shayvaan wrote:
Another big factor in the chaos in reconstruction America was the assasination of president Lincoln.
Lincoln wanted to put the country back together with the least amount of disruption in the South (I imagine that would have been AT LEAST as hard as fighting the war to begin with). After he was killed, that kinda went out the window.
I hope this doesn't mean that Stonhar was killed.
Irregardles, Siddarmark is in a bad place. The east has a lot of western province refugees who will want to go home, but the people already in those provinces have already tried to kill their neighbors once (and have probably ALREADY killed at least some of their families and friends).
At the very least you would have all kinds of civil unrest, much much worse than the post civil war South.
At worst you might end up with a complete disintigration of civil authority, at least in the western provinces. And if the western provinces has gone into terrorist mode, like Clyntahn's Rakurai it might possibly cause a complete balkanization of the nation.
Johnson wanted much the same thing as Lincoln. Congress, or at least the Radical Republicans...didn't, and that plus the election of '66 greatly contributed to his impeachment.
Stonhar, I think, would grasp the advantages of industrializing. Since it isn't happening, at least to the degree expected (I can't quite see Nynian, or whatever identity she's using this book, not doing
anything), I'm thinking a combination of factors is in play.
1) Entrenched 'corporate' self-interest from...pretty much anyone who'd stand to loose on industrialization (canal workers, various guilds, etc.)
2) Political operators worried about disruption of the existing election machine when industrialization brings wealth (and in turn a new voting block that forms out of those able to afford the franchize' property requirements)
3) Clean-up: dealing with displaced whoevers, competing property rights, justice vs vengence, etc.
4) Religious unrest. Less so than before, but the loyalists aren't exactly welcome, and while Siddarmark had a sizeable number of reformists they
weren't exactly embracing the Church of Charis either. Call it a three-way split with a 'native' church between the Temple and Charis
5) Economic turmoil. All that new farm land broken in the East, and now farmers wanting to get back to it in the south and west have glutted the market, depressed crop values, etc.
Toss in rehabilitation vs retribution on the part of the 'loyalist' provinces/population, and Stonhar, or whoever is in his seat, probably has a lot more than mere 'industrialization' on his plate.