Well I read the Soltzhenitsyn's the Red Wheel in translation, which has an interesting backstory about they got to that point, btw have you heard of Rex Carruthers, anywhere, I took a look at Bolano's voluminous magnus opus, 2066, it's a chore.
Demographics, (German and Irish) kept us neutral, Maybe had the Zimmerman telegraph, not transpired, although neutrality could not be maintained. without a further escalation, would the Arab Revolt have been crushed by the Ottomans, would Ibn Saud been the big winner from the whole brouhaha, in the Arabian peninsula, Grimswold posits an Ottoman empire lasting till present days, but that seems dubious
Ferguson's pity of war, really does suggest the First World's consequences were as noxious to the Winner, as it did the losing party, a whole generation of British, French young men, slaughtered between Ypres, and the Somme,
I was struck, when Yglesias had his own blog at the Atlantic, how unaware he was on such issues, of course, Asimov postulated his notion, before the advent of Multiverse theory, that I found out in a appendix to Crichton's Timescape, so one can never return to the universe, one came from, you end up in the alternate reality, Scott's show Sliders, really incorporated that paradigm
Well I read the Soltzhenitsyn's the Red Wheel in translation, which has an interesting backstory about they got to that point, btw have you heard of Rex Carruthers, anywhere, I took a look at Bolano's voluminous magnus opus, 2066, it's a chore.
Demographics, (German and Irish) kept us neutral, Maybe had the Zimmerman telegraph, not transpired, although neutrality could not be maintained. without a further escalation, would the Arab Revolt have been crushed by the Ottomans, would Ibn Saud been the big winner from the whole brouhaha, in the Arabian peninsula, Grimswold posits an Ottoman empire lasting till present days, but that seems dubious
And it will likely be again, sometimes around the 2020s, probably, probably we will have to lose a city, or something at that order of consequence,
Ferguson's pity of war, really does suggest the First World's consequences were as noxious to the Winner, as it did the losing party, a whole generation of British, French young men, slaughtered between Ypres, and the Somme,
I was struck, when Yglesias had his own blog at the Atlantic, how unaware he was on such issues, of course, Asimov postulated his notion, before the advent of Multiverse theory, that I found out in a appendix to Crichton's Timescape, so one can never return to the universe, one came from, you end up in the alternate reality, Scott's show Sliders, really incorporated that paradigm