Message from @Iron
Discord ID: 692347868845178890
If you have a bunch of Celtic towns, and you propose to have a singular government between these Celtic towns - by your logic that is globalism
Your vision of what is globalism inevitably leads to localism
Slavs are too varied.
You imply that has always been the case
And that it cant be fixed
Nationalists aren't more likely to give up to pan-slavic nation than they are to EU. You'd have to do something with them, and that's quite dangerous and delicate operation, prone to massive failures.
I despise globalism and would much prefer localism.
Localism never works
Fixed, that sounds like the Soviets with the New Soviet Man. That is exactly what they tried to do.
Works better than globalism.
Japan does well by it.
Did.
Does.
Great balance of nationalism and interface to communicate with external World.
Following this train of logic that iron proposes, Germany has no right to exist
Because it merged many different cultures, languages, and heritages
Germany pre-Otto was extremely varied
More so than Slavic nations now
It was not nearly as varied as north and south slavs
The Slavic Union i propose is for North Slavs
South Slavs are - jeez - its a whole thing
I rest my case.
North Slavs can be united much much much easier than South Slavs
Of course they can, they are similar as Germany and Austria.
That is not a slavic union.
That is a small group of countries.
That share locality.
The South Slavs, will, with time - be integrated into a Slavic Union
But we start with the Northern Slavs
They wont.
They are all the worst aspects of slac culture.
We could even open up to nations with lots of slavs for a process of slavification
Such as Molodova
Georgia
The languages map could be passable metric for determining how much the isolation caused by the recent slavic history impaired the potential unifications:
Ukraine doesn't seem right though, I though most of population knows Russian and uses it quite often.
It is perhaps gauging mother tounge
Gotta admin, Crimea is quite russian here.
What year