Second American Civil War
The first American Civil War spanned from 1861 to 1865, after which the Union was restored. Rhetorical or hyperbolic references to a Second American Civil War have been made on a number of occasions throughout the history of the United States.
As the phrase Civil War, can refer to any war to separate one political body from another, a number of international scholars name the 1861-1865 war as the Second American Civil War, referring to the American War for Independence as the First American Civil War, separating the colonial states from Britain.
In popular culture
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- The Second Civil War, a 1997 made for TV movie.
- The movie Barb Wire, based upon the comic book of the same name, is set in 2017 during the "Second American Civil War," rather than World War II. Barb Wire (Pamela Anderson) owns the Hammerhead, a nightclub in Steel Harbor — "the last free city" in a United States ravaged by the civil war — and she brings in extra cash working as a mercenary and bounty hunter.
- Shattered Union, a 2005 PC game published by 2K Games. It depicts a civil war between six factions of the former United States and the European Union, following the destruction of Washington, D.C. in a nuclear attack.
- Season 2 of Jericho; a Second American Civil War begins between the United States and the separatist Allied States of America.[1]
- Power Games (Operation Enduring Unity Series). A military fiction novel written by Richard Peters depicting a modern US Civil War.[2]
- In the Family Guy episode "Back to the Pilot", Brian and Stewie go back in time and prevents 9/11, but this causes a paradox to occur in 2004, in which George W. Bush lost the Presidential election to John Kerry because he never had the encouragement to not let another 9/11 happen. Shortly afterwords, nine southern states of the U.S. secedes under Bush's influence as the "Second Confederation" and he declares a new American civil war on the rest of the U.S.
- In the PC games Hearts of Iron II and Darkest Hour: A Hearts of Iron Game, there is a mod named Kaiserreich: Legacy of the Weltkrieg, in which one component is that there is an event chain that involves the United States in a civil war with four or five revolutionary groups, of which two them are new form of governments; the South in the form of the far-right "American Union State" and the Rust Belt in the form of the far-left "Combined Syndicates of America" which want to destroy the government and replace their new government if they win civil war while California and the Pacific Northwest secede as the "Pacific States of America", Hawaii, and New England all secede over election results and other reasons as a result of the Central Powers winning World War 1.
- In the novel A Disturbance of Fate by Mitchell J. Freedman, Barry Sadler gets elected President of the United States in 1984 and causes a second civil war due to his conservative politics. After much destruction of the nation, Sadler is arrested and a new Constitution is put into place, which abolishes the office of the presidency
- The Northwest War in the video game series Deus Ex, where several states seceded from the US due to an unpopular gun control law and increasing dissent with the federal government. The main antagonists for the first act of the game, the National Secession Forces, are descended from the Northwest Secession Forces who fought the United States during the war, although the former is more kin to a left-wing populist movement not unlike the Occupy Wall Street movement, and the latter is more akin to a right-wing militia.
- The book Halo Evolutions calls the historical civil war the first American Civil War, hinting there was another conflict at some point in the series history.
- The Mass Effect series has this happening in the backstory, spawning from the creation of the United North American States.
References
- ↑ As stated at the end of the final episode, "Patriots and Tyrants".
- ↑ Richard Peters (2013). Power Games. Operation Enduring Unity. ASIN B00G2H6DL0.
See also
- Second American Revolution
- List of fictional states of the United States