rivers and passes, with a several much less impressive mountain ranges blocking access to the heartland. To the north you have an almost uninhabited arboreal wilderness (yes, somewhat exaggerated, pls don't send asassins Canada). To the south you have Mexico, no elaboration needed.
@marlonmoncrieffe0728
@marlonmoncrieffe0728 Ай бұрын
Yeah but imagining Americans fighting against a foreign enemy on their home territory is just too much fun not to speculate and imagine.
@mechs_with_hands
@mechs_with_hands Ай бұрын
@@granienasniadanie8322 I said uninhabited, not uninhabitable, and there are "Not Russians" in plenty of places in Canada.
@nova-witchwood
@nova-witchwood Ай бұрын
Ah, Canada, a country covered with snows and iced eight months of the year, that boreal part of the world. idk for some reason I think you should’ve quoted Voltaire
@mechs_with_hands
@mechs_with_hands Ай бұрын
@@nova-witchwood I was going more for a Jeremy Clarkson snark, never read a single page of anything Voltair wrote :D.
@nova-witchwood
@nova-witchwood Ай бұрын
@@mechs_with_hands fair fair I was going for those ‘a few acres of snow’ quotes as the ultimate diminishing insults to Canada. There’s also ‘a few acres of ice’ but the former is simply more popular…
@PotatoBearRawr
@PotatoBearRawr Ай бұрын
On the Spanish Civil War I am sort of surprised you even mention Franco by name as he was like number 3-5 on the list of potential leaders, but iirc his superiors kept crashing they planes (there is a joke about them being overloaded with weight being the cause, as they were stacked with victory medals). However, there is a scenario for a different result in the Spanish Civil War, but it depends much on France, as it is a French intervention. France was balancing significant support for communism in the interwar period and either through France becoming communist, or by France appeasing communists, then you could see full intervention by France. Now the point of divergence is tricky, because likely this would require another French Revolution, which might also have lead to a French civil war, where you might see Germany intervening. You need a scenario, where communists take over in France, without civil war or intervention, and then well, it stop being about the Spanish Civil War, and instead about a completely new scenario for WW2. So while I agree that the Spanish Civil War is very unlikely to change much in any way, then it could be the trigger for the radicals in France to attempt a takeover, and then you have a butterfly effect from that. Sometimes it is funny how you get these circles back to our timeline, when you are trying to change something.
@coenisgreat
@coenisgreat 27 күн бұрын
The one thing I always thought was neat about Operation Downfall was that the initial bombardment prior to the landing would be led with the ship-based launch of a thousand Republic-Ford JB-2's, an American reverse-engineered copy of the German V1 Flying Bomb
@FacterinoCommenterino
@FacterinoCommenterino Ай бұрын
Today's Fact: In 2017, a man in Texas successfully delivered his own baby on the side of the highway, with only the help of 911 dispatchers on the phone.
@olliegoria
@olliegoria Ай бұрын
People used to do that all the time before they had hospitals
@FriedFoxRoblox
@FriedFoxRoblox Ай бұрын
pregnant man?
@KingOfItiapolis
@KingOfItiapolis Ай бұрын
@@FriedFoxRoblox🫃🏿🫃🏿
@markmierzejewski9534
@markmierzejewski9534 Ай бұрын
This would happen in Texas.
@swyjix
@swyjix Ай бұрын
mregnant pan?
@andrewmerklinghaus6316
@andrewmerklinghaus6316 Ай бұрын
I struggle with the "realism" of alternate history media because in this timeline our current political situation stems from the font selection on the ballot in Dade County Florida in 2000, the decision to retool Star Trek Voyager after its second season, the decision to ban Hent@i from Something Awful and a single pangolin with a weird cold
@ThomasWeaver1992
@ThomasWeaver1992 Ай бұрын
I don't know why this factoid of "it wasn't the nukes, it was the Soviets" exists. The nukes certainly were a factor, even if we conclude that it wasn't the primary factor. Nagasaki's bombing was proof that the USA was capable of producing multiple nukes and willing to use them, making it more obvious that Japan's time had already run out.
@rfvtgbzhn
@rfvtgbzhn 6 күн бұрын
They were only capable of producing a nuke every few months or so, so overall the nukes still did much less damage than the conventional bombings of cities like Tokyo. This would also have been the case if the war was prolonged by something like a year.
What if Napoleon Invaded Britain?
22:14
AlternateHistoryHub
Рет қаралды 514 М.
What if the Mongol Empire Never Existed?
22:46
AlternateHistoryHub
Рет қаралды 587 М.
Why Is He Unhappy…?
00:26
Alan Chikin Chow
Рет қаралды 103 МЛН
Smart Sigma Kid #funny #sigma #memes
00:26
CRAZY GREAPA
Рет қаралды 19 МЛН
ОБЯЗАТЕЛЬНО СОВЕРШАЙТЕ ДОБРО!❤❤❤
00:45
7 Days Stranded In A Cave
17:59
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 52 МЛН
The History of the World According to 'Ancient Aliens'
23:20
AlternateHistoryHub
Рет қаралды 5 МЛН
Soviet Collaborators Who Helped the Germans | Animated History
18:28
The Armchair Historian
Рет қаралды 159 М.
An Ancient Roman Shipwreck May Explain the Universe
31:15
SciShow
Рет қаралды 3,3 МЛН
There are NOT 195 countries
12:16
Jay Foreman
Рет қаралды 1,7 МЛН
The Most Underrated Era in History (In My Opinion)
16:38
AlternateHistoryHub
Рет қаралды 2,1 МЛН
What if the Soviet Union Never Formed?
23:56
AlternateHistoryHub
Рет қаралды 702 М.
Earth has Terrible Worldbuilding
21:20
Curious Archive
Рет қаралды 1,5 МЛН
The Most Controversial Children's Book in History
40:38
Solar Sands
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
Every 40k Faction's Greatest Strength
28:55
PancreasNoWork
Рет қаралды 282 М.
Prohibition - OverSimplified
33:43
OverSimplified
Рет қаралды 48 МЛН
Why Is He Unhappy…?
00:26
Alan Chikin Chow
Рет қаралды 103 МЛН