Lurking wrote: ↑Sun Mar 06, 2022 5:20 am
Doozer wrote: ↑Sun Mar 06, 2022 5:07 am
Frankly, I see the United States going down the path of Rome in the next century or so.
I would see it more similar to what happened to England or France, USSR at worst.
There will likely be similarities to all of the above. Hopefully they can avoid getting some of Yugoslavia thrown into the mix, but I wouldn't bet on that. In terms of the Roman analogy, every empire in history rises, peaks and then declines until it no longer exists. But with the Roman empire, its fall marked the end of the entire civilisation it belonged to. Civilisations are wider than individual states and empires. What the Roman Empire belonged to was what we call Classical Civilisation, which had its beginnings as the Greek Dark Ages bottomed out around 750 BC after the fall of the Mycenaean Greek civilisation.
Likewise, the industrial civilisation that we live in today and has included empires as diverse as the British, the French, the Soviet Union and US hegemony began after the medieval Dark Ages bottomed out and gave way to the Renaissance. The wider civilisation we're part of now has included a great many states and empires. The fall of US hegemony, and the dissolution of the US itself, will just be one more imperial fall within industrial civilisation - just like the Soviet Union before it, and the various empires of Western Europe before that.
Like every other civilisation before it, our industrial civilisation will follow the same pattern of decline and fall (I would argue we're already well into the decline). I think that perhaps Chinese hegemony in the wake of US collapse may be the last great "empire" of industrial civilisation before whatever new Dark Age arrives, but it will be a very gradual fading out rather than waking up one day to find we're suddenly back to a world of feudal statelets. When the Roman Empire collapsed, its eastern half survived and kept many of the same political structures going for another millennium under the Byzantine Empire, even if it had a vastly reduced resource and technological base to work from. Perhaps something similar will happen with today's industrial civilisation. Even though the resources and technology we have today won't be there, maybe some of the political structures we have today will find some way to survive in some parts of the world for a long time to come - maybe including some attempts to recreate an American-style republic. Certainly, having been founded in the 18th Century, we know that can be done on a much lower budget than we've become accustomed to today.