#1
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American Midwest Research
So I've finally managed to get my hands on a few of the modules, but what I've seen has all been focused on either Poland or the East Coast of the US.
I'm interested in trying to put together what occurred in the American Midwest (North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wisonsin, Michigan, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio). I've found information in the BYB (yes, I'm working off the v2.2 timeline) and the American Combat Vehicle Handbook, but was hoping for: Any additional canon sources that I might have overlooked and/or don't know about. Any analysis that's already been done, i.e. homebrew timelines that anyone has already worked out involving these areas. Any insight that anyone is willing to offer about the area, at least as far as rebuilding it in a post-nuclear world goes. I've lived my whole life in this area, so I'm already familiar with it IRL. Thanks in advance. |
#2
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Howling Wilderness can also be considered for 2.2, in fact virtually all the 1.0 books dovetail almost seamlessly into 2.x.
__________________
If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#3
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And Howling Wilderness is about the only game in town for that part of the country, if I remember right (though it's just an overview at the national level). The T2K detailed supplements pretty much don't touch that part of the country. Might be some stuff in Challenge that I'm forgetting or didn't see along the way. (Actually I think there is at least one that covers the Wright-Patterson AFB area, now that I think about it.)
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#4
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Quote:
-"Crazy Horse" (#73) is set in South Dakota. -"A little recon mission (#58) around WPAFB in Ohio -"Westward ho" (#57) shepherding civilians across Kentucky to Memphis -"Lima incident" (#56) northwest Ohio, around the Lima tank plant Off the top of my head, from Howling Wilderness: the region is a lighter-armed version of the rest of the country: no Mexican or other invaders, not much Milgov or Civgov to speak of, and only scattered New America. But lots of marauders and famine.
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My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
#5
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I would have thought that the region would be a hotbed, with constant skirmishing. After all, the Civgov capitol is in Omaha, Nebraska & the Milgov capitol is in Colorado, just west of there.
And considering how much of the Midwest was agricultural before the Twilight War began, I was thinking that it would be fairly easy to re-establish small farming villages (50-150 people, everyone shares one tractor, people work a half-day in the communal village fields & a half-day on their own land or projects... just a few ideas off the top of my head). |
#6
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That may well be the case but info is relatively scarce.
...and then comes along the drought to turn the region into a parched dust bowl...
__________________
If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#7
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Quote:
Anyway -- that's certainly not to say that the frontier between the two sides in the region is peacable and that patrols don't trade shots daily, just that neither side seems to be looking at going hammer and tongs at one another circa 2000. |
#8
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Its actually stated quite explicitly in Howling Wilderness that that is the case. I recall a passage where it describes ad hoc meetings between MilGov and CivGov patrols along their shared border in one of the Great Plains states, with soldiers stopping for a drink and a smoke and an exchange of news. Not officially sanctioned but clearly tolerated (and no doubt tacitly encouraged by higher commands if useful intel came out of such meetings).
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"It is better to be feared than loved" - Nicolo Machiavelli Last edited by Targan; 04-18-2011 at 08:44 PM. |
#9
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It also seems difficult to believe that patrols would be shooting at people who were fellow servicemen in the same force just a couple of years before without explicit orders.
There may well be bad blood, but that's more a political thing in my opinion and unlikely to spill over onto the ground. Mind you, emotions do run hot for some people regarding politics....
__________________
If it moves, shoot it, if not push it, if it still doesn't move, use explosives. Nothing happens in isolation - it's called "the butterfly effect" Mors ante pudorem |
#10
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Ok, at the unspoken recommendation of everyone involved, I got myself a copy of Howling Wilderness. I skimmed through, and will read it more thoroughly soon.
To shift the topic, does anyone have any insight to what would likely happen (or even just what could happen) throughout this region from 2000 onwards? |
#11
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Kind of depends on how you see the Great Plains being effected by the T2K Drought. If it's bad enough that agriculture fails, the area probably slides down from where it is at 2000, until there's not much left but isolated settlements along rivers or other reliable water sources. Given a generation of further downward fall, true nomads or something close would probably turn up, but in the years immediately after 2000 it's probably more isolated towns and fortified ranches on solid water supplies that depend on a mix of limited agriculture and heavy herding.
If that area pretty much goes under, then you've got assorted groups to the west (MilGov and New America north of them, with the Mormons in Utah going it alone again and Mexicans south of them) and maybe a concerntration of CivGov in the Wisconsin/Minnesota/Michigan area, above the MilGov hold on the Mississippi from southern Illinois down towards somewhere in the direction of New Orleans. |
#12
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Quote:
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#13
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And giving troops an order you know they'll just ignore anyway isn't overly good form, as leadership goes, though not all Civil War era leaders may have grasped that point . . .
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#14
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Quit picking on Joe Hooker!!!! He wasn't a bad corps commander, just wasn't cut out to command an army....
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The reason that the American Army does so well in wartime, is that war is chaos, and the American Army practices chaos on a daily basis. |
#15
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Especially not with a concussion. That'd screw up anyone's command status.
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My Twilight claim to fame: I ran "Allegheny Uprising" at Allegheny College, spring of 1988. |
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