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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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Pete U (293 D)
11 Jun 11 UTC
Anyone fancy a game?
Im fed up of CDs. So I want to play 2-3 day turn anon WTA with some people who arent going to bug out on me. Itll be low stake (20 or so), but Ill password protect it.

Let me know if you want to play, and if theres enough interest, Ill set it up
28 replies
Open
Withnail160 (1204 D)
20 Jun 11 UTC
Anyone around for a live game (5 mins)?
....just a 15 pointer?
14 replies
Open
London198 (0 DX)
20 Jun 11 UTC
Monday Night Gunboat WTA
Anyone who wants to play a live, classic gunboat with a 40 point bet, im setting up one that starts at 7:35 eastern time. ID is 62000
0 replies
Open
Sicarius (673 D)
09 Jun 11 UTC
GM franken-food
about as safe as a rabid Puma
22 replies
Open
Estonian (857 D)
20 Jun 11 UTC
NEW GAME! LIVE - 5min! Going to start now!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=61979
6 replies
Open
Rommeltastic (1111 D(B))
20 Jun 11 UTC
Return
Details inside.
4 replies
Open
zultar (4180 DMod(P))
20 Jun 11 UTC
Gunning for the Gunboat-3 Discussion
I don't think Turkey understands that this is a WTA game.
He gets nothing for letting Russia wins.
And I played poorly as Italy. I tried to stop the Jugger but France kept attacking me and not sending a fleet to safeguard the Ionian.
0 replies
Open
SpeakerToAliens (147 D(S))
19 Jun 11 UTC
BBC Kids TV show "Horrible Histories"
It's certainly one way of teaching history...
2 replies
Open
Sunday Night Diplomacy-3
gameID=61942
Anon, 5min phases
starts in 90min
3 replies
Open
Mujus (1495 D(B))
19 Jun 11 UTC
Global Warming (51246) has ended. Any discussion?
Well, I had fun. :-)
1 reply
Open
Carpysmind (1423 D)
19 Jun 11 UTC
Move Question
TUR: Fleets in Alb and Aeg ~ ITY: Fleets in Gre and Ion, army in Tun
If Gre>Aeg and Aeg sup Alb>Gre and Ion con Tun>Gre; what happens?
"bounce" all around or does TUR get Gre?
5 replies
Open
Leif_Syverson (271 D)
18 Jun 11 UTC
Westboro Baptist Church to picket my church this Sunday
http://blog.marshillchurch.org/2011/06/16/westboro-baptist-church-this-false-prophet-and-his-blind-lemmings-welcome-you-to-our-whore-house-for-god%e2%80%99s-grace-and-free-donuts/

Our response? Serve them donuts...
9 replies
Open
taos (281 D)
19 Jun 11 UTC
i cant conect to www.vdiplomacy.com
does anyone knows if there is something wrong with the site?
7 replies
Open
diplomancer83 (123 D)
18 Jun 11 UTC
Does Winner Takes All really mean Draw Takes a Third?
Seems to be that way to me. Any future plans on allowing a mode where no draws are allowed period?
11 replies
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
18 Jun 11 UTC
for your enjoyment...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-13823427
1 reply
Open
Quick Classic Game gameID=61878
need 2 more

Anon, 5min phases
3 replies
Open
Indybroughton (3407 D(G))
16 Jun 11 UTC
Why does it take an act of congress to get a
Cancel that - Congress acts more quickly :)


28 replies
Open
jasoncollins (186 D)
18 Jun 11 UTC
face to face in sydney
Hey all, last minute invite to join a f2f game in summerhill this arvo, 1pm? Email me if keen, we are 1 short lol

[email protected]
0 replies
Open
Puma (1231 D(S))
18 Jun 11 UTC
Why No in-game messaging?
Isn't the main purpose of "Diplomacy" communications? Why are there lots of games that specify No in-game messaging? Just curious. Unless the game is anonymous, I would be worried about lots of private communications.
5 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
16 Jun 11 UTC
The NHL Season Ends: Boston Gets the Cup, But Vancouver Gets the Riots!
http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/blog/puck_daddy/post/Boston-Bruins-dominate-Game-7-win-1st-Stanley-C?urn=nhl-wp7298
A terrific end to Tim Thomas and the Boston's terrific season...
http://sports.yahoo.com/nhl/blog/puck_daddy/post/Boston-Bruins-dominate-Game-7-win-1st-Stanley-C?urn=nhl-wp7298
Aaaaaand Vancouver isn't taking it too well...if I were Luongo, I'd look out! ;)
24 replies
Open
Invictus (240 D)
15 Jun 11 UTC
Puerto Rican Statehood
http://blogs.reuters.com/gregg-easterbrook/2011/06/14/why-puerto-rico-should-become-the-51st-state-it-would-be-good-for-business/

Leave aside the fact that at least 3/4 of the content of this article is either wrong or not even wrong. What do you think about adding another star?
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Thucydides (864 D(B))
16 Jun 11 UTC
aha no you see i am not *in favor* of continuing decentralization and independence, but i defend the right of people to achieve it.

thus if i was ever part of some kind of independence referendum i would most likely vote no on principle. i favor global integration with goal on a global federation
Putin33 (111 D)
16 Jun 11 UTC
Alright well that wasn't clear before. To me it's sort of like giving people the right to vote on/reject school budgets. Give them the right and of course they'll reject them. You still run into the problem of who gets the "right" to independence. Are there any criteria at all? It's unsettling even if it's not carried out. I think Canadians would agree vis-a-vis Quebec.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
16 Jun 11 UTC
@Putin, the fact that two states can come to blows doesn't mean the HAVE to stay together, nor does it mean they should

Sudan only became two states as a result of a carefully negotiated peace agreement. They were only trying to end the conflict. That there hasn't been peace in the past 6 years (since the agreement on holding an independence referendum) isn't because people tried to re-arrange their borders, it is because the state as a whole doesn't exist in the same way as other states. It exists as an entity imagined by only a few foreign diplomats...

you can't very well run a country when half the population thinks that you are a foreigner who has no right to impose law on you.
Putin33 (111 D)
16 Jun 11 UTC
It certainly wasn't imagined by the British and the Egyptians, who fostered this sense of separation prior to independence. The two sides were officially prohibited from interacting with each other, beginning in 1922 with the Passports and Permits Ordinance. Egypt fostered South Sudanese nationalism, in order to play the divide-and-rule game that the British loved to play, because they wanted Sudan to remain part of Egypt. The South Sudanese adopted English as their official language and were deliberately isolated from the outside world, which shows you how they fit into the whole program of discouraging the Sudanese national movement, which was influenced by the pan-Arabism of the anti-colonial period. They purged everything Arab - clothing, religion, language, commerce, from the South.

Like most "independence" movements, especially in the development world, this is yet another divide-and-rule ploy to seize the oil resources of the South (70% of Sudan's total, which doesn't include the disputed Kurdufan region where fighting has broken out after 5-6 years of peace) from Khartoum. Sudan had a working federal state for the past decade and now the end of the civil war has been replaced with new territorial disputes. Except the difference this time is that South Sudan can be legitimately armed as a sovereign state.

I can't think of a single partition where the result of partition was more peaceful than the period which preceded it. The only way partition can succeed is if there is large-scale ethnic cleansing of all other groups from the partitioned territories. In cases where a residual minority presence remains, there will be continued fighting. Indeed there is intensified risk of conflict because everything is now up for grabs. Once established boundaries are now unsettled and fought over by the new states.

Thucydides (864 D(B))
16 Jun 11 UTC
putin i agree that partition is usually a bad thing, but you have to respect the right of people to declare independence, even if they are subject to the influence of history. aren't we all? are you going to walk into south sudan, give them that lecture, and tell them they will still be under khartoum come july 9? i don't think so.

so far s. sudan is admirably refusing to retaliate for attacks in the disputed region, last i heard anyway. i am cautiously optimistic about this partition, in that it may not be as bloody as it could have been.

the criteria are a well established majority in favor of it, in a vote deemed fair. the sudan vote was fair, so there you go. on what basis can you tell a group of people they have to stay a part of a state if they want to leave?

again let me re-emphasize that i am not fan of secession. but if that's what the people in the area really want, something should be done to meet their demands. secession can often be avoided by autonomy grants, concessions, and so on. but sometimes that doesn't work, and people have a right to self-determination.

i can sense questions coming to me about the CSA. and to you i must truthfully say that although the civil war ended up working out for the best, if i had lived in that time period and not felt strongly about slavery (which as much as i'd like to believe i'd be a free radical like john brown, i probably would have not had an issue with), then i likely would have defended the south's right to secede, whether i was a northerner or a southerner.

that would be all other things being equal though. the slavery thing complicates it a bit. regardless, that was a long time ago and like someone else pointed out a lot has changed since the 19th century.
Thucydides (864 D(B))
16 Jun 11 UTC
and i think in most cases the people can usually be convinced that secession is a bad idea. because it usually objectively is. that's why scotland and quebec and so on can talk all day about seceding, but they won't. in a more volatile zone like sudan, it's harder to tell the people that they'll be better of with north sudan when they've been treated so poorly.
Putin33 (111 D)
16 Jun 11 UTC
"so far s. sudan is admirably refusing to retaliate for attacks in the disputed region, last i heard anyway"

Really?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110615/wl_afp/sudanunrestabyei_20110615180858
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2011-05/20/c_13885930.htm
http://allafrica.com/stories/201105220003.html

The South Sudanese army is also busy killing southern cattle-herding tribes.
http://www.seattlepi.com/news/article/Hundreds-of-civilian-casualties-in-S-Sudan-battle-1406737.php

"but you have to respect the right of people to declare independence"

No I don't. Especially not if that "right" comes at the expense of other peoples rights. Should a group be able to seize control of territory by declaring independence in an area which has historical and religious significance to a group of people which happens to be a minority? Especially when the majority which declares independence then proceeds to annihilate the historical treasures belonging to the unfortunate minority? Things aren't as clear-cut as you make them out to be.

"the criteria are a well established majority in favor of it"

What counts as "well-established"? What if an area has an exponential increase in a particular group, because they keep flooding into the area to create demographic facts on the ground.

" on what basis can you tell a group of people they have to stay a part of a state if they want to leave?"

On the basis that they do so without the consent of the rest of the country, or they do so without the consent of a large minority which has long-standing historical rights to be present in the territory, on the basis that it violates international laws which uphold territorial integrity of all states, and on the basis that independence presents an existential threat to the geographic unity of the country. For example, India didn't allow Hyderabad to become independent, because it was in the heart of India and made no sense geographically. But Hyderabad did the exact same thing the Kashmir prince did, except it was a Muslim prince and a Hindu population and not vice versa.



mscott (384 D(G))
18 Jun 11 UTC
@Putin

Your attack on South Sudanese independence is curious. By all accounts I have read, both parties (north and south) have made a concerted effort to end a devastating and exhausting civil war by partitioning the country. It is true that there are still armed militia groups and trigger-happy soldiers fighting each other in periodic flare-ups of violence. However, given the behavior of the government in Khartoum towards the south during the course of the longest-running civil war in Africa, I would assume that it will take some time for both sides to renounce violence entirely. And I would like to remind you that in the vote for independence, it wasn't a close vote - 98.83% of the population voted for secession.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
18 Jun 11 UTC
"I can't think of a single partition where the result of partition was more peaceful than the period which preceded it. The only way partition can succeed is if there is large-scale ethnic cleansing of all other groups from the partitioned territories. In cases where a residual minority presence remains, there will be continued fighting. Indeed there is intensified risk of conflict because everything is now up for grabs. Once established boundaries are now unsettled and fought over by the new states. "

yeah, except the partition of the Ottoman empire, where Greeks and Turks partitioned a land which had been more or less unified for thousands of years. Instead of a any ethnic cleansing there was just some forced migration, marching turks from the new 'greek' lands and greeks out of the new turkic republic.

Sure all changes of territory are to be feared, because otherwise we might have more wars, but NOT changing the borders just because they were arbitrarily set down at some point simply allows us to freeze conflicts for decades or even centuries.

I'd take Ireland as a case in point, except being that 'Ireland' refers to an Island near that other island Britian, there has never been much of a territorial dispute, just a juris-diction and religion issue - which is more about sectarianism and self-determination (home rule, as the power-sharing agreement in northern ireland now proves as a concept) than about territory.

What i think we need to accept is that 'traditional' border are becoming less and less meaningful and useful for peace and stability. The geography of a region still has a massive economic effect, but the ability of our technology to surpass these limits and to bring people together is going to continue. I would advocate the end of the nation-state.

From charter Cities, to virtual republics, the idea that everyone believes a nation-state is the only, or even the best is an example of a belief in belief.

Yugoslavian communist party members didn't believe in communism or marx, they believed that everyone else believed their state was the only option they had. They didn't necessaries consider it an ideal, but it was a practical reality. And technology will continue to change practical reality.

To survive and prosper we need to be able to adapt, take advantage of the latest tools, and escape flawed traditional social structures which are too slow and unwieldy to function in the 21st century.

see: http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/paul_romer_the_world_s_first_charter_city.html

see: webdiplomacy (this is not how boardgames were once played, yet it is successfully promoting the hobby on a global scale)

Borders are a thing of the past, there's a really good talk about the lines connecting countries (rail/roads, network infrastructure, oil pipelines, inter-connected water and electrical supply) being more important than the lines dividing them (borders) and this will become increasingly true as our society continues to push forward.

I must admit your opinion irks me, though i must admit it is valid. I have failed to come up with a decent alternative (other than EU like supra-national entities, but the EU is a perfect example in my mind of the failings of democracy and bureaucracy... and i'm a Europhile) however it is reasonable to suggest that trade will continue to be the means to the end of war. Economic incentives such as packages to help build the communications or transport infrastructure (on condition that the fighting ends) might be useful tools in peace-keeping, especially if funding is dependant on the upholding of a cease-fire. But more importantly most wars are fought over economics.

When did germany finish the rail-line through the ottoman empire to buy oil directly from the arabs? What impact did it have on English purchasing power there, and the fuel required to power the biggest navy in the world? This must be considered a major part of the build up to world war 1.
Putin33 (111 D)
18 Jun 11 UTC
Borders aren't things of the past. The abstraction of the "global community" has no meaning for people's lives. The fallacy of free trade and free capital is being exposed before our very eyes. People are becoming increasingly insular and inward looking. Our world is moving towards what it was like in the 1920s - regional economic blocs and protectionism. Europe is preoccupied with Europe. Japan is preoccupied with Japan. The emerging countries are preoccupied with their own affairs. While the US doesn't have the resources to provide public goods and an international agenda anymore. We have a "global economy" with parochial actors. People want their own backyard taken care of. They don't give a flying fig about global problems.

I don't see what this issue has to do with the present discussion on independence and partition, I'd just add that the Greek/Turk thing is exactly what I'm talking about when I say ethnic cleansing. In areas where there is still a residual minority, like Cyprus, we have conflict. The Turks were successful at displacing the Greeks from their historical capital - Constantinople, and turning their holy sites into mosques or museums.


130 replies
Tyrrhenien (137 D)
18 Jun 11 UTC
Need a replacement for Turkey
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=61176
0 replies
Open
hotetatu (188 D)
17 Jun 11 UTC
join the 5 min game
We are looking for some players for a 5 min game, stated soon

http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=61733
1 reply
Open
Yonni (136 D(S))
21 Apr 11 UTC
Beginners guide to Gunboats?
So, I'm pretty intrigued by the idea of gunboats but I feel that there are a lot of nuances that are a little tough to pick up on the fly.
Anybody wanna give me a quick few points so I don't seem like an idiot on my first game?
180 replies
Open
Join Classic Diplomacy-9
12 hours per phase.
Starts tomorrow.
0 replies
Open
Serioussham (446 D)
14 Jun 11 UTC
Serioussham invitational, looking for 5.
WTA, 50 point buy in, anon, 2 day phases.
22 replies
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
13 Jun 11 UTC
Upcoming F2F Tournaments
For those who are interested, here is some info on up-coming F2F games in the New England area.
13 replies
Open
abgemacht (1076 D(G))
10 Jun 11 UTC
webDip F2F Boston LIVE FEED
LIVE updates will be provided throughout the day:
https://sites.google.com/site/bostonfacetofacefeed/
-and-
@BigAl11235
150 replies
Open
The Czech (40297 D(S))
16 Jun 11 UTC
Beginner's Gunboat - 2 Running Commentary
0 replies
Open
Troodonte (3379 D)
13 Jun 11 UTC
Gunboat Means Never Having to Say You're Sorry-8 is over!
gameID=57165
Finally this game is over.
Ipressed draw because I didn't think there was any way to get a better outcome than a 5 way draw.
55 replies
Open
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