- Location
- Sandford, Gloucestershire
- Pronouns
- She/They
Has anyone written about a mashup of what we would recognise as Technocracy developing in a surviving Imperial China?
Has anyone written about a mashup of what we would recognise as Technocracy developing in a surviving Imperial China?
no but that sounds like it would kick a reasonable amount of ass
1963-1964: Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative & Unionist)
1964-1970: Harold Wilson (Labour)
1964 (Majority) def. Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative & Unionist), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1966 (Majority) def. Edward Heath (Conservative & Unionist), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1970-1974: Edward Heath (Conservative & Unionist)
1970 (Majority) def. Harold Wilson (Labour), Eric Lubbock (Liberal), William Wolfe (SNP)
1974-1979: Harold Wilson (Labour)
Feb. 1974 (Minority) def. Edward Heath (Conservative & Unionist), Eric Lubbock (Liberal), William Wolfe (SNP), Harry West (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP)
Oct. 1974 (Majority) def. Edward Heath (Conservative & Unionist), Eric Lubbock (Liberal), William Wolfe (SNP), Harry West (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP)
1979-1990: Margaret Thatcher (Conservative & Unionist)
1979 (Majority) def. Harold Wilson (Labour), Eric Lubbock (Liberal), Harry West (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP), William Wolfe (SNP)
1983 (Majority) def. Harold Wilson (Labour), Richard Wainwright (Liberal), James Molyneaux (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP), Gordon Wilson (SNP)
1987 (Majority) def. Harold Wilson (Labour), Richard Wainwright (Liberal), James Molyneaux (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP), Gordon Wilson (SNP)
1990-1997: John Major (Conservative & Unionist)
1992 (Minority, with UUP confidence and supply) def. Harold Wilson (Labour), Christopher Brocklebank-Fowler (Liberal). James Molyneaux (UUP), Ian Paisley (DUP), Margaret Ewing (SNP)
1997-2003: Harold Wilson (Labour)
1997 (Majority) def. John Major (Conservative & Unionist), James Molyneaux (UUP), Christopher Brocklebank-Fowler (Liberal), Margaret Ewing (SNP), Ian Paisley (DUP)
2001 (Majority) def. Kenneth Clarke (Conservative & Unionist), Simon Hughes (Liberal), Martin Smyth (UUP), Margaret Ewing (SNP), Ian Paisley (DUP)
2003-2011: Barry Sheerman (Labour)
2003 (Majority) def. William Hague (Conservative & Unionist), Simon Hughes (Liberal), Margaret Ewing (SNP), Ian Paisley (DUP), Martin Smyth (UUP)
2007 (Majority) def. John Redwood (Conservative & Unionist), Simon Hughes (Liberal), Roseanna Cunningham (SNP), Ian Paisley (DUP), David McNarry (UUP)
2011-2020: John Redwood (Conservative & Unionist)
2011 (Majority) def. Barry Sheerman (Labour), Simon Hughes (Liberal), Roseanna Cunningham (SNP), Ian Paisley (DUP), David McNarry (UUP)
2016 (Majority) def. John McDonnell (Labour), Roseanna Cunningham (SNP), Simon Hughes (Liberal), Ian Paisley Jr. (DUP), David McNarry (UUP)
2020-2029: Charles Kennedy (Labour)
2020 (Coalition with the Liberal Democrats) def. John Redwood (Conservative & Unionist). Roseanna Cunningham (SNP), Tom Brake (Liberal), Ian Paisley Jr. (DUP), Robbie Butler (UUP)
Current situation: Charles Kennedy (Labour), Nicolas Clegg (Conservative & Unionist), Kate Forbes (SNP), Tom Brake (Liberal), Ian Paisley Jr. (DUP), Tina McKay (UUP)
A remake of my first list with an update on leaders in the current situation.
CTT likes making wilson pm at advanced ages lmaoWilson is PM at 87?
JUNE 1940: Shortly before the Democratic National Convention, President Franklin D. Roosevelt is injured falling down a flight of stairs. The incident spells doom for Roosevelt's bid for a third term, and the former president retreats to the world of writing before his death in 1952.
JULY 1940: Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy is nominated by the Democratic National Convention. With Roosevelt and Cordell Hull declining to run at the last minute, Kennedy's wealth afforded him an advantage over his unprepared rivals.
SEPTEMBER 1940: Presidential candidates Willkie and Kennedy face off in the nation's first presidential debate. While a majority believe the eloquent Willkie won, Kennedy's anti-interventionist message has motivated certain segments of the public.
NOVEMBER 1940: The race between Kennedy and Willkie remains too close to call, with Pennslyvania serving as the tipping point state. While Kennedy leads, a recount is declared. Protests break out in opposition, with revisionist historians claiming they were orchestrated by the Bufalino family. Eventually, Kennedy's victory is certified.
President-Elect Kennedy sparks tremendous controversy after claiming "Democracy is finished in England. It may be here." Pollster George Gallup quickly sees a wave of "buyers remorse" in light of Kennedy's comments.
NOVEMBER 1942: The Democratic Party suffers tremendous losses in the 1942 midterm elections. Nineteen days later, President Kennedy is assassinated by an anti-Catholic extremist. The subsequent US entry into World War II has sparked theories from revisionist historians (theories that resonated with war-weary members of the public).
AUGUST 1943: John Fitzgerald Kennedy, son of the former president, is court marshalled after several of his compatriots are killed in a Japanese attack.
SEPTEMBER 1957: Disgraced soldier John Fitzgerald Kennedy is found dead of a drug overdose. He is mourned by former First Lady Rose Kennedy and controversial attorney Bobby Kennedy.
---
1941 - 1942: Joseph Kennedy † (Democratic)
1940 (with Jesse H. Jones) def. Wendell Willkie (Republican)
1942 - 1945: Jesse H. Jones (Democratic)
1945 - 1945: Wendell Willkie † (Republican)
1944 (with Hanford MacNider) def. Jesse H. Jones (Democratic)
1945 - 1953: Hanford MacNider (Republican)
1948 (with Arthur Vandenberg) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic), A. Phillip Randolph (Socialist)
1953 - 1957: Brien McMahon (Democratic)
1952 (with Averell Harriman) def. Robert Taft (Republican)
1957 - 1959: Harold Stassen † (Republican)
1956 (with Allan Dulles) def. Henry J. Kaiser (Democratic), T. Coleman Andrews (Southern Democratic)
1959 - 1965: Allan Dulles (Republican)
1960 (with Goodwin Knight) def. Earl Warren (Liberal Republican), Happy Chandler (Southern Democratic)
1965 - 1968: Phillip Willkie † (Republican)
1964 (with James P. Mitchell) def. Happy Chandler (Independent Democratic), Elliott Roosevelt (Democratic)
1968 - 1969: Frederic Morrow (Republican)
1969 - 0000: Orval Faubus (Courage)
1968 (with Richard B. Kay) def. Frederic Morrow (Republican), Paul Robeson Jr. (Popular Front), Paul O'Dwyer (Democratic) [withdrew]
Causes of Death
Kennedy: Assassinated by anti-Catholic extremists
W. Willkie: Heart attack while meeting with Chinese diplomat Soong Mei-ling
Stassen: Drug overdose in a failed attempt to treat wartime injuries
P. Willkie: Committed suicide following Red Hot Summer riots
---
1924 - 1942: Joseph Stalin (Communist)
1942 - General Secretary Stalin makes peace offer to Hitler's Germany, accepting Brest-Litvosk borders
1942 - 1946: Vyacheslav Molotov / Lavrentiy Beria / Mikhail Kalinin (Communist)
1942 - General Secretary Stalin arrested, formation of troika, restoration of Nazi-Soviet conflict
1946 - 1947: Vyacheslav Molotov / Lavrentiy Beria / Andrei Zhdanov (Communist)
1947 - 1949: Andrei Zhdanov (Communist)
1947 - Defeat of Nazi Germany, pact signed with Anglo-American Alliance
1949 - 0000: Lavrentiy Beria (Communist)
1949 - Death of Zhdanov, arrest of Molotov over Zionist conspiracy, NKVD-led coup, end of Soviet-American warfare
---
1940 - 1942: Winston Churchill (Conservative leading War Coalition)
1940 - Resignation of Chamberlain following Norway Debate, formation of all-party war coalition
1942 - 1944: Stafford Cripps (Independent Labour leading War Coalition)
1942 - Resignation of Churchill following the Fall of Singapore and withdrawal of the Soviet Union
1944 - 1947: Leo Amery (Conservative leading War Coalition)
1944 - Resignation of Cripps following failed Allied invasion of France
1947 - 1950: John Anderson (Independent)
1947 (Anti-Socialist Union with Conservatives, Liberals & SDP) def. Stafford Cripps (Christian Democracy - Labour / Radical / Crippsite Conservative)
1950 - 1951: Ernest Bevin (Labour coalition with SDP & Miscellaneous Left)
1950 - End of Anti-Socialist Pact after the death of Stafford Cripps and bankruptcy of the United Kingdom
1951 - 1951: A.V. Alexander (Labour coalition with SDP & Miscellaneous Left)
1951 - 1954: Duff Cooper (Union)
1951 (Majority) def. Lord Beaverbrook (Albion), A.V. Alexander (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical), Herbert Morrison (SDP)
1954 - 1958: Oliver Stanley (Union)
1956 (Coalition) def. Lord Beaverbrook (Albion), Hugh Gaitskell (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical)
1958 - 1960: Selwyn Lloyd (Union coalition with Labour)
1960 - 1963: Alfred Robens (Albion)
1960 (Majority) def. Selwyn Lloyd (Union), Frank Soskice (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical)
1963 - 1968: Max Aitken (Albion)
1964 (Majority) def. Donald Johnson (Union), Megan Lloyd George (Progressive), Reg Birch (ILP-CPGB)
1968 - 0000: Geoffrey Rippon (Atlantic Conservative)
1968 (Majority) def. Edward Hulton (Progressive), Jack Powell ('Continuity' Albion), Reg Birch (ILP-CPGB)
---
Understanding the Brossolette-Era
Oscar "Red Haussmann" Niemeyer: from the ashes of Paris to a socialist playground
1940 - 1940: Philippe Pétain vs. Charles de Gaulle (Vichy France / Free France)
1940 - Fall of France, declaration of Free French government
1940 - 1946: Philippe Pétain vs. Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque (Vichy France / Free France)
1946 - 1947: Pierre Laval (Independent leading Coalition of Republican Liberty)
1947 - 1948: Émile Muselier (Miscellaneous left)
1947 (Triparty Alliance with PCF, SFIO & MRP) def. Pierre Laval (Republican Liberty), Charles Vallin (Republican Left)
1948 - 1949: Jacques Soustelle (Committee for Public Safety)
1948 - General strikes break out in opposition to the Continuation War
1949 - 1963: Pierre Brossolette (National Front)
1949 Constitutional Referendum - Yes (57%)
1949 def. Francisque Gay (Popular Republican), Henri d'Astier de la Vigerie (Republican Liberty)
1956 def. Henri de Kérillis (Republican Centre), Guy Petit (National Right)
1963 - 1965: Georges Guingouin (National Front)
1963 def. Antonine Pinay (Republican Centre - United Opposition)
1965 Impeachment Trial - Convicted
1965 - 1965: Eugène Tisserant (Popular Republican) [acting]
1965 - 0000: Louis Napoleon (Popular Appeal - United Opposition)
1965 def. Maurice Kriegel-Valrimont (National Front)
///
1928 - 1942: Chiang Kai-shek (Kuomintang)
1928 - Northern Expedition finalized, China united under Nationalist rule
1942 - 1949: H.H. Kung (Kuomintang)
1942 - Assassination of Generalissimo Chiang in Burma
1949 - 1964: Kung Te-cheng (Kuomintang)
1949 - Retirement of President Kung following passage of "Sagacious Constitution"
1964 - 0000: David Kung Ling-kan (Kuomintang)
1964 - Retirement of President Kung from political roles, continues spirtual offices
When u such a Stassen loyalist you become racistRICHARD KAY REFERENCE MY PROSTATE JUST CAVED IN
Hehehehe hehehehe.W. Willkie: Heart attack while meeting with Chinese diplomat Soong Mei-ling
Also this world seems like a good way for a Worldwide 68’.SEPTEMBER 1957: Disgraced soldier John Fitzgerald Kennedy is found dead of a drug overdose. He is mourned by former First Lady Rose Kennedy and controversial attorney Bobby Kennedy.
1949 - 0000: Lavrentiy Beria (Communist)
1949 - Death of Zhdanov, arrest of Molotov over Zionist conspiracy, NKVD-led coup, end of Soviet-American warfare
1950 - 1951: Ernest Bevin (Labour coalition with SDP & Miscellaneous Left)
1950 - End of Anti-Socialist Pact after the death of Stafford Cripps and bankruptcy of the United Kingdom
1951 - 1951: A.V. Alexander (Labour coalition with SDP & Miscellaneous Left)
1951 - 1954: Duff Cooper (Union)
1951 (Majority) def. Lord Beaverbrook (Albion), A.V. Alexander (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical), Herbert Morrison (SDP)
1954 - 1958: Oliver Stanley (Union)
1956 (Coalition) def. Lord Beaverbrook (Albion), Hugh Gaitskell (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical)
1958 - 1960: Selwyn Lloyd (Union coalition with Labour)
1960 - 1963: Alfred Robens (Albion)
1960 (Majority) def. Selwyn Lloyd (Union), Frank Soskice (Labour), Megan Lloyd George (Radical)
1963 - 1968: Max Aitken (Albion)
1964 (Majority) def. Donald Johnson (Union), Megan Lloyd George (Progressive), Reg Birch (ILP-CPGB)
1968 - 0000: Geoffrey Rippon (Atlantic Conservative)
1968 (Majority) def. Edward Hulton (Progressive), Jack Powell ('Continuity' Albion), Reg Birch (ILP-CPGB)
1969 - 0000: Orval Faubus (Courage)
1968 (with Richard B. Kay) def. Frederic Morrow (Republican), Paul Robeson Jr. (Popular Front), Paul O'Dwyer (Democratic) [withdrew
Having read about Frank Soskice, the large adult son of the Wilson Administration it seems in drove Labour off a cliff, whilst the Progressive’s and CPGB made hay out of it. Meanwhile the Conservative’s are probably due to a number supporting Cripps and others supporting the National Government leading to a bizarre split between the Old Tory’s and Skeltonite/Centre Right crew.WTF happened to Labour in the 1960s and the Conservatives in the 1950s
“become”When u such a Stassen loyalist you become racist
1974 impeachment vote[2]: Yes 220-No 215 (HR), Yes 42-No 57 (S)
[4] Overthrown in "Color Revolution" portion of the Second American Revolution