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The Salt March

Principled resistance as political strategy

India, 1930. Gandhi is about to walk 241 miles to break British law with a fistful of salt. You're in the inner circle, the march route is planned, and the empire is watching — trying to decide if this is protest or provocation.

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Part of this story

The Salt March

India, 1930. Gandhi has announced a 241-mile march to the sea to make salt illegally and break British law. You are part of the inner circle. The British administration is watching. The question is not whether to march — it is how to make the march impossible to ignore.

Part of the quest

Decisions That Shaped the World

Five moments that changed history. The Cuban Missile Crisis, Gandhi's Salt March, the Berlin Airlift, Mandela's negotiation table, the Marshall Plan pitch. Each one was a decision made by a person under pressure. Practice the skills those decisions required.

What you'll learn from The Salt March

This scenario focuses on Principled resistance as political strategy — a critical skill inside the broader history domain. You'll face a decision where the instinctive response is often the wrong one. After you make your choice, you'll see exactly what happened in the other person's head and why it mattered. The scenario is part of The Salt March, a full interactive story inside the Decisions That Shaped the World quest.

Skills you'll build in Decisions That Shaped the World

Crisis JudgmentPrincipled ResistanceSustained ResolveAdversarial Trust-BuildingShared Purpose FramingStrategic Patience

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