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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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Yonni (136 D(S))
29 Jun 12 UTC
Chatting during a pause.
There seems to be mixed sentiment about chatting during a pause. Personally, I appreciate the courtesy of not plotting my demise while I'm away. I've seen people hold to that principal on and off on the site. Wondering how the majority of ppl feel about it.
18 replies
Open
RSf (0 DX)
29 Jun 12 UTC
Password protected games
How do you get to play in password protected games .. or should one wait to be asked?
14 replies
Open
redhouse1938 (429 D)
29 Jun 12 UTC
So, I downloaded Henry Kissinger's "Diplomacy"
So far I've gotten to page 284. I'd say every diplomat on this site should read it!
3 replies
Open
Fortress Door (1837 D)
29 Jun 12 UTC
Classic Game -6
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=93183
5 replies
Open
RiverOtter (100 D)
29 Jun 12 UTC
Export Game in Judge or jDip Format
I am shocked this is not part of the interface. Please tell me I'm wrong, or I'll write a standalone tool to do it.
3 replies
Open
Sandgoose (0 DX)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Help - Dipn' Dots
hi...i haven't played a lot of games here but understand the fundamentals and basics. i noticed on the board that all the various colors remind me of a form of dipn'dots...is it possible to lick the screen and "taste the rainbow" so to speak...
4 replies
Open
RSf (0 DX)
29 Jun 12 UTC
Ratings
I'm relatively new to WebDip .. and am interested to know roughly how the ratings work and what influences your status. Is it primarily about proportion of wins? (But I have noticed people with no wins who have moved on from 'political puppet'.) Or is it more about the overall proportion of wins/draws/survived/defeats? Do the total number of points you have influence things? Does the quantity of games played matter?
10 replies
Open
Favio (385 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Aliens in the White House
Apparently 65% of americans say that Obama would handle an alien incursion better than Romney.....sure...he offers them Obamacare and they blow the planet up because they realize that it is ridiculous.
8 replies
Open
Tyran (914 D)
29 Jun 12 UTC
EOG Mutually assured destruction
Roflmao! The game was canceled in like 1908 or later! Don't leave up your cancel votes and leave it to the only guy losing to vote cancel lol
15 replies
Open
Sajtoskefley (111 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Help - Black dot
Hi all! I am new here, I didn't play too much games yet, but I understand the basics. There is one thing yet I do not understand: At some provinces there are a black dot with a circle around it. What does it mean?
22 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
25 Jun 12 UTC
Looking for a sitter...
...on vdip.
We're playing an interest bankroll variant (see: http://vdiplomacy.net/forum.php?threadID=29140&page-thread=1#threadPager) by signing up you'd be agreeing to follow the rules in the thread. I need someone to sit for ~10 days as i'm away with my scouts.
14 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2596 D(B))
28 Jun 12 UTC
Moving to Canada
See below.
28 replies
Open
Sun_Tzu (2116 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Problem in a world game.
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=89935#gamePanel.
I went to move fleet Quebec NC to New Foundland & fleet New Foundland to Quebec SC and It bounce! It should have went because two different coasts.
Thanks.
2 replies
Open
JRMA (0 DX)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Need World Diplomacy Players
Ten more players needed in "Against The World".
5 replies
Open
Putin33 (111 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Azzuri win!
Mario!!!
6 replies
Open
rokakoma (19138 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
2012 end of the world - EoG
15 replies
Open
Catan_banned (0 DX)
17 Jun 12 UTC
Debate?
Atheist here. Want to debate god's existence?
191 replies
Open
JRMA (0 DX)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Against The World
Come join Against The World; World diplomacy.
1 reply
Open
jmbostwick (2308 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Full-messaging PPSC game, need players!
24-hour phases, full messaging. We need a few players to join, since a couple friends dropped. Please be sure you're willing to commit to the whole game.
4 replies
Open
JRMA (0 DX)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Against The World
World Diplomacy, "Against The World". Come play!
0 replies
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Help - Grey dot
Hi all! I am new here, I didn't post to many threads here, but I understand the basics. There is one thing yet I do not understand: At some players there are a grey dot with a circle around it. What does it mean?
1 reply
Open
redhouse1938 (429 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
Help - Green dot
Hi all! I am new here, I didn't post to many threads here, but I understand the basics. There is one thing yet I do not understand: At some players there are a green dot with a circle around it. What does it mean?
9 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
28 Jun 12 UTC
Damn cool:
http://gizmodo.com/5921868/scientists-invent-particles-that-will-let-you-live-without-breathing
1 reply
Open
taos (281 D)
28 Jun 12 UTC
political puppet tournament
i want to organise a small tournament for political puppets only.
pasworded games,have to be a political puppet at the moment of registering,ppsc games sc's count.
who is in?
1 reply
Open
semck83 (229 D(B))
25 Jun 12 UTC
Supreme Court mostly overturns Arizona immigration law
The Supreme Court unanimously (8-0) upheld the part of the law requiring police to check the immigration documents of people they arrest/stop. It overturned the rest of the law -- 6-2 for the part of the law dealing with employment, and 5-3 for the rest.
101 replies
Open
SantaClausowitz (360 D)
26 Jun 12 UTC
A State government pays for this IN AMERICA.
http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/sideshow/loch-ness-monster-used-debunk-evolution-state-funded-190816504.html
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It sounds like a hoax, but it's apparently true: The Loch Ness Monster is on the science class syllabus for kids at Eternity Christian Academy in Westlake, Louisiana.

As reported by the Herald Scotland (which must track all Loch Ness-related news), a school that will receive tax-payer dollars, will teach kids that the mythological sea creature is real in order to debunk the theory of evolution. So pay attention: That will be on the test.

Eternity Christian Academy uses the fundamentalist A.C.E. Curriculum to teach students "to see life from God's point of view."

According to the Herald, one textbook, Biology 1099, reads, "Are dinosaurs alive today? Scientists are becoming more convinced of their existence. Have you heard of the 'Loch Ness Monster' in Scotland? 'Nessie' for short has been recorded on sonar from a small submarine, described by eyewitnesses, and photographed by others. Nessie appears to be a plesiosaur."

Starting in the fall, thousands of schoolchildren will receive publicly funded vouchers to attend private schools, some of which are religious. Religious schools in Louisiana will receive public funding as part of a push from Louisiana's governor, Bobby Jindal, to move millions of tax dollars to cover tuition for private schools, including small bible-based church schools. Money will fund schools that have "bible-based math books" and biology texts that refute evolution.

At Eternity Christian Academy, pastor-turned-principal Marie Carrier says that the her first through eighth-grade students learn at their own pace from Christian workbooks. The beginning science text explains "what God made" on each of the six days of creation. Evolution is not taught.

Carrier said, "We try to stay away from all those things that might confuse our children." She hopes to secure enrollment of 135 voucher students for the 2012-2013 school year. According to the website Salon, the school currently has just 38 students.

Whether this gambit will help move Louisiana from the bottom of math and science rankings in the country is unclear. A 2011 study of how well primary education prepares students for engineering careers had Louisiana third from the bottom, with only West Virginia and Mississippi performing worse.
This is our future!
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Now this is true irony. I've always viewed Nessie, if found real, as proof evolution does happen and that one small family of some ancient water-based dinosaur got trapped and has managed to continue throughout the eons.

Of course, the odds are Nessie doesn't exist. But if (s)he does, then (s)he was frozen during the ice age and, like Japanese Koi, was naturally resuscitated. Evolution at work allowing the creature to develop that ability and possibly even be asexual in reproduction or able to biologically pick the sex of its offspring such that it always has a mating pair when they reproduce (making two of them: Nessie and Nestor?)
I swear we're not all this bad
just most ;)
Celticfox (100 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Just the ones like this don't look very good on the community as a whole.
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Which community is that, CF?
Celticfox (100 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
The christian based faith teaching one? Ask PE he says they are not all that bad.
hes from Louisiana
PE and I are both from Louisiana. And if any of you are wondering why I've become an increasingly vocal and pissed-off atheist as of late, this is why.
largeham (149 D)
26 Jun 12 UTC
"Whether this gambit will help move Louisiana from the bottom of math and science rankings in the country is unclear." (from the article)

No, I think it's pretty clear what this will do.
Also, why are religious schools getting state funding (not that we can talk)?
because its louisiana
Prison capital of the world, too:

http://www.nola.com/prisons/

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nGw_vAnqPI
semck83 (229 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Because of school vouchers, largeham. According to the voucher system, parents get to choose where to send their kids, and since it's the parents directing the funds, not the government, it's constitutional (since it's not establishing a state religion).

Easy to focus on these crazy stories, of course, but it's not such a bad system.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Asexual reproduction, or parentogensis (sp?) is pretty cool, i believe it has been recorded in sharks - so if you isolate a female shark for long enough it will create a little clone of itself... Really useful if the male members of your species are on the other side of the globe.

(No comments about humans doing this; would only produce a female child in any case - no Y chromosone to use...)

Nessie is highly unlikely. I will remain skeptical until i see evidence, but some of the really cool things life has done are truely awesome... So i'm not against looking, we wouldn't have found life around deep sea volcanic vents unless someone went to look.

Teaching lies on the other hand is something i have a problem with.
dubmdell (556 D)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Yeah, PE and AWB, we aren't all that bad, and it is a strong deterrent against religion when they pull shit like this. "Bible-based math" textbooks. What the hell does that mean?! Are we going to show the kids how Matthew can't count?! Or are we going to teach the kids to also count incorrectly do that Matthew /appears/ to know how to count?
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
And he is correct. Not every Christian school is so anti-evolution. Some even believe evolution is God's way of shaping the world. Which, honestly, can't be disproven and doesn't conflict wirth science. Archeology looks for the who, when, and where. Science looks for the what and how. But the why is the realm of philosophy (which includes religious faith, be it Christian, Hindi, Muslim, Judaism, Buddhism, whatever).
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Agree completely, orathaic. It just strikes me as ironic how they want to use Nessie as anti-evolution evidence when, if she exists, she would be the most *pro* evolution evidence ever! Her species would have had to evolve somehow to survive the ice age *and* reproduce.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Yeah, i guess you can make that distinction - science asks how God created man kind, religion/philosophy asks why...

Of course science goes, can we replicate this effect? While philosophy ends up either with unanswerable questions or religious dogma which is unquestionable.. Seperate but unequal.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Sorry draug, you got me onto a different rant (feel free to ignore my ranting) i was going to suggest something about democracy working better when decisions are made on a local basis - if the local school board wants to approve, if the parents concerned want to pay their tax dollars towards it... If this is state level and lower then the people who have a problem with it will have an easier time convincing their local friends that it is a problem.

No need to make it a national issue, let the people of Louisianna decide and democracy will work out the rest!
JECE (1248 D)
26 Jun 12 UTC
SantaClausowitz: Ha ha, are you really surprised by this?
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
@ora - The people of Louisianna tend towards fundamental Christianity so they probably, as a collective, have little issue with this. And that is where the problem lies. It will never get changed if the locals all agree with it or even the people of the state. And the fed funding for schools is such a pittance (and most of them think the fed shouldn't be involved in education anyhow) that yanking it would mean nothing to them. Add to the situation that it is a private school and can teach whatever it wants provided it is willing to give up funding if forced, and this kind of "education" will just continue and the children of Louisianna will continue to lag behind.
"SantaClausowitz: Ha ha, are you really surprised by this? "

Sadly, no...
"No need to make it a national issue, let the people of Louisianna decide and democracy will work out the rest!"

But no. I, for instance, don't want my tax money going to fund this at all, and I do have Constitutional protections against this on a national level. So it's going to become a national issue if the legality of this provision is ever called into question.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Then make sure your tax money doesn't end up being spent on eeucation at a federal level...

And yes, if the people of Louisianna want to go ahead with their insanity they should feel free, it worked so well for Afghanistan.
Draugnar (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Depends on if that school receives national funding or not. Being a private Christian school, probably not.
semck83 (229 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
PE, this kind of thing has already been declared Constitutional by the Supreme Court. See Zelman v. Simmons-Harris, 536 US 639 (2002). Usually considered a major victory by libertarians, incidentally.
And that's why I can't take libertarians seriously.
semck83 (229 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Yeah? Really? This case was the reason? It's like, before this case, you had a lot of respect for libertarians, but then Zelman v. Simmons-Harris comes down, and you're like, "Yeah, uh, that's it for me, libertarians."

Is that about how it went down?
Whether it has been or not doesn't really affect whether it should be. State money being used to fund schools that border on being churches themselves seems so blatantly like a violation of separation of church and state.

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56 replies
Sargmacher (0 DX)
26 Jun 12 UTC
Baby Boxes
"Boxes where parents can leave an unwanted baby, common in medieval Europe, have been making a comeback over the last 10 years. Supporters say a heated box, monitored by nurses, is better for babies than abandonment on the street." Discuss.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18585020
25 replies
Open
2ndWhiteLine (2596 D(B))
26 Jun 12 UTC
Gunboat Isn't Real Diplomacy
21 replies
Open
Draugnar (0 DX)
22 Jun 12 UTC
So which of you fucktards wants to get your ass kicked first...
...in a World game with yours truly, the Draug! :-)

Seriously, I'm in the mood for a full press, non-anon, WTA world game of 24-48 hours. Anyone else who wants in, sign up by replying below!
148 replies
Open
joeschoen (0 DX)
19 Jun 12 UTC
Liberals vs Conservatives
i don't no which ideologies make more sense so start debating
85 replies
Open
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