Alternate Timelines

Scenarios about 'student protests'

Student protests represent organized demonstrations, sit-ins, and collective actions by students advocating for political, social, or educational reforms. Historically significant examples include the 1968 global student movements, anti-war protests during Vietnam, and pro-democracy demonstrations like Tiananmen Square in 1989. In alternate history scenarios, student movements often serve as catalysts for divergent political developments, revolutionary changes, or as indicators of societal tensions under different governmental systems.

What If Paris's May 1968 Protests Succeeded?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the May 1968 protests in France toppled the de Gaulle government and established a new political order, dramatically reshaping European politics and global social movements.

What If The Kent State Shootings Never Happened?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the Ohio National Guard never fired on student protesters at Kent State University in 1970, potentially altering the course of the anti-war movement and American political history.

What If The Tiananmen Square Protests Succeeded?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests led to democratic reforms in China, fundamentally altering the trajectory of global politics, economics, and human rights in the 21st century.