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/pol/ - Thread 515161851
Anonymous Australia No.515183216
>>515161851
I do shitcoin trading on tg, bought weed on Signal and flirted with big tiddied MILFs on kik.
/x/ - /ng/ - Nobody General
Anonymous No.41047346
1. Would This Strategy Work?
These 100,000 gangs share similar structures, business models, and a common identity, despite their nano-scale size (mostly 2-20 people), the cooperative strategy is likely emergent. Historical parallels suggest that homogeneity and shared cultural ties significantly boost the odds of successful alliances against external threats. For instance, during the 13th centry Japan v Mongolia shows fragmented samurai clans united under a shared code, repelling invaders with coordinated guerrilla tactics. Their similarities in warfare styles and hierarchies allowed quick alignment.
Distrust and inter-fighting would drop, enabling rapid information sharing and joint operations via digital networks. The small size adds agility. Risks remain, overall, the invasion into a unifying catalyst rather than a divider.

2. If Successful in Fending Off The NG, Would The Gangs Conglomeratize?
Yes, conglomeration is probable, likely evolving into federated networks or mergers. The shared structures and business models would facilitate integration, as compatibility reduces post-victory conflicts over how to organize.
E.G. Sengoku's warring states (thousands of small 10-100 clans) into the Tokugawa shogunate, and Italy's consortia after WWII threats.
If victory highlights inefficiencies in fragmentation, it could spark voluntary amalgamations into larger alliances, especially if leaders emerge.

>3. Would This Lead to Less Hostilities Initially and Over Time?
Absolutely, Initial hostilities would drop sharply due to the external focus, the shared identity and similarities reduce conflicts.
Long-term, the homogeneity may help embed unity, reducing rebound hostilities.
E.G.14th century Swiss v Habsburg invasions led to Switzerland's low-conflict federalism.
Intermingled businesses could turn former rivals into partners, with victory narratives reinforcing cooperation.
Economic dominance shows friction may still exist after, but overall decreased violence.