Well, even the European powers of the day did not care much about these countries. The modern USA would be like a giang among insignificant ants.Chirios wrote:Actually no. There were several surviving African kingdoms at this point, some of which were at war with the Europeans. Wene wa Kongo, Mwene Mutapa, Lunda, Luba, Bachwezi etc. These kingdoms consisted largely of permanent farming settlements, and in the case of Mwene Mutapa, walled cities. There were concrete power systems that the USA could negotiate with.Mr Bean wrote: 3. Conquest!
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To put 3 in more prospective I'm guessing since your talking about pure nomadic tribes at this point we will give the tribes lavish gifts and buy everyone's friendship via small scale projects. People are still fighting over water rights at this point in history so something like a Seawater distillation plant will be worth a hundred times it's weight in gold.
But as already mentioned our contact must be strickly limited because we have modern day plagues to devastate them and they have ye-old fashion plagues to devastate us.
France was the most powerful country in the world in 1776, and France at the time was a country with 27 million inhabitants, it's largest city, Paris, had 550,000 inhabitants and 85% of the population lived in the countryside while 40% of the population wasn't able to purchase 2,500 calories of food daily. Only about 40% of the population was literate.
Compare the tax revenues (of the central government) in terms of silver among the great powers in 1775 AD:
Qing China - 1,229 tons
France - 1,612 tons
Spain - 618 tons
Netherlands - 350 tons
Ottoman empire - 263 tons
England - 1,370 tons
Russia - 492 tons
source: "Rock, Scissors, Paper." Working paper, Departament of Economic History at London School of Economics" (http://www2.lse.ac.uk/economicHistory/w ... /WP152.pdf)
Now compare with the tax revenues of the USA today converted to modern silver prices, at 2 trillion dollars the budget of the central government of the United States would be about 2,000,000 tons of silver or over 1,000 times the silver budget of France. The combined budgets of all major powers in 1775 would be around 10,000 tons of silver, or 0.5% of the American budget.