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Spite

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Posts posted by Spite

  1. Good morning

     

    I've seen a few scattered examples of formulas through threads, however I'd like to put them all in one useful place (ie the wiki)

     

    I was wondering if people (and Sheep) could help me with this by posting what formulas they have for the war module?
     

    I'm interested in everything from ground battle mechanics, to air strike damage to infrastructure, to missile damage, to spy probabilities.

     

    Some of you have been playing a long time and can probably eyeball most of these, but as a member of an 80-strong new alliance we are very much stumbling blind here. It would help others who join the game after us if they had this information on hand in the wiki so they could make calculations without trawling through tonnes of threads.

     

    Thank you for your help

    • Upvote 1
  2. Good evening,

     

    A simple suggestion which has perhaps more to do with role play than strict mechanics- during history, when countries or cities have been under siege, this has created a rise in disease and lawlessness.

     

    Many great cities under embargo have seen crime rates rise as resources become scarce. In addition, being cut off with poor nutrition and damaged infrastructure leads to overwhelmed hospitals, cramped conditions and rising disease.

     

    I propose that if a country is attacked, embargoed or bombed it suffers a corresponding rise in disease and crime in its cities proportional to the damage. This would last until the war ends, or the damage done by the attack is repaired. This would reflect the real world loss of income that being under siege creates for a country. 

     

    Thanks for reading :)

  3. Using wikipedia as a source...

     

    China can't project power globally. It has one aircraft carrier. It has almost no global projection capacity. They have numbers but no logistical support.

     

    The fact many EU members are also members of NATO doesn't mean anything. It certainly doesn't make them more federal. You can't try to pretend Romania and the UK have joint foreign policy, or that Poland and Spain share military support, just because they happen to be in the same alliance bloc.

     

    China is touted as a potential superpower because people like to be sensationalist. Maybe one day it will be on a par with the USA. Right now it is not even remotely close.

  4. So you could buy lots of credits at once, then use them each month? Just thinking I will likely buy the max every month for the first few months until their value as a % of my income drops. Might as well save some dollars if buying bulk is cheaper.

  5. One of the challenges to legalization is the growing human trafficing issue.  Many men prefer girls to women, and will pay extra for it.  As long as that's true, prostitution carries with it the baggage of child-rape.  Even in a regulated world, there will be 15 year olds with fake ID's engaging in the practice, willingly or otherwise.

     

    So, I reject blanket statements of "legalize it, duh", or "it should always be illegal".  We need to address the issues our society has(and the world seems to have) with men banging little girls before or during a general process to legalize prostitution.

     

    Any attempt to divorce these issues seems contrary to reality.

    Human trafficking is an issue because prostitution is illegal. If the sex trade wasn't in the hands of criminals it wouldn't be such a problem. You'll find that the more draconian the sex laws are in a country, the more violence against women. I wouldn't use prostitutes myself, but I think the prostitutes themselves deserve legal protection, and they can only have that if the practice is decriminalised. 

  6. The EU isn't a federal state it's a loose economic union. Using the term "superpower" to describe something that:

    1. Isn't a country

    2. Has no army

    3. Has no unified economic policy (not all countries are eurozone)

    4. Has no single political/diplomatic representation

     

    just means you don't understand what "great power" means. It doesn't mean a strong country or organisation it is a specific term in international relations which has a specific set of criteria.

     

    "Superpower" other than being something the X-Men have is just a slang term coined to describe the USA and USSR as pre-eminent great powers. China is an emerging great power. It's not established by any means. It is fighting for the title of greatest economy now. In 1980 Chinese GDP was $200 billion. In 1999 when Hong Kong joined China, it represented a third of all Chinese GDP. One city. It's economic power is very new- so yes it is emerging.

     

    Militarily China cannot project power globally though it is acquiring that capability, and diplomatically it has weak influence compared to the USA or even the UK/France. It's a great power, not a superpower. And even then only just.

  7. It's always easier for ISIS. They don't care about maintaining infrastructure or protecting civilians, so they can use this to divide and weaken anyone attacking them by splitting their priorities.

     

    Assad is a first rate cretin, ISIS are worse. Rebels are disorganized and include everyone from secularists to tribal fanatics to religious minority groups. Situation won't be resolved until Western ground forces intervene.

    • Upvote 1
  8. What is a superpower?

     

    Superpower is a term used during the cold war to describe the emergence of the USA and USSR as the two foremost great powers. 

     

    What is a great power?

     

    A great power is a power which can project military strength globally, exerts global political hegemoney, is recognised as a great power by other great powers and is in the first rank of nations worldwide.

     

     

    This last part is what made the term superpower contentious in international relations (as opposed to colloquial usage). The great powers are widely recognised as being the permanent members of the UN security council - ie. USA, UK, France, China and Russia, with the possible inclusion of Japan and Germany who fulfill all the criteria of great powers except military strength.

     

     

    Now it's obvious that since the fall of the USSR (even before that arguably) the USA is by far the most powerful country in the world. Politically, economically and militarily it is the centre of the world. Now by the original definition of great powers, this means it is the only great power, since it is in a class of its own. 

     

     

    China is a powerful regional power with global economic clout. It has growing influence in Africa and the Middle-East and some legacy influence in parts of Latin America. However it is not politically on a par with the USA, not even on a par with smaller countries such as Germany and the UK. 

     

    Economically it is very strong, but that economy is based largely on it's industrial capacity. It's per-capita income is still very low and it's human development index barely rates it as an OECD nation never mind in the first rank globally.

     

    In terms of military power, the vast bulk of Chinese military expenditure is focused defensively. Despite being the second or third biggest spender on arms globally, it has a big catch up game to play with the USA and their Western allies. It's technology is lacking and it hasn't got the naval or air capacity to fight a war abroad. For example, China would logistically struggle to attack Iraq in the way the USA did, if it wanted to do such a thing. It lacks the ability to win an air war abroad, and is largely a local power.

     

     

    So no, China isn't a superpower. It's an emerging great power which may some day reach a position where it's per capita income, military strength and foreign influence ranks it at a par with the USA. But that isn't going to be for a long time yet.

     

     

    disclaimer: I'm not American

    • Upvote 4
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