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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
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bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
29 Aug 13 UTC
Anyone wanna play....
....the game. HAHAHA.

No seriously. If you wanna play a full press 3 day phase game 15 D bet please say so now pl0xxxxxxx.
1 reply
Open
orathaic (1009 D(B))
30 Aug 13 UTC
Wars per country, downward trend explained?
m.phys.org/news/2013-08-war-analysis.html

Interesting analysis.
0 replies
Open
shield (3929 D)
30 Aug 13 UTC
Failed Convoy Cuts Support, Yes?
Assuming fleet is not dislodged?
4 replies
Open
Heywoods (100 D)
30 Aug 13 UTC
Beautiful building oil paintings on sale here
The California Academia of the Fine Artistry, owner of two trademark oil paintings by United states realist Edward Hopper, plans to sell one and plow the predicted substantial continues into a finance mostly for getting modern art, authorities have declared.
-----------------
Most beautiful oil paintings here:http://www.oilpainting-shop.com/
0 replies
Open
Heywoods (100 D)
30 Aug 13 UTC
Cheap 365 days of happiness tree oil painting
A regional artist’s performs will be presented in an Emmy Award-winning TV display.The makers of “Homeland” have leased three oil paintings by Curt Servant, a full-time expert oil artist and proprietor of Servant Studio room in Gastonia.
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Cheap oil paintings here:http://www.oilpainting-shop.com/
0 replies
Open
steephie22 (182 D(S))
29 Aug 13 UTC
I think my sister is going to a concert of Selena Gomez soon...
That's what she told me anyway. But can that girl even sing any good? I never heard her sing anything good :P
8 replies
Open
jmo1121109 (3812 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
New Variant Gunboat Series Notice
Due to absurd abuse of the Wait for Orders (games sitting for weeks) mode I'll be turning that mode off in all of the games 24 hours from now.
14 replies
Open
T.W. Higginson (100 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
New Game: Kill Thy Neighbor, pw: history
Game is on the America map. We need a few more players. The game is set to anonymous. Join now, 5 more minutes to go!
1 reply
Open
Fasces349 (0 DX)
29 Aug 13 UTC
Is violence ever the solution?
Time to make an obi like post talking about morality, politics and war in general; and Syria in particular. See inside:
46 replies
Open
podium (498 D)
01 Aug 13 UTC
Web Dip Fantasy Football
Surprised to see that nobody who played last year hasn't posted anything yet.
I won't set up league but if someone who played last year wants to set it up again I'm in.
Also post here if interested.We had two leagues last year perhaps we can have more this year if there is interest.
82 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
27 Aug 13 UTC
Russia to US, West--"Catastrophic Consequences" Should the West Attempt to Intervene
http://news.yahoo.com/russia-warns-catastrophic-consequences-syria-hit-100720291.html In other news, water is still wet and the Mets still suck (why did you have to tear your shoulder ligament, Matt Harvey, why?) but setting aside US/Russia tensions are about as commonplace as anything these days...well, thoughts on the latest developments in Syria? Intervene, don't intervene...?
126 replies
Open
hecks (164 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
And the Beardy goes to...
The 2013 MLB Beard Awards. Discuss, enjoy. http://www.grantland.com/blog/the-triangle/post/_/id/72713/base-beards-the-2013-mlb-beard-awards?ex_cid=grantland33
5 replies
Open
redhouse1938 (429 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
In several hours from now
a hazy picture of a truck and a silo shall be presented to us and it shall be captioned "Image 327. Undisputable evidence that Syrian high command used chemical weapons on its civilians."
Such are the burdens..
0 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
28 Aug 13 UTC
Call Me a Dirty So-n-So III
Calling for obnoxious fellows that need a good verbal lashing for a Modern Diplomacy game.

Come on out you rat bastards...and you know who you are...
44 replies
Open
partytime (131 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
new to online diplomacy!
Can anybody tell me how to post me orders plz ?
2 replies
Open
SplitDiplomat (101466 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
A spot open for a replacement
gameID=122910, for brave ones seeking for a challenge,
original Italy has dissapeared.
2 replies
Open
NigeeBaby (100 D(G))
29 Aug 13 UTC
Rape justice in a Montana stylee !!
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23882735

Hardly too absurd to be believed ...... he is truly sad pathetic old man
1 reply
Open
hecks (164 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
Debt Ceiling
Hey, remember last year, when the whole US public had a knock-down, drag-out screaming match over the debt ceiling? Who's ready to do *that* again?! Just kill me now.
2 replies
Open
Tolstoy (1962 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
Does paying taxes to a government...
Make one morally culpable for that government's actions? Discuss.
Tolstoy (1962 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
Governments/terrorists oftentimes will justify attacks on/brutality against non-combatants by pointing out that they were financially supporting "the enemy" by paying taxes. See (just off the top of my head) the American Civil War, the 1998 bin Laden Fatwa justifying attacks on American civilians, "Sanctions" against and bombings of Iraq during the '90s/'00s, widespread bombing of cities during WWII, etc...
ILN (100 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+2)
Does giving money to a burglar threatening you with force make you morally culpable for his/her actions?
Randomizer (722 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
I knew someone who when his home was broken into and the police arrested the burglar he agreed to file charges and testify. The burglar and his family up until then had gotten every other victim to drop the charges. So the burglar sued the homeowner for restraint of trade as a way to force the homeowner to drop the charges. The judge threw the case out, but not until months later when the case finally went to trial.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
28 Aug 13 UTC
Yes and no.

Doesn't it depend on whether you support those actions? If you live in a democracy and disagree you can get involved and protest (like in Egypt) to change things; if you don't live in a democracy then do you have and choice/say in government actions?
Sylence (313 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
Thanks for this question, Tolstoy. It is very important to me. And you put it real well. I cannot resist make an entry.

I say: Yes. Essentially yes. "Culpable" is a bit too decided... Let's say "accountable"... or better still... I'd say something like "involved".
And to anyone convinced that he is fighting a fundamental (total) war there are no innocent victims among the human beings that make up the structure supporting the enemy's war effort. Bombing of German cities in WWII I think indeed should be a good example as can make "ordinary" western people of our time to understand the idea.
If they are determined that Nazism was evil and the war against it was one that had to be won at all costs, unless evil prevails on earth, they may appreciate the idea that German civilians are part of "strategical targets" - the structures whereon the Nazi war machine is fueled.

And I would not focus primarily on the paying of taxes. Modern life is institutionalized down to the bone. If you want to be socially, economically successful, or even respected, you are more or less reduced to be this through the behaviour that is institutionalized, best expressed by being successfully tested in school curriculums.
Thus submitting oneself to being defined by the institutions, identifying oneself with the agenda of the institution one is a complicit.
The paying of taxes is not where the "culpability" starts.

And "culpable " is a hard word. First of all, let's grant that a person may be positive to the direction the institutions lead the shape of our world so he complicits with joy and pride. Anyway we'll need to acknowledge there is no simple black-or-white, therefore I'd be careful to automatically go from "involved", "complicit" to "culpable" until we have decided and agreed that we are thinking of a structure, institutions that we condemn.

And when one is deeply enough involved so as to be called upon to pay taxes, how then evade it?
The human beings are responsible for the institutions they produce, but no individual can take a stand outside the institutions to budge them the least.
If you are "powerful" within a society such as ours, you are it *within* an institution, never in the sense of having power and winning over one.
You refuse to pay taxes? Ok, good luck... you lose...
Sylence (313 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
I want to repeat and sympathize with this testimony of ILN from another thread:

"I was saying that anyone willing to work should be able to. I'm also against mandatory schooling. Anything they teach in school is on the internet now anyways, so the argument that kids will grow up stupid is itself stupid, kids that want to learn will learn, with or without school, until recently school only provided kids with knowledge they couldn't get elsewhere. Only thing mandatory schooling does is make kids that want to learn have their class interrupted by some douchebag that thinks it's funny to make farting noises in class.
Having experienced public school unlike you I can tell you that I have learnt more from various Wikipedia articles than all my history and geography courses put together. Public education is a joke."

Ivan Illich was a thinker publishing books in the 1970s criticizing the institutionalization of life in industrial society.
He prophesied Internet in a way, as he called for using modern means of communication for free networks of people taking initiative and responsibility for their own learning, for their own interests, not for being tested, stamped and sorted by an institution providing "education".
Sylence (313 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
The horror of "child labour" I think has taken minds far astray. The concept conjures up images from the early industrialism of 12h or more of daily work in mines and then leads on to think of kids doing any work but school is unhealthy.
When kids feel not like a burden, creatures in need of a painful costly "education", but rather like participant, developing, learning, positive little companions in healthy unstrained work, both kids and parents shine with satisfaction.

But this never now happens in "rich" countries...
SYnapse (0 DX)
28 Aug 13 UTC
We are all implicitly consenting to the social contract under which we live, whether it is expressed in writing or not.

But our societies do have a plethora of means of legal protest, petitions, focus groups, pressure groups etc. You really have a civil obligation to take part in these activities.
Al Swearengen (0 DX)
28 Aug 13 UTC
I think that most people tend to overthink the whole tax thing. You're more or less stuck paying taxes.
If you're an economist, you're entitled to gripe over the size of your tax bill, but for the rest of us you're pretty much just better off writing the check and forgetting about it. It's not something to spend too much of your energy worrying about.
Tax problems are, at the end of the day, white people's problems.

You brought up the subject of terrorism, something regrettable that many government leaders indulge in. Where I think some cats go wrong is in understanding the proper way to combat this sort of violence and misbehavior.

The best way to confront these sorts of issues is to fully engage the system. Tax protesting is unfortunately yet another form of escapism. Rather than engaging and ultimately effecting positive change in an egregious system, tax protesting mostly serves to make you look like an eccentric.

To truly fight terrorism you want to truly engage a system - to get a PhD in something relevant to public policy, to get experience working inside of the government, to develop political connections, to engage nonprofit and NGO, to write and speak effectively, to become someone who's opinion the rich and powerful will respect. This is how you effect change.
Jamiet99uk (808 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+3)
You realise that if you abolished public education and expected kids to sit at home and learn from Wikipedia, thousands upon thousands of parents, who currently work while their kids are at school, would have to give up their jobs in order to look after their children?

I'm not making an argument for or against, at this stage, but have you thought about the impacts on people, and your economy, of this proposal?
Jamiet99uk (808 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
In response to the OP, I'd say, "sort of". I like the term Sylence used, actually - not "morally culpable" but "involved".

If you are a citizen of a state, and that state does something you consider morally wrong (such as, say, goes to war with another country without good justification) the question should be asked of you: "Well, you are a part of that state - what are you going to do to voice your opposition to the war?" So yes, as a citizen and a taxpayer, you're "involved" in the state's actions.
Gunfighter06 (224 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
I say no, for two reasons. First, I am compelled under threat of punishment to pay taxes. Second, my government doesn't listen to me or anyone else, so if I do raise an objection to a morally dubious action, it will fall on deaf ears.
Gunfighter06 (224 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
This is why the 16th Amendment should have never been ratified.
Maniac (189 D(B))
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
Yes I'm morally culpable.

I'm one of around 30m tax payers and about 5% of my taxes go on defence, so whilst I'm culpable the degree of culpability is quite small. As my taxes also go to the NHS (around 15%) my conscience is salved a little.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
@Gunfigther, if this is true: "if I do raise an objection to a morally dubious action, it will fall on deaf ears." - then you're not living in a democracy.

If the will of the people, from which your government claims to derive it's power, is ignored in favour of powerful moneyed interests, then you've got bigger problems than taxation.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
I don't think so, at least not in a meaningful way.

Morality is highly subjective, to begin with, as is intent...

And I'd argue that personal and public/state morality are separate, at least to an extent.

I'd argue that personal morality is based on intent (ie, if I mean to be kind in offering you a peanut butter and jelly sandwich not knowing that you're highly allergic, I'm at fault in a practical sense--and possibly you as well for not telling me or checking what you're eating before you chow down--but I'm not at fault in a moral sense, I didn't INTEND to cause you harm and in fact intended to help you, and there's no way I could have known that my action would cause you harm as I didn't know you were allergic.)

By contrast, the morality of a state is the sum total of the actions of its people...

Intent matters here, but since nearly every one of our 300 million US citizens have different intentions when they pay taxes or even when they vote for political candidates (20 Obama voters could have 20 different reasons for voting for him, ranging from a hatred of Romney and the opposition to true endorsement of Obama to a blanket endorsement of the Democrats to self-interest insofar as Obama might be friendlier towards certain social positions--ie, gay rights/marriage--than Romney, so if you're gay, and your choices are someone who's at the very least ambivalent and at best someone who's grown to endorse gay marriage on the one hand and a candidate whose Mormon beliefs--and in this case I feel it's fair to reference them, belief is private, but given how high-profile the Mormon stance on gay marriage is, I think that's a fair point --well...if gay marriage is a central issue for you, then you COULD vote for Obama just the same as a guy who might hate gays but endorse Obama's other policies) I think individual intent is muddled to the point where in most cases it becomes a non-factor in terms of counting individually--

Hence why it coalesces and counts in "group intents/morality."

This can be unifying (Latinos, female rights activists, Jews, blacks, and gays can conceivably all come from very different backgrounds, but broadly-shared collective intent has helped the Democratic party to build a powerhouse political base come election time) and it can be destructive (the intent of the Religious Right, Big Business and Libertarian sects of the Republican Party right now are all very much at odds, and that arguably caused them to lose the election as much as the New Democratic Coalition described above helped Obama win)...

That neither validates nor refutes the position, you can unify a bad platform or destroy a good one...

But it does mean that individual intent is given over to the whole.

As such, we all have different intents when we pay taxes.

Further, we have very little control over where that money goes.

You can be shoveling coal into the boiler to make a steam engine go, but you have no control over whether or not the captain suddenly decides to break out some hidden guns and raid another ship or kill his passengers for their money.

You could argue the ship would never be in position to fire on the other ship if the coal workers didn't power it, but as they didn't know what their raw efforts were going towards, individually they're not at fault, while collectively they are.

As such, you can't blame a small, nice, happy, tolerant German family for WWII...

That being said, they're collectively implicated when we blame "Germany" for certain actions in WWII.
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
I'd add this is yet another reason I think the people here who judge politicians on a moral standard which is skewered towards personal morality are naive and in error.

State morality requires a different outlook and mindset than personal morality.

For individuals, morality tends to be more intent-centric...

For states, I'd argue it's Greatest Good for the Greatest Possible Number.

Exploiting others and having "dirty hands" in your personal dealings can be immoral...

But it may be (and often is) necessary for politicians to have dirty hands and even harm others to help a greater number.

I'd argue that's PROBABLY the justification the Democrats have for Obamacare...

*HOWEVER*--

1. I do not know nearly enough about Obamacare to have a debate on this,
2. I don't really care to have a debate on this,
3. I don't deny you the right to say (and for all I know be correct) that this isn't the case,
4. This is not meant to start a healthcare debate that will span 300 posts, I'm just
5. Giving the POSSIBLE reason Obama, Hillary, Harry Reid and Co. might be endorsing this program.
ckroberts (3548 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
"For individuals, morality tends to be more intent-centric...

For states, I'd argue it's Greatest Good for the Greatest Possible Number."

obi, this kind of Machiavellian utilitarianism has been the argument for any number of crimes, massacres, and misdeeds over the course of human history. I mean, the government could introduce chattel slavery and doubtlessly save us from having to pay taxes (and arguably already is) -- would that be for the greater good?
orathaic (1009 D(B))
28 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
@Ckrobert, that seems to be a rather poor interpretation of Machiavelli. He was rather discussing practical leadership; the kind of thing that leads the US to spy on the rest of the world - because you do what you can to ensure you remain in power...

I don't remember him saying anything about the greater good of your people... (however you go about it)
Gunfighter06 (224 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
@ orathaic

"then you're not living in a democracy. If the will of the people, from which your government claims to derive it's power, is ignored in favour of powerful moneyed interests, then you've got bigger problems than taxation."

America is NOT a democracy, we're a constitutional republic. My state government is (somewhat coincidentally) doing a good job, so I'll accept moral responsibility for my state's actions. But that is neither here nor there. America *does* have bigger problems than just taxation. For starters, our federal government isn't even in the general vicinity of its constitutional mandate.
Starside (10 DX)
28 Aug 13 UTC
If I had a choice in paying taxes, yes, I would share in what the government does.

But since I pay taxes with a gun to my head, I am not responsible for what the government does.
ckroberts (3548 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
Orathaic, if it's easier you can just call it utilitarianism. But my understanding of Machiavelli's significance is that he calls for a good and effective ruler to do immoral or wicked things, based on the needs of the state. Preserving one's power, even immorally, is ultimately better than instability. This is why he praised the Borgias, who ruthlessly but effectively maintained the stability of the state. It's why he praises the miserly ruler who won't have to tax his people and ultimately lead to revolution.
orathaic (1009 D(B))
28 Aug 13 UTC
@'America is NOT a democracy, we're a constitutional republic.'

I'm so glad you're pedantic enough to bring this up.

Also NOT RELEVANT. Well done.

@CK, yes, i'm being almost as pedantic as Gunfigther, i just happen to like Machiavelli, i think he gets a terribly unfair treatment in common usage.

Gunfighter06 (224 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
@ orathaic

No disrespect intended. I agree with most of you said in response to my previous post. I completely agree with the assertion that the American government has not reflected the will of the American people for quite a while.

I just never miss an opportunity to point out that America is NOT a democracy. It's a pet peeve of mine when people refer to America as a democracy. Democracy is tantamount to mob rule. Constitutional republicanism is how America was originally intended to operate and is the best plan for the future. The sooner people realize that, the better off America will be.
Pete U (293 D)
28 Aug 13 UTC
I'd argue that it's not paying taxes that would give you (a very small) degree of culpability, but voting for the government that implements the policies
Gunfighter06 (224 D)
29 Aug 13 UTC
Well, my vote doesn't mean anything.


26 replies
Thucydides (864 D(B))
20 Aug 13 UTC
Ughhh give me advice
See inside
202 replies
Open
bo_sox48 (5202 DMod(G))
28 Aug 13 UTC
Fort Hood Shooter
Got the death penalty. Military peeps rejoice! ...... Of course there's still ten years of appeals to go.

http://news.yahoo.com/fort-hood-shooter-nidal-hasan-gets-death-penalty-192904908--abc-news-topstories.html
12 replies
Open
dirge (768 D(B))
22 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
I want to live as a woman named Chelsea
Bradley Manning
61 replies
Open
philcore (317 D(S))
20 Aug 13 UTC
(+7)
first time in london and i finally have wifi ...
So I decided to post here, rather than tell my family we arrived safely.
52 replies
Open
Emac (0 DX)
27 Aug 13 UTC
Criminally liable for not immunizing
There is a debate in the California legislature to make an individual criminally liable for knowingly exposing others to an infectious disease if the individual refused an immunization for that disease. A Canadian case where an idiot infected with measles walked into a hospital newborn nursery.
102 replies
Open
Njgerry (100 D)
27 Aug 13 UTC
What now?
What do you do if you believe that one person is playing two nations in one game?
3 replies
Open
SYnapse (0 DX)
28 Aug 13 UTC
Hungary Petition
http://act.watchdog.net/petitions/2675?n=34375532.d5ndx9

Please sign the petition for EU intervention in Hungary
0 replies
Open
Mapu (362 D)
27 Aug 13 UTC
(+1)
Invitation for PBEM games
This was posted on vdip and a friend of mine on there asked me to post it here.
9 replies
Open
LakersFan (899 D)
17 Aug 13 UTC
Around the World Gunboat 14 EoG
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=104131
2 replies
Open
SacredDigits (102 D)
27 Aug 13 UTC
Anyone want to take over an Egypt position?
It's not terribad.

http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=121610
6 replies
Open
krellin (80 DX)
03 Aug 13 UTC
(+10)
I am your Moral Guide
In a recent thread about *bad* behavior by Democrats, it was suggested that no goood Lib/Dem was outraged by the racist behavior because I posted the thread...in other words, you judge the word by the light of me. i.e., I am not your moral guide, apparently.

Please feel free to post your moral dilemmas here for my review, or PM me if they are too personal. I will be a kind and just judge.
81 replies
Open
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