Talk:1983: Doomsday

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GENERAL DISCUSSION
The following is for general discussion to improve the TL that does not involve article proposals.

War!
Moved to: Talk:2009 Saguenay War (1983: Doomsday). Please direct all questions, comments, concerns, etc. about the Saugenay War (or whatever its name will eventually be) there please. Mitro 18:31, September 16, 2009 (UTC)

Proposition for the Condition of Asia
Discussion moved to. Mitro 18:17, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

New Britain-LoN
Would anyone be adverse to New Britain joining the LoN? They technically don't occupy KwXhosa anymore, though KwaXhosa is bound by treaty not to attack NB. Bob 17:12, October 12, 2009 (UTC)
 * They're not going to join immediately, certainly, since the LoN seems to act very slowly on these matters. Do they have a friendly nation that is a member of the LoN that can "sponsor their membership", if you will?  That would probably improve their chances.  Canada might work - looking thru the news, NB seems to have gone out of its way to strengthen ties with Canada in recent months.  Benkarnell 21:07, October 13, 2009 (UTC)
 * So if Canada said that NB was in a position to rejoin then they could albeit after some time. Also how come the LoN reacts so slowly. Surely they want to react swiftly enough to prevent another world war occuring? Bob 15:59, October 15, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'm sure they're much quicker to respond to a crisis than they are on issues like membership. Even our UN would't just drop sanctions and say "all's forgiven" after a week or so of compliance... or would they?  It may be that sanctions have been lifted for now, and I'm sure they would a team (likely from the RZA) to travel to KwaXhosa and report back to the LoN on how the transition to independent rule is going.  Any body would want to make sure that NB is acting in all good faith and is serious about giving up its claims/desires for Xhosa territory or influence.  And that would be required (I'm guessing) just to secure a permanent lifting of sanctions.  Actual membership will probably be a couple of months down the road. As international diplomacy goes, the timetable I'm proposing isn't really that short - look how long the EU takes to add new members.  Look how long it took the UN to recognize the PRC, not the RoC, as the legitimate government of China.   Benkarnell 20:11, October 15, 2009 (UTC)


 * No problem, though the Celtic Alliance would wish to ensure that they renounce all claims to former U.K. territory and claims of royal rights. The Alliance would even consider proposing if the situation regarding occupation was clarified. Mjdoch 09:40, October 20, 2009 (GMT)

New Hawaiian colony
In my latest news article, Hawaii's congress authorized a new colony in Ogasawara, or the Bonin Islands. I'd like some feedback on potential problems with the undertaking. Ogasawara is pretty far away. Do you think that Hawaii has the resources to create and maintain settlements there? Do you think they might come into conflict with Japan? And how do you think the ANZC itself will react to this claim? Benkarnell 21:10, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

[edit] This discussion has taken off at. I think it would make the most sense for some of the diplomatic groundwork to have been laid in the last year or so. The problem is, I don't know enough about Japan *there*, or its relations with the ANZC and its satellites. Benkarnell 12:55, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

History Pages
I've noticed that some pages have been made for nations' histories. Is each nation supposed to have its own history page? --DarthEinstein 18:16, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * No, I've only been doing that when articles get too large. Still if anyone wants to split the history section of a nation into its own article, that is perfectly fine.  Mitro 16:07, October 16, 2009 (UTC)
 * Hawaii probably needs it. That page has turned into a beast.  Benkarnell 20:07, October 16, 2009 (UTC)
 * I've generally been waiting until a page reaches 30k before splitting it. I've noticed that on some of the computers I use that if I attempt to edit a page that is over 30k in length there is noticeable lag.  Hawaii isn't there yet but feel free to split it off if you want to.  Mitro 13:59, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Latest archive
I moved an insane amount of discussion to Page 7, and added an equally insane amount of proposal discussion to Proposal Page 4. I apologize if I moved comments that people were hoping to get replies from: feel free to move them back, or ask if you can't find them. It was 92,000 bytes of text that I removed - and this page is still huge! Benkarnell 02:45, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

Revising approved articles because of canon
I decided to revise the early history of Vermont and while I don't know if that's allowed, I had the best intentions.

There is a line on the timeline page which reads,

By Christmas, Hawaii is the only US state with a functioning government...

I had Vermont's state government still existing after Doomsday.

I changed the scenario to allow for the survival of Governor Snelling and enough stability within the state to restart the state government soon after DD.

I'm certainly open to correction here, but I want to honor canon and be realistic while doing it. You can't have Vermont with a stable government weeks after the bombs go off when Hawaii has been said all along to have the only functioning state government in December.


 * That line was written before we knew anything about Vermont. I think it's OK to change it in this case.  The question is: why did the US government not know about it?  They left for Australia assuming that _nothing_ was left in the US.  Was Vermont deliberately hiding?  (Or do conservatives just hate Vermont that much ;)?) Benkarnell 12:53, October 17, 2009 (UTC)


 * You can also ask that question about Aroostook, Superior, Utah, Texas (assuming it is approved as canon), Dinetah, the NAU. Other than Reagan's trip to Mexico, it seems like Reagan stayed put at Mount Weather and Bush at the Greenbriar. Plus, all the satellites were knocked out, electricity was sporadic and communications were out. I still want to be careful about contradicting what's already been said. Plus, it doesn't preclude city and town governments from operating, and working together, to form a provisional state or regional government. --BrianD 14:49, October 17, 2009 (UTC)
 * I wrote Vermont and West Texas as if the respective nations would have rejoined the US if it had reconstituted itself on American soil; I remember Superior and Aroostook having provisions early on to rejoin the US in such a scenario. West Texas probably would have wanted Bush to show up personally in Midland to believe the legitimacy of any US government; Vermont probably wasn't able to communicate with Bush and the APA until after it disbanded. Just because ham radio operators heard signals from the southern hemisphere, or someone with an operational shortwave radio got a signal from Australia, doesn't mean that North American survivor states would be easily able to communicate with Australia even 10 years after Doomsday. Now, yes. Then, no.--BrianD 15:36, October 17, 2009 (UTC)


 * Most of those were not yet stabilized - not yet "functioning governments" - by December 1983. Benkarnell 16:30, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * Not yet functioning, but in the process of organizing themselves?--BrianD 18:19, October 18, 2009 (UTC)


 * Roughly, I guess. It had to be bad enough that the people surrounding the President could not find one reliable "safe zone" in the US and made the calculated decision to flee to Australia.  Benkarnell 21:19, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * How would they have tracked the entire country, though? Would they have been able to keep track of all 50 states, or did they make their decision based on the best (but not comprehensive) knowledge they had?--BrianD 21:25, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

Introduction
Hey guys,just wanted to say hi,I'm new to the site and I've already made some proposal nations,I'd like to see what you think about the articles,the first one I kind of screwed up and i could use some help,the other one I was trying to somehow fit into the story and that's about it,hope to get some advice later on --Vladivostok 12:36, October 17, 2009 (UTC)
 * Great! Welcome! Could you give us links to those proposal pages you mentioned? I'd like to read them. Hope you have fun in 1983: Doomsday! --DarthEinstein 15:02, October 17, 2009 (UTC)
 * I found them. They're the articles on Mongolia http://althistory.wikia.com/wiki/Soviet_Socialist_Republic_of_Mongolia and Tibet http://althistory.wikia.com/wiki/Tibet%281983:Doomsday%29 --BrianD 15:26, October 17, 2009 (UTC)
 * Welcome, and compliments on your proposals.--BrianD 15:26, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

New Map
I think whoever creates the maps for this timeline needs to get started on the new one, as there are a ton of newly confirmed nations to be added to the map. --Yankovic270 03:10, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I think anyone would create the maps - as long as it fits with canon and it's approved by the community. I might want to try my hand at some mapmaking myself... --DarthEinstein 03:25, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * XiReney and Fero made the first few world maps. The latest one is mine, and since last June it's become very out of date.  Problem is that I was not following 1983DD for most of August and September, when the flury of activity really began.  I've been trying to read all the new pages from August or later, but just keeping up with current proposals is difficult... anyone is free to ad some or all of the new nations.  Or maybe it would be best to break down the labor?  North America is the worst offender; maybe I can upload a world map with just North America updated, and others can take it from there.  Benkarnell 16:39, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I've actually already started a new map. I decided to build it from the ground up; that is, I'm getting the information from the individual articles instead of from previous world maps. I started with the Americas, and they're about half complete, and I haven't started on the Old World. --DarthEinstein 16:44, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * Go ahead, then. Ground up is probably best: I tried hard to keep it free of errors, but they crept in anyway.  Are you still going to include flags?  They have been sort of a tradition so far, but now there are many, many more of them.  Benkarnell
 * I'll try to put the flags in, but first I'm going to get all the borders. After the borders, then I'll get the names and flags. I also thought of creating maps for each continent simply by slicing up the world map, which we can put on the pages for each continent. --DarthEinstein 17:11, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

Hey Darth! What is the soonest time you can estimate the map being finished? --Yankovic270 21:13, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * Well, I'm not sure; so far I've drawn the borders of most nations in North and South America, as well as the Alpine Confed, Celtic Alliance, and the small French nations. After I'm done the rest of Europe, I'll move south to Africa, then to Asia and Oceania. After that, I'll fill in the names and flags. So... there's still lots I have to do. By the way, if you notice any nations missing from the list, put it on. I'm using it as a referance to find all the countries. --DarthEinstein 21:31, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

Could you post an image of the North American section on my talk page? I'm curious on how my nations look. By the way, Assiniboia has the borders of the old Red River colony. --Yankovic270 21:44, October 19, 2009 (UTC)


 * As I said, I haven't put the names or flags in yet, but if you want me to get a partially finished version, that's fine. --DarthEinstein 02:17, October 20, 2009 (UTC)


 * I would say (as a comment after a long time), you might put it in a partially finished version when the names are done. Then we could decide if we insert the flags as well... But I would guess a separate map with flags would me optically more proper. I offer to do the "FLAG MAP Work as a first contribution after a long absence. --Xi&#39;Reney 17:55, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * Great to have you back! Also, here's a map update: I've drawn the borders for the North and South American and European countries, as well as the African ones except in South Africa, which has really confused me. After I'm done drawing borders in Asia and Oceania, I'll put the names in, and leave a space under each name for a flag. --DarthEinstein 19:50, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

Okay, I just did a whole lot of work on the map, and I think it's ready for people to see the first version. As you can see, the countries are not yet labeled. I'd like to hear any concerns over the borders of the countries first. If you've been following the TL you should be able to recognise most of the countries. The darker grey regions between the NAU and Utah, Utah and the Navajo Nation, and Aceh and Indonesia, represent condominion or contested territory. Any suggestions for the next version are appriciated. --DarthEinstein 23:14, October 23, 2009 (UTC)
 * It's a little jarring to see so much of Africa, China, Europe, even the eastern U.S. in dark grey. That aside, the map looks good.--BrianD 23:18, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

I like the map as well but I have some issues. I may have relented on NAU Nebraska, but I respectfully want all of non-NAU Nebraska to be under Lincolnite control, that would give the Lincolnites both more territory and a border right next to the NAU. Plus the loosly-bound nation of Cave City, like the Okanogan to Victoria, is a potential site for future expansion of Virginia. That warrents, at least until official control is obtained, those dots of colour you see marking influence. --Yankovic270 02:19, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * Right; I haven't added any "influence dots" yet, so I'll do that for the next version. I'll expand Lincoln also, but keep in mind that the map I built this off of didn't have state borders, so it will be approximate. --DarthEinstein 02:25, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * I have a problem with zones of influence. The map ought to represent definite borders for each country; in some areas (like India, Sikkim) these zones can literally change by the day, or a country can claim influence that it can't realistically maintain. The issue should be discussed, though.--BrianD 02:40, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * Good point. The last map did not include claims for that very reason.  Now that we have dozens of new countries, we have to pick and choose what information to show.  This is really good!  It looks so clean, and the colors are easier to distinguish.  THe small changes I'd recommend:
 * Sikkim's independent government was overthrown a couple of weeks ago, IIRC.
 * I don't think that the North American UNion overlaps with Utah; that was an error on my map.
 * The NAU might more accurately be shown as three countries with a common color, like the Nordic countries. (I'm pretty sure that when I made the other map I hadn't actually read the NAU page.)
 * More of central Italy should be no-man's land. My map used diagonal stripes only because the Alpine and Sicilian colors were too hard to tell apart when I used dots.
 * But basically... wow! Benkarnell 03:24, October 24, 2009 (UTC)
 * Okay, thanks about Sikkim, I did not hear about that. So it's part of the UIP now?
 * I'll fix the Utah-NAU border.
 * I'll separate the states for the NAU. While doing this, I tryed to decide what to do about Siberia. With the addition of Mongolia, Uyghuristan and Khazakhstan to it, I thought I might want a solid border like with the Nordic Union and, as you said, the NAU. But I thought they might be too centralized a state for that. What do you think?
 * I based Italy off of the page; for territory it said that they owned it up to Milan. I did think this was odd, and I guess you agree. So will they extend to, say, the ruins of Rome? Also, don't you think Sicily might be able to control the nearby Tunisia also?
 * Thanks for the help! --DarthEinstein 03:42, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * Hm, that is odd about Sicily. I think the no-man's-land as I had described it was based on the previous map. Maybe Sicily only claims Italy up to Milan?  Or, Milan was the high-water-mark of their advance, but is not securely under their control?   And I know I have heard something about Sicily controling at least part of Tunisia.  As for the Siberian states, I'm not sure, since that's a family of articles that I also have not read yet.  (Sorry!)  Finally, can I suggest a darkish blue for the NAU?  Benkarnell 04:03, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

Status of Siberia
I suggest to change the status of the Siberian state. It should not claim to be a republic, it's supposed to claim to be a temporary territorial administration until the pre-war states will be restored. Its official name could be something like The Provisional Authority for Coordination in Statehood and Economics Restoration — PACSER (Временное Управление по Взаимодействию в Государственном и Экономическом Восстановлении — ВУВГЭВ). Its official aim is to restore the pre-war states including the Soviet Union (with all its fifteen republics), Mongolia, and the People's Republic of China. It does not claim to have annexed Alaska — it claims that "its Alaska" is the legal successor of the State of Alaska and it will be re-admitted to the United States as soon the country will be restored (but the Siberian authorities refuse to recognise the regimes that appeared on the former US territory and therefore consider Siberian Alaska the most lawful of all). — Hellerick 06:56, October 18, 2009 (UTC)


 * You know I was thinking of retooling the Siberia article for quite some time now. I noticed a few potholes and things that wouldn’t happen in our timeline (for example the capital of Sovetskaya Gavan wouldn’t have been hit, but there was another major base near by that would have been plastered). Since I am currently concentrating on Northern Europe at the time I can relinquish control of the article if someone else wants to mess with it.

But before someone dose here are a few of my suggestions I thought of while I considered redoing the page.

First the country would still be called the Soviet Union (although officially it would be called the name you mentioned above).

Secondly the territory would change a bit. I propose that the soviets would lose some territory in the east of Siberia, but would gain some in Central Asia. The territory could stretch from northern Kazakhstan down through the deserts and the Aral Sea into western Uzbekistan and northern Turkmenistan. With a wetter climate these areas could be turned into farming regions to help feed the Soviet population. Later on its territory could expand further east and west.

Third West Alaska would fall under Soviet influence rather quickly (as in just after Doomsday) before the rest of ANZC of Alaska has anything to do with it. This is less do to the desire to take over territory as it is that Western Alaska is closer to Russia than it is to anywhere else in the world.

Finally the leaders of the Soviet Union would all be from the military weather they come back from Afghanistan or were in Siberia/Central Asia all along.

So what do you think about my suggestions?--ShutUpNavi 14:48, October 18, 2009 (UTC)


 * Sorry to jump into the conversation but I also thought that some territory in Central Asia would be a reasonable assumption. Not in the most affected areas obviously but perhaps a provisional Kazahstan Republic,perhaps with only Pavlodar and East Kazahstan stable enough to be in the Soviet Union. I don't see any reason why they would lose any territory in the east,considering that only Yakutsk and Vladivostok were hit in the most eastern regions. I also think that by turning Siberia back into the Soviet Union would make my newly created articles on Mongolia and Alaska fit in perfectly with the TL,as I was finding it rather difficult naming Mongolia any differently than a Soviet Republic and that would mean that Siberia wasn't a republic,but a union or federation. I'd love to write about this part of the world,maybe even push my East Turkestan idea through.--Vladivostok 16:13, October 18, 2009 (UTC)


 * I like these ideas, especially the different status of Alaska. I assume, therefore, that the USSR considers the ANZC regime to also be a usurper to the title of "successor to the USA".  Establishing the oblast earlier than 1990 makes it much, much harder for the Aussies and Kiwis to do anything about it.  Benkarnell 16:43, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I could alter the timeframe of the attacks,but there needs to be a lot of editing in the Siberian(now Soviet Union?) article. It doesn't specifically say that Mongolia or Alaska are part of the Union,even though the map states otherwise.--Vladivostok 16:59, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

I have a concern with Alaska. I have been toying with the idea of having a surprise Siberian attack happen sometime in 1993-1994 as part of my article. The war would be short and it would end quickly with the APA agreeing to cede western Alaska and there would be a symbolic peace ending Doomsday day between Siberia and the APA. The events of the short war however would be a blow to American morale and convince Bush to end the APA, which is currently not really explained sufficiently IMO on why he did so in canon. Bush would see his failure of holding on to all of Alaska as a sign that the APA/USA could not possibly exist anymore as a sovereign nation in the post-Doomsday world and convince him to cede control over the Australia and later ANZC. Mitro 00:28, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

My idea is that "Siberia" is in fact a kind of union of survivalist regimes. After the war there was a complicated issue of who is the highest authority, and who is the successor of the Soviet government. So they came to an agreement — none of them is the successor. The Soviet government will be re-established later, when the problems of vital importance will be solved. Plus, the agreement guarantees non-Soviet groups (from Mongolia, China etc.) that their territories won't be absorbed in the future. Siberia did not conquer Alaska — Western Alaska started as a local survivalist group that came into the Siberian sphere of influence simply because the Siberians were the first "civilized power" they came into contact with, and they heavily depended on them in the first years after the Doomsday. The Siberians consider ANZAC (with its "puppet" organizations like APA) "predators" who are trying to take over the North while it lies in ruins and can't defend itself. — Hellerick 13:06, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * Well,Hellerick,I unfortunately didn't see your suggestion. I have just added new content,nothing was erased,i just wanted everybody to see a couple of my ideas. Unfortunately,I'm not that good at editing for now,so I didn't add links to newly made republics because I just don't know how. If i was hasty with my decision to edit,I'll remove the new content myself.

--Vladivostok 19:43, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Recent news item
I have to object to this item that was recently added to the news section:

"October 19, 2009, 19:53 GMT: KwaXhosan Terror strikes British industry: Rhoflag.png Kwaxhosa.jpg PORT ELIZABETH - In the areas where New Britain has been heavily industrialising, KwaXhosa has made a shocking move and has captured key industrial areas. KwaXhosa fielded mechanical infantry purchased from Sicily and has deprived New Britain of its industrial strength. Parliament is encouraging workers to passively resist and refuse to work in the factories. To support them, New Britain is printing more money to pay them."

This is not plausible. KwaXosha was just recently under New Britain occupation and now apparently they were able to build up their military enough to take them on after just a month of freedom. That does not make sense. Furthermore how was Sicily able to send them weapons when they are pretty much surrounded and cut off by the ADC and LoN? Mitro 00:01, October 20, 2009 (UTC)


 * No, and indeed NB ended their occupation with _very_ generaous terms, obviously intended to bolster its human rights record with the international community. KwaXhosa could essentially do whatever it wanted, so long as it didn't attack NB, am I right?  Why is it now breaking its treaty with a nation proven to be stronger, since it was occupying its entire territory up until last month?  Unless the KwaXhosa leaders' stated goal is to end up a New British province with no diplomatic consequences for New Britain.  Benkarnell 01:09, October 20, 2009 (UTC)


 * [EDIT] I thought of this today: NB announced just a couple of weeks ago that it was pulling out of KwaXhosa. It's almost certain that there are still some NB troops in the country in the process of withdrawing.  While there's no way KwaXhosa is in the position to launch a military attack (and no reason they'd want to), there are probably some militant groups who would attack NB soldiers in the process of leaving, for whatever reason.  The article does say "terror" after all - why not "terror"ism?  I don't know what the result of the attacks would be, but NB could possibly use it as a pretext for reversing their withdrawl: KX is "not ready" or what-have-you.  Such would probably still hurt NB diplomatically, however... I'm not sure there's a plausible way for NB to go back on their promises without offending the outside world.  Benkarnell 21:35, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

League of Nations members
What is the official process for application to the League of Nations, according to the timeline? I couldn't find it on the LoN page. As far as getting a nation joining the LoN in canon, is that something the community here has to approve? BTW, Douglas's plane should arrive in Tonga next Monday. He'll meet with Newman on Tuesday, Birch on Wednesday and King Andrew on Friday.--BrianD 02:33, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * We never established that. IMO there are some nations that exist that should have been members of the LoN from the beggining because of their history, but for whatever reason aren't.  We really need to establish the current list of who was a member of the LoN now that there has been so many new nations added to canon.  Mitro 16:32, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * If it's okay, I'm proceeding as if Vermont has never been a member. I'll research how a nation becomes a member of the U.N., and have Vermont follow that format (as the LoN is based partly on the UN). Douglas should make his presentation a week from now. Would it be safe to have the LoN immediately grant Vermont "observer" status, with a vote on full membership to come later in the year?--BrianD 16:50, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Looking at the national histories, here are those nations IMO that should be members of the LoN currently:


 * Aland
 * Algeria
 * Alpine Confederation
 * Aroostook
 * Cleveland
 * Commonwealth of Australia and New Zealand
 * Bolivia
 * Brazil
 * Canada
 * Celtic Alliance
 * Chile
 * Colombia
 * Cuba
 * Denmark
 * East Caribbean Federation
 * Ecuador
 * Faroe Islands
 * Finland
 * France /RTA
 * Friesland
 * Republica de Galicia (has been in contact long enough with the outside world to be a member)
 * Greece
 * Greenland
 * Guyana Cooperativa
 * Iceland
 * Islamic Indonesian Islands League
 * Madagascar
 * Mexico
 * Monaco
 * Municipal States of the Pacific (If the RZA is a member I can’t see why the MSP should not be as well. Both were formed under ANZC/SAC supervision.)
 * Netherlands Antilles
 * New Britain (maybe an original member though they might be relegated to observer status)
 * North Germany
 * Norway
 * País del Oro/Western Sahara
 * Pakistan
 * Paraguay
 * Peru
 * Philippines
 * Portugal
 * Puerto Rico
 * RZA
 * Republic of San Juan
 * Somaliland
 * Soviet Socialist Siberia
 * Spanish Republic (LoN has a base right next to it, seems odd though they would not be a member)
 * Sweden
 * Sri Lanka
 * Superior
 * Tonga
 * United American Republic
 * Venezuela
 * Vermont
 * Victoria
 * Zanzibar

Comments, questions, anyone I missed? Also, a couple of questions of my own:
 * What exactly are the relations of the associated states with Australia? Are they able to represent themselves independently in the LoN or are they mere observers?
 * Are the member nations of the Nordic Union and the SAC represented separately or by the organization? What about the separate components of the RTA? Mitro 17:05, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * One option is to retroactively admit everyone. Another is to stick with the list of members and observer states as they currently exist, and have the LoN go on what amounts to be a large membership drive, recognizing the large number of nation states that have recently become known on a global basis, and have no strikes against them in regards to official membership.--BrianD 17:16, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * No offense but neither of those options are necessary. The reason the LoN membership is as it is currently is because that when the article was first created there were only a small number of nations that were canon at the time.  Now we have a hell of a lot more nation articles, many with histories that make it plausible that they would be a founding member of the LoN.  For whatever reason though, editors (myself included) have consistently said our new nations are not members.  If the contact date is early enough, the nations are recongized by a majority of states and they are not some rogue state like Sicily or a dictatorship like Virginia, there should be nothing stopping an editor from adding their nation as a member.  Mitro 18:15, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * None taken. I needed to know exactly how the process works. With that in mind, unless there are objections Vermont is on its way to becoming a member.--BrianD 21:10, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

My nation of Lincoln might be polite enough to get into the LoN, and the Virginians are in the midst of loosening the iron fist considerably. --Yankovic270 21:22, October 20, 2009 (UTC)


 * Like Mitro says, the list as it currently exists is there because it was written early, before we knew about most of the world. The SAC is listed as a single member because, well, we didn't know a thing about any of the individual South American states.  The Nordic Union is listed as a single member because in the early versions, it did sound like one big country.  It was a little later that Realismadder clarified its status, as a union of independent nations and a re-creation of the Nordic Council.  One of the reasons the ANZC satellites _are_ members is that, at the time, Hawaii was one of the few fully-deceloped nation pages we had, and the list felt empty without it.  Now of course, it's basically canon, and I'd be very sad if "my" country lost its membership status.


 * I would say that any stable nation with an Atlantic, Pacific, or Indian coastline is probably a founding member, no questions asked. So are stable inland nations that were in contact with the "mainstream" world by 2005-ish.  Vermont, it seems, was in contact, but its government was until no wary of the LoN, which is fine.  I'd imagine that the members would want a little more time to "get to know" more recently contacted nations.  Lincoln is as stable & peaceful as can be, but it's probably only been contacted in the last 1-2 years: definitely a good candidate for membership.  Benkarnell 21:50, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'm fine with Lincoln being added to the list.--BrianD 00:04, October 21, 2009 (UTC)
 * I agree with Benkarnell; the founding nations in the League should be nations that can access the wider world, and have been able to do so for several years. The newer nations on the international scene (mainly inland nations) would have to wait. --DarthEinstein 00:23, October 21, 2009 (UTC)


 * Sounds good. And I should add to what I said before: there are plausible justifications for the ANZ satellites being members.  I can imagine a situation where the Brazillian negotiator says, "We demand that the League of Nations have its headquarters in Sao Paulo and that none of your satellite states get to be members!"  The Autralo-Neozealandian negotiator responds, "Rubbish!  The League will be headquartered in Aukland, and all of our sassociated states must be allowed to join!"  The Brazillian says, "Very well.  We'll put the headquarters in Tonga, but none of your satellites can join."  The ANZ-er says, "A Tongan headquarters we can agree to, but our client states must get to join."  "Fine."  Benkarnell 01:35, October 21, 2009 (UTC)

I'll add the ANZC associated states, especially since the ANZC would not want to be that outnumbered by the South American states. However I don't think Lincoln would be a member. Its too far inland and I really believe that contact with it would be around the same time of the NAU. Mitro 14:06, October 21, 2009 (UTC)

I established the LoN page as a very early site of DD as I tried to imagine a functioning world organisation in the then-current situation. As my focus was on establishing a nearly balanced out system (I still believe) merging the UN and the old League of nations System I did not establish a valid and vivid admission system of new states...Only mentioned a General asssembly decision once a year... but due to the proposal and rapid expansions of the TL adjustments need to be made for sure...Will need to get back into the TL end the developmetns during last weeks as I am now a bit out of the worst in my new job here in Spain and found the time to get involved with 1983: Doomsday again....--Xi&#39;Reney 17:59, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

/
These two pages don't seem to be working together. The former mentions a "horrifying warlord regime" that existed before 2006, while the other talks of a fairly peaceful nation that existed since Doomsday, which seems to be the successor to South Africa. --DarthEinstein 22:11, October 21, 2009 (UTC)


 * Hm, you're right. I wrote the "horrifying warlord" business before we knew exactly what was in the Cape.  Here are karsten's (aka Villa's) original comments.  They should be incorporated more exactly into the both articles (and possibly also the South Africa page):

The fictional Van der Merwe was ultimately replaced with the real-life Marais. Otherwise, this was the plan. It has the extra advantage of helping to explain the origins of New Britain (the Anglo-Africans fled the Cape and settled in Port Elizabeth). Benkarnell 23:25, October 21, 2009 (UTC)
 * After the attacks the only part of South Africa to remain under effective government control is the almost wholly Europeanised part round Cape Town. As the central government finally collapsed, local authorities assume control of the area.
 * To keep the support of the Coloured population, which was vital in beating down those riots that did occur in the Western Cape region, some Coloureds are appointed to government posts. The most important posts however remain in the hands of the Afrikaners.
 * One of the leaders of a Coloured militia created after Doomsday (I'm calling him Hendrikus van der Merwe for now, just to ease referring to him) grows dissatisfied by the relatively marginal posts given to his kinsfolk (or perhaps better said: grows dissatisfied by the fact that he wasn't among those appointed...) starts revolting against the Cape Town authorities and becomes an uncontrollable menace, ultimately taking over control over the state.
 * Van der Merwe streamlines the Cape into an authoritarian regime and starts some kind of personality cult.
 * Van der Merwe initially targets the Islamic Cape Malay population as a scapegoat for all problems of the RZA.
 * Ultimately, when this loses some of its effect, Van der Merwe also starts targeting another group that is somehow different from the norm: the local Anglophone population. Going as far as passing an edict that fully outlaws usage of the English language and forces people to use Afrikaans.
 * With Anglo-Saxons being actively persecuted, I guess international interference is only an inch away, regardless of the fact that it's happening in Africa...
 * After the interference the first truly free elections of the Cape are held.
 * The new democratic government chooses to remain a member of the New Union of South Africa. Which, being by far its largest member, the RZA has come to dominate.
 * Okay, that works. I'm no South Africa expert though, so if someone else could fix it up that would be good. --DarthEinstein 01:07, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * I've done a bit of reading on it. I've been meaning for months to do some serious writing on the topic for DD, but haven't found the inspiration yet, I guess.  Mostly I'm interested in writing a proposal for KwaZulu.  But seriously, until the current growth rate slows a little bit, I don't think yet another proposal is very helpful.  I have yet to read the majority of proposals that are out there, to say nothing of many of the canonical articles.  Benkarnell 05:23, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

New categoriztion for country pages
I've grouped all 200-ish current country pages into regional subcategories, which can be seen in Category:World Country Profiles (1983: Doomsday). There may be a good way to coordinate them with Category:Continents (1983: Doomsday), maybe eventually reaching a point where everything can be put into a gepgraphic category of some kind. In the meantime, please try to put new country pages into one of the subcategories; that way the categories are easier to use. Benkarnell 05:23, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * Your dedication to this timeline continues to impress me. Well done.  Mitro 14:51, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

World Map
Hello, does anyone know where to get the blank version of your world map? Thank you L3eater 20:41, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

Nuclear contamination map


I have made this map of the nuclear contamination after the war. Of course it should not be taken to seriously, but it gives us idea of which area can be re-populated, and which cannot. Unfortunately it show us that many regimes created in Europe and ex-USA seem very implausible (especially the Alpine Confederation). On the other hand it shows us some surprisingly clean areas (e.g. in western Ukraine and Montana). — Hellerick 08:44, October 24, 2009 (UTC)
 * May I ask where you got your information?--BrianD 16:56, October 24, 2009 (UTC)
 * What information? This picture is based on File:1983nuked2.PNG, the red dots for nuclear strikes were Gausian-blurred in Photoshop (thus imitating the contamination being spread) and isolines of "contamination levels" were added. The ICBM markers are larger, thus they produce a larger contaminated area. That's why I said that this map should not be taken to seriously, but still in shows which places are more likely to be contaminated than the rest. — Hellerick [[Image:Flag of Divnogorsk.svg|20px]] 19:16, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

There is a difference between radiation from elsewhere, and an actual nuclear impact. A state can survive radiation fairly easily, but an actual impact often destroys the chance for an organized government. The only exclusion to this "rule" is Lincoln, the destruction of Omaha did not affect it, as its capitol is Lincoln. --Yankovic270 19:48, October 24, 2009 (UTC)
 * I don't understand Yankovic's comment. — Hellerick [[Image:Flag of Divnogorsk.svg|20px]] 13:24, October 25, 2009 (UTC)
 * I think he means that because Lincoln is west of Omaha, it didn't get affected by the blast nor by the fallout.--BrianD 14:18, October 25, 2009 (UTC)
 * THere's also wind patterns to consider, and this map doesn't show the recently "discovered" impacts all over the Middle East. But overall it's quite helpful.  I'm once again feeling skeptical about, for instance. Benkarnell 11:14, October 25, 2009 (UTC)
 * Obviously no Luxembourg is possible, in fact I think it would be one of the most "hot" regions of Europe.
 * I can take into account the winds if necessary (I guess it would make eastern Canada and northern Russia more polluted, and it probably would destroy the western Ukrainian "oasis"). If I'll be given am updated map of nuclear strikes, I'll make an updated map of the contamination. — Hellerick [[Image:Flag of Divnogorsk.svg|20px]] 13:23, October 25, 2009 (UTC)
 * This does help to show what I've feared for a while - that our survivor states in Europe and northeastern America are altogether too optimistic. It's time to talk about what changes are needed for the Alps and similar places.  Benkarnell 16:19, October 25, 2009 (UTC)

i thought most of the detonations were airburts, not ground detonations so there would not be that much fallout. anyway, surely nations like the Alpine Confed have been canon for to long to alter. --HAD 16:47, October 26, 2009 (UTC)

Changes to articles by anonymous users
I had an anonymous user who's apparently quite the rugby union fan make some changes to the sports by country article. How often does this happen, and how is it dealt with here?--BrianD 20:46, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

CURRENT ARTICLE PROPOSALS
Please list any and all current article proposals and their discussion here. If the proposals only involves a specific section of the article, please state that. Also remember to use  when reviewing new articles.

What would happen to the nation of Liberia in Africa? --Yankovic270 18:48, September 29, 2009 (UTC)
 * I was just recently looking up that whole region to see how Nigeria would be doing, so Im curious as well.--Oerwinde 18:55, September 29, 2009 (UTC)

We could have a repeat of what happened in the early 19th Century. A group of American settlers/refugees fleeing the situation on the home front. It may seem strange, but anything is better than the anarchy of the former States. Especially from the eyes of one of these refugees. --Yankovic270 21:28, September 29, 2009 (UTC)


 * There were already Americans living in Liberia, and I doubt that people would cross the Atlantic to reach it. It would be more likely that those people would divert to Latin America.

Also, it appears that Liberian history would play out much like it did, though I can't say for certain. At the time, the country was under a dictatorship that could have potentially have held onto its power. However, there was also popular support for movements against the government, both peaceful and armed, and therefore it is likely that the nation could have simply dissolved into anarchy. Lahbas 21:40, September 29, 2009 (UTC)

With no foreign aid or arms supplies from Europe or North America, many of the African countries would likely be unable to sustain military coups as well and would likely either dissolve into anarchy with roving bands of machete wielding raiders, or stabilize due to the need to become self reliant.--Oerwinde 17:57, October 1, 2009 (UTC)

I think the Liberians have the best chance of regaining a democratic government, due to the American heritage of many of its citizens. We should have and article here, as this region of Africa has not been written on. There have been nations in the North, South and East. Why leave West Africa out of it. --Yankovic270 18:05, October 1, 2009 (UTC)


 * I'm no expert on Liberia, but from what I remember the American-descended elite was hardly the force for democracy in the country. Their latest dictator was named Charles Taylor, after all.  I definitely don't want to implicate an entire ethnic group here, or say "every American-descended Liberian is evil!".  Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the current President, is a great hero of democracy, and she obviously has an Anglo-American name.  But Liberia's "American heritage" is definitely, definitely no guarantee that they will turn to democracy.  Benkarnell 18:19, October 6, 2009 (UTC)

In 1983, Liberia was ruled by Samuel Doe, who had overthrown and killed the previous leader in a military coup three years earlier. His rule had already become extremely corrupt and repressive at the time of Doomsday. What is interesting to note, is that he was in NYC on Doomsday attending a session of the UN and as such, would most likely have died. I don’t know it this would have made any difference in the long run in that another warlord/dictator would have quickly stepped up and assumed power. In our timeline, Doe battled several coup attempts before being killed a former ally in 1990 who immediately became the same kind of ruler as he had been. --Fxgentleman 20:18, October 7, 2009 (UTC)

Ok. So if not Liberia, can someone create an article for a nation in the area around Liberia? --Yankovic270 00:38, October 10, 2009 (UTC)
 * I would be interested in writing said article, though I see Liberia as more of a failed state controlled by various warlords then an organized survivor state. Mitro 14:05, October 20, 2009 (UTC)
 * I started the article. Interesting note: Charles Taylor who would play a big role in the civil war and later be president, was probably in America around Doomsday so he might be out of the picture.  Mitro 14:36, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Can someone write the article for the Freport of Monrovia then? It IS the most stable state in the area. --Yankovic270 15:12, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

I felt free to start the article in question. I only added an info box, so if anyone has an idea it doesn't contradict it too much (I think). --Yankovic270 22:16, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

NEW
I have moved the obsolete Republic of Lincoln to Nebraska. I remember my derisive comments towards Nebraska, and I am "eating crow" for them. I just could not figure out any other place that could be called the Republic of Lincoln. That and with Omaha's presumed destruction, Lincoln's being the largest settelement in Nebraska gave it a lot more influence. Besides it is the capital of Nebraska anyway. --Yankovic270 00:24, October 6, 2009 (UTC)


 * Overall I like the page and am very happy to see the Lincolnians thriving!
 * I have a few concerns, though, mostly small ones.


 * The North American Union is literally just next door, and like Lincoln and Gondor, it is a placeholder regime anticipating an unanticipated time when the rightful US government will be restored. The NAU even has a state called Nebraska, which I had assumed was based on some remnant of the state government.  I suppose the NAU's Nebraska could be a different survivor community that organized separately from Lincoln and joined the NAU.  Maybe now Lincoln is like a nonviolent version of Canada's Saugenay: The NAU sees no reason why Lincoln doesn't join up, while Lincoln sees no reason to be anything but independent.
 * When the USA government in Canberra dissolved itself, it was not in contact with the interior of North America. Even the NAU didn't find out about it for several years.
 * 1984 seems quite early for a community used to stable US rule to try their hand at forming a whole new country. I'd think that there would be a couple of predecessor regimes trying to maintain continuous rule in Nebraska, before giving up and forming a new republic.
 * For some reason, everyone calls it the ANZC, not CANZ. Don't ask me why.  Maybe it's to avoid the impression that the commonwealth is a pile of metal cylinders.
 * On a personal level, I'm uncomfortable just taking flags from another ATL. I think the group is creative enough that we can come up with good symbols for Lincoln.  Plus, flags with detailed seals, maps, and writing are bad enough.  A flag with a detailed portrait of an individual just seems like vexilological heresy, because it's so hard to make different flags look identical.  The flag of the State of Washington is just plain horrible, IMO.  That said, the flag is distinct and not at all unattractive.  It helps that the image is a high-contrast BW picture of Abe, not a full-color portrait like the monstrosity in Washington.  I think I could get behind a flag like this if the word "Lincoln" were removed, it being unnecessary.
 * Overall I want to repeat that I like what you wrote very much. Benkarnell 18:43, October 6, 2009 (UTC)

I have edited the flag. I also request that the the North American Union may be adjusted so that the NAU abandons its claims to Nebraska in return for Lincoln renouncing its claims to any territory outside the pre-doomsday state borders. --Yankovic270 01:50, October 7, 2009 (UTC)


 * I kind of like the idea of a separate community in western Nebraska that did join the NAU. Benkarnell 02:28, October 7, 2009 (UTC)

It would not be compatible. If the Republic of Lincoln was founded in 1984, then by 1996 (when the NAU was founded) the Lincolnites would have solidified control over the ENTIRE State. The close proximity of the two nations would foster very good relations, but the border would be pegged at the Wyoming and South Dakotan borders. Since most of the NAU is Northwest of the Lincolinites, this would not affect the NAU too much. And it is not like I am making the Lincolnites too expansionist. I have them just claiming their state and nothing else but. --Yankovic270 02:19, October 8, 2009 (UTC)


 * A couple things to consider.


 * Since the NAU page is canon, Louisianan would have to approve big changes to it (like disappearing his own State of Nebraska).
 * The NAU may have been founded in 1996, but its constituent communities are all older than that.
 * If the USA is as bad as we've been assuming, it's definitely possible that even after all these years Lincoln has not been able to secure the entire state. Nebraska's big, with lots of room for people of all sorts to roam around. Chances are Lincoln, with a small population, would not have much use for a lot of that prairie land and wouldn't expend the resources to control it, not when the only real advantage would be a larger spot on the map.
 * I don't want any of that to seem rude. I'm just trying to share my ideas.  Benkarnell 02:56, October 8, 2009 (UTC)
 * I agree with Ben. I only see Lincoln controlling only the eastern portions of the state, not the entire state.  Just one correction though, the NAU was my brainchild not Louis'.  Mitro 14:57, October 8, 2009 (UTC)
 * That's right, I was confusing it with Utah. My apologies!  Benkarnell

Ok. I have relented on the issue. The western part of the state is in NAU hands. And does anyone like the other changes I made? Including the Doomsday memorial, and Abe Lincoln-centered culture. --Yankovic270 21:29, October 9, 2009 (UTC)


 * I do like the memorial. Is it in Lincoln, though? (The page never said where specifically it is). Regarding Lincolnism, there are people who see him as a deity? That sounds a little far-fetched to me, especially given that at least 10 percent of the populace are atheists. It seems more reasonable to me that, in a stable of a society as Lincoln seems to be, that any number of people would see Lincoln as not so much a god as an inspirational figure, perhaps not someone to worship but someone to model one's life and values after. People who follow Lincoln in this manner could be adherents of any religion, or no religion at all.--BrianD 00:08, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

Yes it is in Lincoln. But I will keep Lincolnism. It is the North American equivalent to the Cult of the Once and Future King in New Britain. Except their is naturally evidence that the figure they worhip existed. Again, considering how much Abraham Lincoln is welded to the culture of the republic that shares its name, there might be people who would establish a religion based arround him. It is basically Christianity with a different face. I truly believe that Abe Lincoln is the only person who could fit the bill. He was kind, compassionate but he knew how to be firm. From the bits and peices I gleaned from church, that is exactly God's "personality". I don't want to offend, but if there is anyone in the Western world i'd "Deify", it would be Abraham Lincoln. --Yankovic270 00:32, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

And if anyone is good with Photoshop, I would like a picture of the Doomsday memorial. I would like it to look like the memorial I described. It is mostly copper, with iron deailing on the plinth, and of course a recycled concrete plinth. --Yankovic270 00:37, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

That's cool, Yankovic. May I ask why the city fathers decided to reinforce Abraham Lincoln with the culture so strongly?--BrianD 01:00, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

Because of the fact that Abraham Lincoln is pretty much universally knowan as THE #1 Best US President EVER. And because of the fact that Lincoln was just growing up as a city when Lincoln was assassinated. And they need a guiding light, a hero to help them get through Doomsday. And Abe provides a perfect candidate. Basically now whenever they have a problem (and I am not trying to offend anyone) they don't ask themselves "What would Jesus do?", they ask themselves "What would Abe do?". I'm sorry but noone, not even Gerge Washington, can compare to Lincoln. --Yankovic270 01:29, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

Anyway, I am pretty much finished. Anyone want to comment on it? --Yankovic270 20:26, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * I still like most of it. And though I feel like kind of an ass doing it, here are still more bullets with the issues I still have:


 * 1984 seems much to early for Lincoln to totally give up on the USA and l themselves a "republic". Until then, I'd imagine they'd just stick with "Nebraska" or "Government for the Greater Lincoln Area" or something just as temporary-sounding.
 * They would hot have known about vents in Australia in 1996; it would have taken them at least until 2000 or later, ,IMO.
 * ANZC, not CANZ.
 * I agree that creating an exact replica of DC is unrealistic not just because they couldn't do it (basically they'll have to survive with almost no industry or modern technology, after the first few years), but because they wouldn't want to. Maybe a grid and a few bits inspired by DC, but by that time the Lincolnites would, probably and hopefully, be exploring their own identity and not just trying to copy the old USA.  Benkarnell 21:41, October 16, 2009 (UTC)

You forgot to read my article I see. Until '96 or so (when the UPA was dissolved), the Republic of Lincoln was a provisional government, or "placeholder" for the US in the area. They did not give up on the US until then. Even now the Lincolnites are holding on to the increasingly hopeless dream that the United States would be ressurected. But again, as I said, the Lincolnites did NOT declare full independance until 1996. --Yankovic270 22:16, October 19, 2009 (UTC)


 * No need to get snippy. I read it.  It gives 1984 as the date of independence and says, "It was not until April 8th, 1984 that a new government was organized. Calling itself the Provisional Republic of Lincoln, the new nation intended to act as a “place holder” for the US government until contact could be reestablished."  They acknowledged their placeholder status (they still do, dont they?) but they still call themselves a "repulic" and a "new nation", something that would take longer than a few months, I think.  At least they include the word "provisional" there, I suppose.  But at that point I really would expect they'd still be calling themselves a "state"., especially since this is supposed to be the Nebraska state government assuming control.  People like continuity in a crisis: in 1984, it would be more comforting to know that Nebraska was still functioning, than to hear them declare themselves a Republuc with a new constitution and everything.  Benkarnell 22:42, October 19, 2009 (UTC)


 * I'm just saying, but though it called itself "independant" at the time, if there was any chance to rejoin a new USA, they would have tooke it like that (snap!). Though there has been a growing independant idenity in recent years,they had at the time considered themselves American citizens. Now they mostly refer to themeselves as Lincolnites (Chosen because I think too many common nationalities include the suffix -ian. eg: Virginian)

--Yankovic270 20:34, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * All I'm saying is that they wouldn't have used the word "independent" at the time, for all the reasons above. Did you see the other issues I raised, also?  Benkarnell 22:40, October 25, 2009 (UTC)

Multi-National Peacekeeping Force (1983: Doomsday),, and
All articles relate to the Middle East. Very little is written on the region and these proposals are trying to flesh it out. Mitro 18:41, October 6, 2009 (UTC)

As an offshoot of the articles I am already working on for the Middle East, I have created proposed articles for both Israel and Jordan. I have posted my arguements for these nations on the Asia Discussion page rather than taking space here. As always, I am interested in any thoughts. Thanks.--Fxgentleman 03:40, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * I still haven't read the old ones through yet (I'm still behind), but from what I can see they are based on solid facts and research and really add to our understanding of the world. Nobody's objected to them - I don't know if that's a silent endorsement, or if everyone else, like me, just hasn't had a chance to read them yet.  Benkarnell 12:58, October 19, 2009 (UTC)


 * I've finally read them. They are definitely good, some of the best-researched stuff we have on the immediate aftermath, and well written to boot.  I'm all for making them canon and letting you be caretaker, playing around with them to finish their history. I also am happy to see one person handle the entire region; it will make things more coherent and less fragmented.  One question: you mention that Israel not only survived after the devastating nuclear attacks, but actually expanded.  How are you going to get it there?  Benkarnell 22:45, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

Thank you for the kind critique. I am fortunate in that I enjoy doing research for fun and kind of thrive on it. I have and continue to do an enormous amount of research on the pages I am working, which is why I have not added further to Lebanon or the MNF for example. I guess a big problem is you have to go back and look at how things were in 1983 versus today, so in Lebanon’s case I am reading a book on their economy circa 1982. My intention was to do a few articles, but things sort of took on a life of their own. I am currently working on articles which will cover the rest of the Arabian Peninsula nations. As previously stated, I intend to post my thoughts on the area “hopefully” soon on the Asia page. As to your question on Israel, without going into great detail, I see them annexing the West Bank and Gaza and fully integrating them into the nation. This will involve massive changes as to how Palestinians are treated. They will become full citizens (i.e. no special ids); elect reps to the parliament and hold seats in the government; and have greater involvement in policing these areas and in the military. Imagine, all the big boys involved in the Middle East will be gone: US, USSR, Europe, Syria, Egypt, UN, etc. Without this interference and given the mutual suffering taking place post D-Day, I see both sides coming closer together and eventually making peace, although there will be extremists of both stripes who will be unhappy. As for the Sinai, with the collapse of the Egyptian government immediately following D-Day, Israel will be forced to reoccupy it to deal with refugees and lawless elements. Another factor to consider will be the existence of an oil field Israel found and developed there, which it later had to turn over to Egypt. With this “re-acquisition” they would ensure their future energy needs. I see the Sinai becoming a protectorate and "maybe" voting to join Israel in the distant future. Beyond this, I do not see Israel expanding further. I hope this helps to answers your question. --Fxgentleman 04:50, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

MediFleet (1983: Doomsday)
Proposed LoN organization. Mitro 18:44, October 6, 2009 (UTC)
 * Is there anyone who objects to graduating this and marking it as a stub? Mitro 14:40, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'm confused as to how the Celtic Alliance surrendering control of the medical institutions becomes surrender of political control to the United Nations? Louisiannan 19:39, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

Yikes! Missed this one. I object on several points: Benkarnell 21:57, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * 1) The League of Nations' medical arm is the International Red Cross, re-established just last March with its headquarters in Geneva.  It may be that MediFleet is an older organization, recently put under League control and not yet merged with the Red Cross (probably a good thing, since the Red Cross so far has mostly lacked things like actual doctors and ambulances and hospitals - it's all in the works).
 * 2) The group just recently rejected the idea of the Celtic Alliance turning control of itself over to the League of Nations, because it made no sense.  No nation ever has or ever would willingly relinquish its own self-government, certainly not to an international body run by who-knows-what country next.
 * 3) Even the idea of turning all hospitals in the country over to the LoN makes no sense.  Where's the money going to come from?  And if the Celts are still going to pay for them, then what exactly are they handing over?  Just decision making power?  Why would they do that?
 * 4) The UN/LoN administers territories and hospitals in places where the normal authorities cannot do so.  The C.E., one of the world's wealthier and more successful countries, is a very odd choice for LoN takeover.
 * Alright it doesn't seem people are acceptable about the idea. Unless Mjdoch or someone else makes some of the suggested changes I will mark this as obsolete.  Mitro 23:56, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * I think the idea of a Celtic-based MediFleet is a good one. It's just that this page was written (I think) when Mjdoch was still considering the idea of ceing C.A. sovreignty to the League of Nations.  Now that this idea was rejected, the idea of MediFleet has to be re-worked given what we know.  It may be that the C.A. has turned MediFleet over to the LoN.  Benkarnell 00:55, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Venezuela (1983: Doomsday)
Article is already canon but a large section was already added and the article itself needs a lot of work. Mitro 18:47, October 6, 2009 (UTC)
 * Generally very optimistic, but for South America I think it's OK. Colombia and Venezuela both seem to have brought out the best in themselves, while Brazil had to go through a difficult period before coming into its own.  Remember that it is established that Venezuela attacked and occupied a portion of Guyana at some point (we don't know when, I think).  So it has to get a more militant government sometime later.  Another minor point: no nuclear winter in this TL.  Benkarnell 06:38, October 10, 2009 (UTC)

Vatican (1983: Doomsday) and Celtic Church (1983: Doomsday)
Religion related articles that have been proposed. Mitro 18:48, October 6, 2009 (UTC)
 * I like everything in the Vatican page, and it fits exactly with what we talked about a few months back: a South American-based Church. The Celtic Church is entirely within Mjdoch's discretion and does not need to go through the proposal process.  Benkarnell 18:55, October 6, 2009 (UTC)
 * I graduated the Celtic Church. Mitro 22:47, October 8, 2009 (UTC)
 * I think the Vatican's ready to move on as well. I haven't looked into it, but I'm assuming the pre-DD decrees by Pope Paul are accurate?  Benkarnell 16:21, October 25, 2009 (UTC)

Republic of Rif (1983: Doomsday)
Proposed article on a Morroco successor state. Mitro 18:51, October 6, 2009 (UTC)
 * It looks unfinished. But I like the idea of the Spanish getting involved in the mid-80s.  It seems to fit.  Benkarnell

Kingdom of Northumbria (1983: Doomsday)
a nieghbour kingdom that i've written to link into Kingdom of Cleveland (1983: Doomsday) page, currently a work in progress--Smoggy80 11:37, October 10, 2009 (UTC)


 * I love the idea of the Lord Lieutenant coming to the aid of his people as the Kingdom collapses - makes for a great story, one of many compelling ones to come out of this ATL. And the new kingdom couldn't ask for a better royal seat!  A couple of minor points: first, that is a lot of bombs!  How could anything survive that's caught between themm?  Do you think their number should be reduced?  I'm not sure; it may be that the towns are far enough away that there's a "safe zone" around Alnwick that can form the nuvleus of the kingdom.  Second, according to Wikipedia, Lord Hugh died in 1988 anyway; if he got premature radiation-induced cancer, that might have to move forward in time.  Third, will a royal marriage really result in the unification of the two kingdoms?  That feels so medieval - but then, this is a post-apocalyptic world.  But while Northumberland feels very much like a medieval kingdom, formed by the personal initiative and influence of the King, Cleveland feels much more modern and constitutional.  The Queen, after all, was more-or-less invited to the throne, wasn't she?  The country of Cleveland itself seems to have been formed by the people rather than y one powerful person.


 * Then again, they might be looking to unite anyhow, and the marriage just provides a way to seal the deal. Oh - did Cleveland and Northumbria design their flags independently?  They're very similar (both being based on the same old banner); has this caused confusion?  Was it deliberate?


 * Finally, it appears that the Percy family are Dukes, not Earls, of Northumberland.


 * I think that Henry is the perfect sort of person to declare the re-creation of Northumbria. From what little I just read about him, he seemed like a flamboyant, unpredictable sort of peer, just the type to resurrect medieval Saxon imagery.


 * Final question: what is the relationship of the two kingdoms to the Celtic Alliance?   The CA might very well see them the way Canada sees Saguenay, an inconvenient local power interfering with their resettlement of the country.


 * Wes hal! Benkarnell 00:54, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

War in the Mediterranean!
Discussion moved to Talk:Second Sicily War (1983: Doomsday). Benkarnell 19:56, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

Commonwealth of Kentucky (1983: Doomsday)
KENTUCKY Hypothetical Nuclear Targets Primary: none Secondary: Fort Campell (Christian), Fort Knox (Harkin), Louisville, Richmond. Tertiary: Covinton (Cincinnati, OH.), Henderson (Evansville IN.), Owensboro, Paducah.

It maybe possible that because Kentucky has no primary targets that it may have been spared the worst of Doomsday. A survivor nation could possibly manifest itself here. Perhaps this nation could be feuding with the Virginian Republic or may be even an ally do to their close proximity. Your thoughts? --GOPZACK 20:58, October 12, 2009 (UTC)

You know, originally the name Virginian Republic (or Empire as its prototype name was) was a misnomer. It was more based in Kentucky and Tennessee than in Virginia. And I am in full support of ANY allies for my precious brainchild, Virginia. --Yankovic270 22:14, October 12, 2009 (UTC)

Very good I quite like the Virginian Empire I say we possibly make a survivor nation of some kind based out of Fort Knox--GOPZACK 23:30, October 12, 2009 (UTC)
 * Why would Fort Knox make a good location? Mitro 23:32, October 12, 2009 (UTC)

Gold! The United States Bullion Depository holds about 4,603 tons (4 176 metric tonnes) of gold bullion (147.4 million troy ounces). It is second in the United States only to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's underground vault in Manhattan some type of gold backed economic system could be based off of it--GOPZACK 23:36, October 12, 2009 (UTC)

I completely agree with you on that. And with the Republic of Superior, Virginia, and West Texas in the area, it is not like they don't have a use for that cash. I see a healthy amount of trade between the nations, especially Kentucky and Virginia. And the Federal Reserve could potentially be salvaged. it lies 80 feet below street level, and is in a water and airtight steel vault. I think that provides plenty of insulation. And if it survived, it is not like the gold is going anywhere. I also notices that the map's lighter red section has a border simmilar to that of Austria. --Yankovic270 00:06, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * I see West Texas more likely to trade with Dinetah, Deseret and the NAU, at least initially. Superior would probably be very interested in the gold.--BrianD 00:49, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I would argue for Fort Knox either being bombed (because not only does it store the gold but is also a military base) or somehow lucking out. Louisville would definitely have gotten hit because of its position as a port on the Ohio River, as well as the two Ford plants there (I don't think UPS had built its presence at the airport yet). The gold could be there waiting for someone to get it, especially if the powers in Kentucky couldn't hold things together and everything fell completely apart.

In the Virginia article it implies that the airborne left Fort Campbell because of the "untenable" situation in Kentucky and Tennessee; this tells me that chaos reigned, at least in the Hopkinsville and Clarksville areas. That said, it is possible you have survivor villages and towns around the state, especially in the eastern half (where the mountains might have muted some or much of the radiation). It's also possible you had a group of people from Bowling Green, Glasgow and Cave City who hid out in Mammoth Cave for as long as possible before starting their own survivor community, perhaps salvaging the Corvette plant and usable facilities at WKU for their own use.--BrianD 00:47, October 13, 2009 (UTC)
 * There is also the fact that gold is useless in a post-apoc wasteland shortly after nuclear war. When food, clean water and medicine are more important do you really think gold will have any influence?  The economy if any in the area will be barter.  Fort Knox will not be the center of any Kentucky state simply because of what is inside its vaults.  Mitro 01:08, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

It could be that the Kentuckians could have pulled themselves together after the airborne pulled out. Plus Fort Campbell is well outside the area actually controlled (and not just claimed) by Kentucky. The lighter red section of the map could be feuding warlords. And Fort Knox was a Secondary target, not a primary one, in fact there isn't a primary target in the whole state. The state could have survived unscathed nucularly, but torn apart by civil confict. I could see a pact beteen Kentucky and Virginia to reclaim the rest of the state. With force if necessary. --Yankovic270 01:23, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I can go along with Fort Campbell lucking out and not getting hit, and even with Fort Knox getting hit but the bomb not doing enough damage to prevent salvage of the gold in the vaults. I'll insist, though, that Louisville did get hit (isn't it canon that, "when in doubt, it got nuked"?), and though everything in the state generally fell apart, there are scattered communities around the state that survived. If the state survived intact and held it together you would have to have heard from it by now, and it probably be on the level of Superior and Canada.--BrianD 01:35, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * I wonder if some dynamic personality - Thompson? - found scattered townships around the state and convinced them to come together as a reborn state, and pledged to rebuild not just in the military bases but also in abandoned cities like Lexington and Bowling Green, if a Commonwealth of Kentucky would work? If gold has any meaning in this economy (and I assume it would), then Kentucky is potentially rich, and it has an abundance of coal in the eastern regions for power. Even if no one was left in the state, surely Virginia at least would move in for the natural resources.--BrianD 01:42, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I think they could use the coal for power and the gold as financial leverage perhaps the good folks at Fort Campbell weren't to concerned with the gold or maybe they did not know the fate of Fort Knox to the north --GOPZACK 02:18, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I agree with Yankovic270 possibly the largest and most powerful country amongst all the warlords could be the Commonwealth of Kentucky based in and around Fort Knox--GOPZACK 02:25, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * For the sake of this TL, I would assume that everything in the FEMA report would be destroyed, or at least be hit by a nuclear device of some kind, despite their status. As such, Fort Knox should be considered lost in the war. Lahbas 03:27, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * I understand where you're coming from, Lahbas - I used the FEMA page as reference for my proposal on West Texas - but no one knows for certain that it's 100 percent accurate. And, I like Burlington and Montpelier in Vermont not having been hit by nukes!--BrianD 03:48, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I really doubt that Kentucky would be the largest and most powerful country in the area. I agree with Lahbas that Fort Knox was no doubt lost and even if it did survive the gold would be useless to a post-nuclear holocaust economy. Furthermore Kentucky's position on the map makes it was too suseptible to chaos caused by refugees. The only parts of Kentucky that are most likely to survive are their portion of the Cumberland Plateau and the Jackson Purchase.

On a related note, I'm worried about the large number of American survivor states that are popping up. Canon tells us that the state governments collapsed and anarchy prevailed over most of the US. But current proposals make me worry that things are going better in the US then what the TL has always reported. Small communities surviving and expanding are plausible, but large nation-states coming out of post-Doomsday America is stretching it. Mitro 14:00, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * My thought that Kentucky would be a powerful nation was based on the very best-possible-case scenario, and on others' insistence that nothing there got hit. Personally I believe that things there would turn into a state of chaos, and that any signs of humanity there are found in small survivor towns, not just in the areas you mentioned but also perhaps around Cave City (Mammoth Cave) and in the eastern Kentucky mountains. --BrianD 14:26, October 13, 2009 (UTC)


 * Also, Mitro raises another important point: canon. While it would be nice for survivor states to rise from the ashes of the apocalypse, any scenarios have to be realistic. I'm surprised that someone hasn't already fleshed out what exactly happened to all of the states in the union; that might be very helpful for everyone to flesh out, going forward, so we don't open up the wiki one day to find someone's presented a proposal for a 10 million-strong Confederate States with a million-person capital built on the ruins of Atlanta.--BrianD 14:47, October 13, 2009 (UTC)
 * The only problem with deciding what happened now for an area as large as the former continental US is that we will potentially prevent others from proposing their own ideas, which might be better then what we could think of. We should't deter others from adding their thoughts and insights, hence why we move slowly as we flush what is going on across the world.  Sure it causes problems (look at Africa, not even targetted and yet there is very little information because not many people are knowledgable about the area) but as long as we follow the Editorial Guidelines and keep our plausibility detectors on high we should be able to keep things nice and neat.  And that is the biggest problem with Kentucky, its already canon that things were bad there, hence why the 101st packed up and moved to West Virginia.  We have to be careful about how large and stable a state we create in Kentucky.  Mitro 14:57, October 13, 2009 (UTC)
 * It's good to know that, Mitro (particularly for someone like myself). Could it be established, perhaps, that despite ham radio operators around the continent, as well as radio and probably TV operational in the established survivor states, that communications is still spotty, with large areas no one has heard from? It could provide an answer to why no one's heard from Pennsylvania or the deep South, and provide a way for someone to come in with a great idea for those areas. Regarding Kentucky, I have my own ideas on how bad things got, so I'll create a page with my proposal in the next day or so.--BrianD 15:07, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

I am looking forward to what BrianD proposes and am interested in possibly contributing to that. I would however like to see some kind of small survivor nation built out of Kentucky, maybe not in and around Fort Knox but in Cave City (Mammoth Cave) and in eastern Kentucky with the possibility of some kind of fascist military dictatorship run by a rouge General at Fort Knox (that may have not even been hit).--GOPZACK 15:43, October 13, 2009 (UTC)

Where can i find the FEMA list? at what website? --HAD 12:10, October 14, 2009 (UTC)


 * http://www.survivalring.org/cd-targets.php (you can take it or leave it as you wish. It may be a guide for writers when creating scenarios on what survived and what didn't, but I wouldn't consider it to be canon, nor supersede whatever already has been canon).--BrianD 12:50, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

thanks. considering that doomsday was sudden event, would it be more likely that the teriatry targets would survive?--HAD 15:34, October 14, 2009 (UTC)


 * You can't know for certain, but it's certainly possible.--BrianD 20:57, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

The Commonwealth of Kentucky is up. Please comment in the talk section and share your thoughts on the article --GOPZACK 23:03, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

Manitoba?
What fate is drawing in the surviving communities of Manitoba? Is it a nest of Warlords, or is there a (as much as posible in this TL) stable state? I could see the small rural communities surviving and banding together. --Yankovic270 02:21, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

You know what? I am going to "adopt" the region. Seeing as the Republic of Lincoln is just about done, I want a project to complete. --Yankovic270 02:40, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

would you mind if iu started this article? i think a "commonwealth of manitoba" with its capital in churchill would be a good idea.--HAD 12:10, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

I am going to use the old borders of the old Red River colony, also known as Assiniboia. Portions of Southern Manitoba and parts of the former US. It has historic significance, and people could have survived due to the dispersed rural nature of the region. I am going to use the small town of Niverville as the captital, as it would have survived Winnipeg's destruction. --Yankovic270 13:20, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

Sounds good. --HAD 15:26, October 14, 2009 (UTC)


 * If you are going to be talking about a Capital for Manitoba, I would say that Brandon, to me, is the logical choice, as it does have an airport (plans to expand in OTL is currently ongoing), and it is on some of the major roads in the SW part of the province, the area least likely to have been hit in Doomsday. By the way, if Minot AFB in North Dakota is attacked, the extreme Southern part of the province (from say the border to Pipestone) would have been heavily contanimated, right? Tbguy1992 16:23, October 21, 2009 (UTC)


 * Remember that Canada controls the bit of Manitoba coast on the Hudson's bay. Of course that probably won't matter too much if they are only around the south. Would they expand a bit into northern US territory? And what about their relationship to the NAU? Also Superior is fairly close I suppose, so they might have some sort of relationship with them, even if they only met recently. --DarthEinstein 16:24, October 14, 2009 (UTC)


 * I think this page can safely be tagged as a Stub and made canon. It definitely fits with the original plan of Canada being a patchwork of local survivor republics (the original impetus for creating Saguenay). Nice research finding local politicians!  Benkarnell 04:17, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

I honestly did not pick any politicians for the first PM. He is my Grandfather. As a farmer and fromer member of the Canadian army, I think he is just the kind of tough soul needed to lead post-Doomsday Manitoba. And besides, It wasn't that hard to research the mayor either. Niverville is my home town. it was as simple as asking who was the mayor. --Yankovic270 12:37, October 24, 2009 (UTC)


 * Neat. Is he the person interviewed for this blog, and the one who received this award?   It was those two sites that made me think you were researching local people. Benkarnell 04:57, October 26, 2009 (UTC)

Cave City
Cave City is up, for those who want to look at it. It is a very, very rough outline, and I'm going to need a few days to flesh it out.--BrianD 04:46, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * I've already begun to do so. The best point of contact with the rest of the world at this time for Cave City has to be with some sort of scouting party from the Virginian Republic, which not only is canon, but has some sort of interest in the region and is the closest known nation-state to the region.--BrianD 21:26, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

Would anyone mind taking a look at Cave City and giving me your thoughts on the latest draft?--BrianD 02:46, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

What I'm most interested here is in how communities might survive a nuclear war, without benefit of state government, powerful leaders, authoritarian generals, military equipment, factories, food, electricity...going back to a standard of life a lot like the first settlers of Kentucky lived. TV, lights, cars, all a memory and a fantastic tale to kids; about the only thing they have been able to replicate is basketball.

Another thing: I've initiated "first contact" with the rest of the world through a man who claimed to be AWOL from his "dystopian" government in Virginia, and had knowledge of the other survivor states. He then disappears after the Cave City parties and he make contact with someone claiming to be from Vermont and that knows this man...the survivor community representatives then use a ham radio that's been made operational by another survivor community in the area, and legitimately contact three survivor states, including Vermont, which says it has never spoken to them.

The Virginian Republic and Commonwealth of Kentucky forces would be by far the closest nations to come to their aid, or otherwise. I don't know if we're taking 1960s, 1970s, or even 1980s-era military technology here with Virginia, but the scenario here is a handful of Walnut Grove/Dodge City (Gunsmoke)-type towns going up against a 20th century Army. It's no contest. They may not have seen a tank in 26 years, but they know what Virginia could do to them if it wished.--BrianD 18:47, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

Plus Virginia has a foothold in Kentucky allready. Kentucky's portion of the Cumberland plateau. If they saw fit, the Cave Citians would be occupied extremely easily. --Yankovic270 19:01, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'd expect Virginia to go farther than that, back to Fort Campbell, as well as into Bowling Green. Assuming there's anything salvageable after 26 years of disuse, you not only have the facilities at the base but also the Corvette plant in Bowling Green. I don't know what advantage the cave would give them, except perhaps as a tourist attraction. If Virginia is serious about joining the LoN, it would have added incentive to treat the Cave City people decently, as Vermont, Superior and the NAU know about them (assuming Cave City gets approved as canon).--BrianD 02:43, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

Due to issues of health, and the relative stability of the region, I am having Thompson step down as President-General. Soon afterwards, the Virginians are going to have their first free election in their post-DD hstory. Though the militaristic elements of the society are going to be softened, they are still going to be there. Also, I'm thinking of sending, or rather having Virginia send, explorers to discover the fate (and condition) of the Deep South. --Yankovic270 03:05, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * You know, if they go far enough south, they'll run into Cuba.
 * I wonder if the Virginians - who I presume would be able to rebuild the power grid and improve transportation - would be seen as liberators of some sort? Or if the people might be wary of them, especially if they came in as conquerors? Sure, they COULD overrun Cave City with ease. But, again, given the perception of the state in the international community, would they rather play nice when they move in?--BrianD 03:11, October 19, 2009 (UTC)


 * Would like your thoughts on how the people lived, and what else needs to be fleshed out before I finish and request graduation of the article.--BrianD 02:25, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

Unsure how to proceed with Cave City; should I involve the Commonwealth of Kentucky (as it is a proposal) or ignore it?--BrianD 22:50, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

I would have the Virginians give no reason for the Cave Citians to hate them, as they would treat them better than in the past. This is part of the Viginians loosening their "iron fist" in all parts of Virginia. --Yankovic270 16:22, October 23, 2009 (UTC)


 * Maybe it's a misunderstanding on the Cave Citians/Portlanders part (as is mine, for not seeing that you're writing Virginia as loosening its iron fist. In any case, I would presume that some people would be scared and perhaps flee, others would welcome Virginia as a liberator of sorts.--BrianD 16:34, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

I would send teams of engineers to Cave City to facilitate a repair of something large, flashy and impressive to "wow" the Cave Citians. Say, the power grid of Kentucky. since I am having them ally with the Commonwealth instead of annexing them (because of their better training/weapons, nd the fact that Thompson might know Kentucky's leader) this would help them grow closer together. --Yankovic270 16:50, October 23, 2009 (UTC)


 * Hmmm. And, now that (in the proposal) Vermont and Superior are aware of Cave City, this might be an added incentive for Virginia to stay on the up and up.--BrianD 16:53, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

Pretty much done with this. I'm looking for feedback on everything before I request any graduation of the article.--BrianD 03:00, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

And besides, Virginia is improvving treatment in Virginia proper. Why should the cave Citians get anything worse? --Yankovic270 12:40, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

New Situation for Mexico

 * Just a proposal. Chiapas and the Yucatan states fight for independence as free states, continuing to the present-day. They are armed by Cuba and a now Communist Guatamala, which has gone on to take over El Salvador and Belize. The insurgents have control over large parts of their claimed territory, but are largely unrecognized internationally (a situation similar to the conflict in Georgia). Everything else is as OTL, with the new district capital, and the jointly controlled Mexican-LoN Northern states. I have never done so much outlining in my life......Lahbas 22:18, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * Chiapas and Yucatan controlling Belize would put them into conflict with the East Caribbean Federation.--BrianD 22:21, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * Yeah Belize is a part of the ECF according to canon. Mitro 23:21, October 14, 2009 (UTC)

Interesting; a nation embracing a political ideaology that doomed the world. Not that I'm saying this is impossible, or implausible, or deplorable, just interesting. I'll be watching the debate and upgrading into canon. Mr.Xeight 22:29, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * By their view, it could be Capitalism that doomed the world, or just the conflict between them. --DarthEinstein 22:35, October 14, 2009 (UTC)
 * DarthEinstein's right. Though we know that the apocalypse was triggered by a Soviet mistake, for all the Cubans and insurgents know, it was Washington that launched the first missiles. I don't think they would hesitate to tell their people that, either. --BrianD 22:38, October 14, 2009 (UTC)


 * I gave Belize to Guatamala only because they historically have territorial claims to the territory. At the same time, I don't think that by the time Guatamala would invade, by the early 90's, there would be an international community to stop them. (The LoN would not exist until I believe 2008, and the ECF military I would think to be incapable of a counter-invasion). Lahbas 00:05, October 15, 2009 (UTC)


 * When I put the map together I imagined Guat. occupying parts of inland Belize, while the proper Belizean government is part of the ECF and controls most of the coast. We can adjust borders and give most of Belize to Guatemala, though, without disrupting canon, as long as Belize at least keeps a rump state on the coast, presumably centered on Belize City.  Benkarnell 11:41, October 15, 2009 (UTC)


 * I just re-read the Mexico article, and any new states in southern Mexico will have to be harmonized with it. The far-right México Primero party, now illegal, was calling for Mexico to occupy Central America as late as last spring.  This doesn't fit with the proposal, which assumes a weak Mexico and a strong Guatemala.  I think we can interpret Yucatan and Chiapas as somewhat lawless, maybe filled with some rebels from the south, but not as full-blown Guatemalan puppets.


 * [edit] Also, League of Nations control in the northern states is a proposal that the Mexican government has made. I doubt the League has the resources to intervene in so large an area.  It's basically still  brand new organization, after all.  Benkarnell 02:40, October 16, 2009 (UTC)

What if after Doomsday the Mexicans consolidated control over the more central territories, leaving the inhabited outer territories to their own machinations. --Yankovic270 02:52, October 16, 2009 (UTC)


 * There can't be a "what if" about it. What's there is there, especially since Guinesscap, the caretaker for Mexico, is more-or-less inactive right now.  We have to be extra careful not to mess up his pages with material that contradicts what he wrote.  And what's written is: "May 10, 1987 - The influx of Central American refugees and indigenous uprisings in Yucatán and Chiapas force president de la Madrid to federalize the the five southern border states of Chiapas, Tabasco, Campeche, Yucatán and Quintana Roo. These five states are dissolved and made into two federal territories, Istmo-Chiapas and Yucatán. Most of the Mexican Armed Forces are stationed here." And this year, "Right-wing extremists use the situation [food riots] to call for an end to immigration and closing the borders at Istmo-Chiapas and Yucatán. The "México Primero" party is formed with dozens of Catholic defectors from the PAN already in congress. They demand the annexation of the Central American states, the creation of reservations for all "Indian insurgents" and for Catholicism to be made the official religion."
 * IMO that _does_ leave room for guerrilla groups that control pieces of territory, maybe even sponsored by Guatemala. But Mexico has to have at least a good deal of control over things like border checks.  How about making the Yucatan and Chiapas rebels something like the Taliban in Afghanistan right now - in control of some out-of-the-way parts of the country, able to cause a lot of trouble, and able to sneak back and forth across the border; but when you get down to it, not in any state to actually govern the territory they claim. Just an idea - it's one way to fuse the ideas together. Benkarnell 04:20, October 16, 2009 (UTC)
 * I like that idea. Question - how strong, or weak, IS Mexico?--BrianD 05:14, October 16, 2009 (UTC)

Albania
Enver Hoxha ordered the construction of some 750,000 bunkers (for a population of 3 million), in the OTL has been viewed as an example of dictatorial eccentricity but in the ATL may mean the saving of many lives. Coupled with the fact that there was only a nuclear explosion in Tirana, the Albanian capital, and that the Albanian territory is very mountainous, which it would preserve enough of nuclear contamination. The backwardness of the country would not be an obstacle in the post-nuclear world, however the population was accustomed to decades of famine and poverty. Ethnic persecution in neighboring Yugoslavia and its eventual successor, the South Slavic Union would involve a large influx of refugees from Kosovo and Macedonia to replace the population died. Finally the power vacuum in northern Greece allow Albanian expansion in this area Tristanbreiker 17:04, October 16, 2009 (UTC)

You have it the other way around. The island of Kerkyra (called "Corfu" in English) has actually been highly interactive on the Albanian coast, not so much colonizing so much as banding together with any surviving refugees, having tiny settlements fly the Kerkyran flag. Mr.Xeight 01:14, October 17, 2009 (UTC)


 * Also, I think Yugoslavia's been more-or-less presented as an island of stability. So likely the refugees would move in the other direction, from Albania into Macedonia and Kosovo.  Although I do like the idea of a rural-based Albanian survivor state.  Maybe it could move somewhat across borders, since mainland Greece (if not the islands) was/is a great mess after DD.  Benkarnell 05:05, October 26, 2009 (UTC)

Corsica
Still have not said anything about Corsica, what suggestion you more attractive?, Power vacuum?, Independent Republic?, another French rival republic of the Republique Francaise des Terres Australes?, allied Republic to the Republic of Sicily?, puppet state of the Sicilians?, puppet State of the Alpine Confederation? or none of these options...Tristanbreiker 17:57, October 16, 2009 (UTC)
 * What if the Corsicans have their own republic, however there are many supporters for alliance or annexation with all of those that you mentioned, leading to lots of civil unrest, and perhaps becoming a warzone in the new war with Sicily.--DarthEinstein 19:33, October 16, 2009 (UTC)
 * The Republique Francaise des Terres Australes definitely claims it; that's been written already. How about - Corsica is a pawn in the rivalry between the Alpines and Sicily? Each side supports a faction in a long-drawn-out proxy war in Corsica.  Benkarnell 21:57, October 16, 2009 (UTC)

I always envisioned an indepedent republic wary of the Alpinians and Sicilians, which is why I've never written anything on their involvement on the war. But a decision on the fate of Corsica would be very helpful for my Sicily War, which hasn't seen direct army-to-army fighting, and nothing bigger than spontaneous firing from ships encircling North Africa, but believe me, it's-a-comin'. Mr.Xeight 02:33, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

Then Corsica is disputed territory, supporting the Sicilians one faction and the Alpine Confederation the other.Tristanbreiker 18:12, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Mongolia
This is a part of Soviet Socialist Siberia authored by Vladivostok. --DarthEinstein 15:55, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

Tibet
This is an independant country in the Himalayas, authored by Vladivostok. --DarthEinstein 15:55, October 17, 2009 (UTC)

Sports proposals
I've written proposals on Auto racing (1983: Doomsday) and Sports by country (1983: Doomsday). The former is intended to be a short piece expanding on an idea I had while writing Vermont: the resumption of the Formula One auto racing series, by entrepreneurs from South America, Asia and Europe. The latter is intended to be thumbnail looks at the state of sport in each country, and what the most popular sports are.--BrianD 14:15, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * In regards to the Sports by country article, it would benefit from contributions by the entire community. I'm willing to take a stab at the various countries, but the proposal would benefit best from the creators and maintainers of those respective countries (and others) to provide the information, as they have time to do so.--BrianD 18:23, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'm not exactly a sports guy, but I'll do what I can for Canada. --DarthEinstein 18:34, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * Okay, I made some changes. I also decided to include an Aroostook team in the Canadian Hockey League. If that doesn't work with some people, than we can change it, I just thought that since they were close geographically and politically it made sense. --DarthEinstein 19:10, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * Excellent work, DarthEinstein!--BrianD 20:47, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I'd like to propose adding an eighth team, from Manchester, as an expansion team for 2010-11; I'd guess the CHL season has already started, and new teams almost never start play in a league during a season.--BrianD 21:39, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * That's okay; but I included Aroostook mainly because of its proximity and the annexationist movement. Vermont is trying to be more neutral, but as the author of that article, if you think that's okay, then it's fine with me.

--DarthEinstein 21:42, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * On second thought, leave Manchester out. The government wants to be neutral, and would probably put pressure on any prospective owner to stay out. That doesn't mean people there wouldn't want Vermont to join a pro sports league. But as that these pro sports leagues are just now starting to reemerge, Vermont can consider an issue it couldn't have even just a few years ago. I do need to look at how Switzerland sports handles athletics, though, in regards to club competition against teams from other countries.--BrianD 21:48, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I don't see a problem with Vermont having a team. The CFL has had several american teams over the years and the WHL was the WCHL until the 80s when it admitted an american team. If its a capitalist venture rather than a national institution then relations between countries shouldn't matter.--Oerwinde 00:32, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * Switzerland has its own sports leagues, but not because of its political neutrality, but because each European country has its own domestic leagues in a sport. Swiss clubs do compete in Europe's Champions League and UEFA Cup tournaments. Vermont's government would strongly discourage competition in the Canadian League, though, because of the situation between Canada and Saguenay. It's one thing for a Vermont national team to play against Canada, but another thing for a Vermont team to play in a Canadian league (if that makes sense). Vermont would be happier to see a professional league tied not to a specific country, but to the region, with teams from all four of the local countries involved. The Manchester owners would love to play in the Canadian Hockey League, but would also be interested in playing in an Atlantic Hockey League if political and economic conditions allowed for such a league to emerge.--BrianD 01:16, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * Well, as in the case of the WHL, perhaps the CHL could evolve into a regional league.--Oerwinde 01:30, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * The precedent is there, and like owners in our world, if the owners in their world saw more $$$ to be made, I'm sure they'd consider it :) Also, I'm certain Saguenay would love to have a shot at beating some of those Canadian teams!--BrianD 01:53, October 19, 2009 (UTC)
 * Well, we all know the 35th Rule of Aquisition: Peace is good for business. (It's Star Trek, for those of you who are unenlightened). I think Vermont, and especially Saguenay and Superior, would wait until the war is over until they joined any athletics competitions. Also Saguenay would have to be recognised (which I think is how the war will turn out) in order for them to participate. --DarthEinstein 02:00, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

Added Sports (1983: Doomsday) as a proposal.--BrianD 20:47, October 18, 2009 (UTC) Saw where Sports by country got deleted. That's fine with me; if something doesn't work and it can't be revised, best to delete it altogether. --BrianD 21:28, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * I only deleted Sports by country, not Sports by country (1983: Doomsday). Mitro 21:30, October 18, 2009 (UTC)
 * Oops. My apologies for the misunderstanding.--BrianD 21:32, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

I've added the International Olympic Committee (1983: Doomsday) as a proposal. The IOC should be getting back on its feet and gearing up toward resuming the Olympic games by now.--BrianD 01:50, October 19, 2009 (UTC)

I created a proposal for FIFA (1983: Doomsday), adding in details for the brief portion of information previously given elsewhere in the 1983: Doomsday wiki.--BrianD 16:15, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

I would like your thoughts on the FIFA, IOC and sports by country articles, and what else may need to be done to get them ready for graduation. I believe FIFA and IOC to be ready now, but am especially interested in other's thoughts on the sports by country article.--BrianD 02:32, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * I support graduation for FIFA and the IOC. Unless anyone objects I will graduate those articles.  Mitro 16:49, October 23, 2009 (UTC)


 * I think they can be safely taken off the proposal list. Thanks, Brian!  Benkarnell 04:13, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

Soviet Siberian Republic and East Turkestan
I was thinking of adding East Turkestan as a Republic in he SSR,because of Soviet historical support of East Turkestan's independence,there was no direct hit on the Chinese province of Sinkiang and because of the need to survive in a post-nuclear war world. Also,i was thinking of adding an article on the Alaskan part of Siberia,as well as making a few changes in the Siberian article,adding history,etc. --Vladivostok 06:27, October 18, 2009 (UTC)

Greco-Sicillian War
With the war mentioned in the WCRB NewsHour, i though I'd start a page for it. Greco-Sicilian War‎ any ideas for the various battles, foreign reactions and other features of the war, please post here. (Is Greco right? or should i use a different word?)

--Das Taub 10:32, October 20, 2009 (UTC)

Actually, there's already a page for this. See Second Sicily War (1983: Doomsday). --DarthEinstein 00:34, October 21, 2009 (UTC)

I only have limited time to say this; but we really don't need two pages for the same war. I have no time to work on it, and I'm sorry.
 * Red vs. Blue, I'm so sorry I haven't responded to your nice comment. I tried two weeks ago but I had a spy-sweeper on my computer and I forgot I pressed "shutdown computer after sweep". Just as I was about to press send, the anti-virus finished, and well... I have a long, drawn out response about Greek culture in your world, and when I have time, I'd love to help!

Mr.Xeight 23:51, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * Wow didn't even realize there were two pages. Maybe we can combine them... Mitro 02:00, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

No point really, they just reiterate the same thing about that comment I put. Mr.Xeight 02:15, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

American Survival States
I have a question concerning development of a proposed story for an American survival state. Although my focus is primarily on the Middle East, I have also been working on a possible mini-state in my area of the former US. Having read a number of thoughts and concerns expressed about so many such nations popping up in this region of the world, should I outline my idea via this page under proposals and get feedback from the editors first or should I create a proposed article page and lay out my thoughts on the discussion page? I would like to get some guidance before I move forward on the idea. Thanks. --Fxgentleman 12:39, October 21, 2009 (UTC)
 * I would do exactly what I did with West Texas: create an article (make sure you put (1983: Doomsday) in the title, and put as the first line in the main text of the article), then list it on this page.--BrianD 22:55, October 21, 2009 (UTC)

Communications and mass media
I'm interested in how mass media and communications works in the 1983:DD world, so I've started a page for it. Your input and help is greatly appreciated. http://althistory.wikia.com/wiki/Communications_and_mass_media_%281983:_Doomsday%29 --BrianD 22:55, October 21, 2009 (UTC)
 * I've read what's there. My only problem is that the REM/Internet seems to spread a bit too quickly. I would think that, though the SAC and the ANZC would be able to use it, as would countries associated with them, elsewhere it would not be available. Many people likely would not have personal computers, and large scale computer production seems unlikely outside of the SAC and ANZC. --DarthEinstein 01:13, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * I revised it to (hopefully) a more realistic scale.--BrianD 01:55, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * So from what I gathered it is in place in the SAC, ANZC, Canada, Singapore, Mexico, and the Celtic Alliance. That sounds good to me. --DarthEinstein 02:15, October 22, 2009 (UTC)
 * Exactly. They're building an infrastructure to expand their version of the internet worldwide. The only limit is funding and public/private initiative.--BrianD 02:27, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

Commonwealth Special Air Service Regiment (CSASR)
If anyone has the time/knowhow, would they mind creating an article for the CSASR of the ANZC (it shold be CANZ, to be correct) the guy who did the Republican Guard article seems to have a knack for this. --HAD 13:01, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

that should start the ball rolling!--HAD 15:22, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

There is currently an objection to this article being a part of canon. Please see Talk:German South West Africa (1983: Doomsday). Mitro 14:52, October 22, 2009 (UTC)

AP/UPI
What might have come over on the AP teletype in the Midland Reporter Telegram's newsroom the night of Doomsday. http://althistory.wikia.com/wiki/Associated_Press_teletype_reports_%281983:_Doomsday%29 --BrianD 22:50, October 23, 2009 (UTC)

And, my take on the last known bulletin from United Press International (which was still a big deal back then), received in the Manchester, Vermont Union Leader newsroom. http://althistory.wikia.com/wiki/UPI_report_from_Chicago_%281983:_Doomsday%29 --BrianD 06:22, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

A South Asian nation in the Himalayas. Still in the conceptual stages. --DarthEinstein 02:57, October 24, 2009 (UTC)

Resettlement of Ogasawara
This hopefully answers the questions surrounding Hawaii's planned colony in the Bonin Islands. Inspired by Brian, I've gone with a different format for the page, an interview rather than an article. It aired on Alaska Broadcasting Company's public radio station last week. Benkarnell 16:43, October 26, 2009 (UTC)