bilby
Fair dinkum thinkum
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In another thread, Malintent raises the prospect of Manhattanites standing up against a federal military coup. Rather than derail that thread, I would like to discuss that question here, as it seems to be a common myth in the US that the people might need to do this - and that if they did, that they could win.
History suggests that this is not what happens. A military coup leading to martial law is not significantly resisted by the people - the vast majority of the population just knuckles under, and does as they are told. A sizeable minority will support the coup, and will say that martial law is necessary (albeit regrettable and temporary); and only a small number of people would actually try to resist.
But even if a large majority of the population were united in their desire to fight back, how effective would they be?
Combat hasn't been a pure numbers game since before the First World War. A million civilians, no matter how well armed, is not an army, and a small number of professional soldiers with tactical training, backed by a well defined chain of command, a properly organised logistics train, and commanded by generals with experience and training in the strategy and art of war, would annihilate any mass resistance.
An army isn't just a lot of people with guns any more.
And even an actual army, with a well established military and civilian leadership, at a time of much lower technology, couldn't beat the US Army in the 1860s.
A bunch of New Yorkers with nothing but a few handguns and a strong sense of entitlement, wouldn't last five minutes.
[...] If a federal militia were to come marching into my city, they would all be buried by the 2 million+ residents, patriotically defending the nation.
It will never come to that... the military wouldn't attack citizens due to the ethics instilled in them... and that other reason: we would fucking kill them all very easily. what is it? less than 1 million soldiers stationed domestically? If every single enlisted soldier marched up to Manhattan island, with no other help from outside the boroughs, the residents there alone would outnumber the entire population of all branches of the military, 2 to 1.
Unless, of course, the plan was to nuke every major city... I'm thinking more of a reaction to any attempt at military control of the populace.
History suggests that this is not what happens. A military coup leading to martial law is not significantly resisted by the people - the vast majority of the population just knuckles under, and does as they are told. A sizeable minority will support the coup, and will say that martial law is necessary (albeit regrettable and temporary); and only a small number of people would actually try to resist.
But even if a large majority of the population were united in their desire to fight back, how effective would they be?
Combat hasn't been a pure numbers game since before the First World War. A million civilians, no matter how well armed, is not an army, and a small number of professional soldiers with tactical training, backed by a well defined chain of command, a properly organised logistics train, and commanded by generals with experience and training in the strategy and art of war, would annihilate any mass resistance.
An army isn't just a lot of people with guns any more.
And even an actual army, with a well established military and civilian leadership, at a time of much lower technology, couldn't beat the US Army in the 1860s.
A bunch of New Yorkers with nothing but a few handguns and a strong sense of entitlement, wouldn't last five minutes.