Quote:
Originally Posted by Trexller
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it does to a degree. there are issues with agriculture and minerals. but that isn't a deal breaker. it's more to the fact that they are already established "developed nations" and those entities aren't going to be likely to agree to be one nation, while everything is always up in the air in africa because no one can agree on permanent borders. being undeveloped without agreed upon borders leaves africa rife for unification. If someone could convince them to get out of their own way.
a south american super power would kinda be like asking all of europe to unite under a banner.
not impossible, but basically impossible
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivarianism
There's Pan-Arabism and Pan-Africanism too.
It's the time it is and it is now.