*As the Syndies come from the north and the Unionist approach from the south we stand here and remember our and victory in 1865 and remember that we are the American people and we preserve our Union at all costs.*
I like to think this is the last artillery emplacement or machine gun nest, and the entire time theyre hearing about the losses and the retreat, theyre just humming along as they do their duty, occasionally broken up by 'Scratch one!' or 'Shot out!', and this goes on and on until theyre killed, or they run out of ammo and just start improvising. Because we all know they aint getting captured.
@@chadgaming8071 Yeah considering the French Commune is supporting them. Germany is supporting the Union. And Japan supports the Pacific States. And you basically start with -70% stability. Yeah this will be a tough battle if you aren't pro at the game
"WE GOT YOUR BACK DOUG!" **poster shows the various Loyal American states rolling up their sleeves and standing behind MacArthur as faces off against depictions of the AUS (a fat man with a businessman's suit and a klan hood and confederate flag hastily stuffed in the back pocket) and the CSA (a stereotypical Italian gangster, with 'the peoples literature' in one pocket and 'the peoples hard earned money' in the other) even from the back they are very clearly terrified**
@@ungusbungus2486 Ok then I go to the "Song of The United Front but you're in a Syndicalist Militia and its day 43 of the Siege of Chicago" Video where I belong
Fun fact about this version: It was specially orchestrated, like every historical song in the anime. For Girls und Panzer, specifically as the theme of the All-Stars University Team
@@a-cell4564 they didn't wear that kind of patch, but you can still see the same logic applied to the armbands worn for D-Day by the grunts landing on the beaches and the paratroopers landing before.
I've seen an AI-only 2nd ACW go on until 1943 once. Over 20 million casualties on all sides. Was kinda horrific to watch, and that was with me playing Japan and happily turning most of Asia and the Pacific into CPS members. Let's just say that when the syndies eventually won and then demanded Hawaii back from me in '45, it was kinda laughable.
the USA has fallen and is engulfed in a second civil war with the syndicilsits of the rustbelt known as the Combined Syndiclists States of America amd the Unionist rising in the south, with the Pacific states. new England and state of Hawaii breaking away becoming separate countries, though the Pacific states usually ends up fighting a war against syndiclst Mexico
@@Mr.Maverick.Hunter It's Authoritarian Democratic. Also the US gets way better Highways if you go Unionist and Racism is basically eradicated because you literally send the US army to kill all members of the KKK. That seems like a good deal.
@@jaredjosephsongheng372 it's Authoritarian Democratic initially but you can still get William Dudley Pelley in charge and that sure as hell does not kill all KKK member and enforces one hell of a lot of racism. You can also get the business plot, which is definitely Fascist in nature. Or as close to it as Kaiserreich gets.
Nothing, its about an alternate history universe known as Kaiserreich- long story short basically the US falls into a civil war in the 30s. Between the Federalists under the military junta of MacArthur- the legitimate government legally, the Syndicalists under Reed and the Combined Syndicates of America, the American Union State under Huey Long- basically fuckin proto fascist pieces of shit, and the Pacific States- I dont know why they exist but they do.
Let’s face it, folks. We can romanticize about the glory of the North during our Civil War all we want. But the Fed today is absolutely awful. And the State of our Union is in terrible shape. Them Yankee boys back then would most likely be ashamed and incredibly disappointed of how corrupt, and bitterly divided we are as Americans right now. They all wondered at some point, of what remained of the freedoms they fought to keep? I say, we need and should give them a good answer.
The state of the union isn't worse than during the Great Depression. As long as it doesn't reach that point, I don't think we are in "terrible shape." You have NO IDEA how much worse things could be.
@@binbows2258 And neither do you? 🙄 I only say that because at least people in the Depression era were traditional and had more of God in it, than today’s Godless, unholy society. We’re supposed to have Trust in God as Americans and we don’t! We’re in terrible shape! And it’ll only get worse, until Christ comes back. Edit: And then the Lord shall make all the world Eden again.
@@gluesniffingdude Could not be anymore wrong. First of all, there are no such thing as morals when it comes to secularism. Second, America is a pretty Bible-based nation than most Americans today either care to admit nor realize. There are references of God in the Declaration of Independence. So how about you actually know your history?
@@metalrocker627 I find your implication that any non-Christian individual or society is morally bankrupt to be ignorant at best and to be head-in-the-sand bigotry at worst. And the separation of church and state is codified within the Constitution. And don't even start about the "unity under God" bullshit either, because you Christians are all too happy to murder and attack Christians of other denominations and sects. As for this childish idea that today's society is somehow worse off than the America of yesteryear, you only need to look at what people used to justify with their faith in God to see that it's not true at all. The will of God was invoked to justify slavery and the systematic extermination of the Indians, after all. And if you actually read up on history, good sir, I think you'd realize that many of the problems you'd attribute to modern society are just as prevalent as they were a century ago, regardless of this decline of Christian faith that you say is the root of our "modern evils". You tell me to read up on history but based on what you say, I think you are the shortsighted one here, pal.