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A place to discuss topics/games with other webDiplomacy players.
Page 704 of 1419
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Rugrat (100 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
The game Hello my Brothers 3
It was clear from the first year that 3- 5 players were working together. That ruins the live games. Russia, England, and France made moves no one would make in a game with unknowns.
12 replies
Open
pastoralan (100 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
Pre-Pause for US Storm?
So pretty much the whole northern US is getting whacked by a storm, and I know I'm not the only person who might be without power for a good long time. Perhaps those of us in the path should vote pause, with the understanding that the other players should also pause if we vanish for a couple of days.
17 replies
Open
thedayofdays (95 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
Leisurely Playing the Game of Diplomacy
Perhaps it's just me, but do some people take this game way too seriously? Here I am, playing Diplomacy for fun, countlessly running into people, other players, that I can't help but to assume have a dictionary nearby whenever they play the game. Intimidation via vernacular, if you will. And to be honest, I find this concept incredibly humorous. Anybody else?
16 replies
Open
Ges (292 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
Pick up Italy in a locked 24 hr low-stakes WTA game?
gameID=46247

Italy is at 7 SCs but about to hit 5. The players in the game have been very dependable -- no other NMRs up to 1905. A good bet for a decent player who enjoys negotiation. The password is playfair.
0 replies
Open
samdaman02 (100 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
Cool!
Guys please join cool! the game..
0 replies
Open
rayNimagi (375 D)
31 Jan 11 UTC
Need 1 More Player for Newbie Game
See inside
11 replies
Open
IKE (3845 D)
31 Jan 11 UTC
Today is my web dip birthday
I just turned 2 and have not learned a damn thing yet. Maybe when I'm 3 I will know how to play this game:)
Happy birthday to anyone else who has the same web dip birthday.
14 replies
Open
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
01 Feb 11 UTC
This Time On Philosophy Weekly: "Will you be kind enough to justify your existence?"
The above quote is from my SECOND-favorite playwright of all-time (we ALL know who my favorite is) Mr. George Bernard Shaw, who was staunchly of the opinion that life SHOULD have a purpose, and that if it didn't...well, he didn't look kindly on that, but let's focus on the positive--IS there such a thing as "purpose/justifying your existence?" Is it granted naturally, or obtained? Can it be lost? WHAT IS IT? And if there IS no justification for existence...what THEN?
1 reply
Open
Baskineli (100 D(B))
30 Jan 11 UTC
Anonymous games are evil - discuss
I consider FTF Diplomacy to be the purest. When playing FTF, you often know who are the players you are playing against, you know their history and how they play. This allows a more intricate diplomacy. By playing anonymous games on WebDiplomacy, we ignore the most fundamental side of FTF Diplomacy - history.
63 replies
Open
Indybroughton (3407 D(G))
30 Jan 11 UTC
PPSC v WTA: A top 100 GR player fails to understand the controversy around 17 17 games
As so eloquently stated in a post yesterday, "PPSC is NOT a gentleman's game. PPSC isn't anything good."

Please elaborate. I promise a good faith attempt to try to understand why PPSC games are inherently evil.
100 replies
Open
Alderian (2425 D(S))
29 Jan 11 UTC
In memory of charlesf
charlesf appeared on the webdip scene on December 10th of 2010. He had one bad game experience so came to the forum to both talk about how this site could be better and to get a better quality game going.

He was last seen on January 10th of 2011 when he had the audacity to leave his country in Civil Disorder in that game.
22 replies
Open
dgtroop53no (0 DX)
31 Jan 11 UTC
last person to post wins
999999
0 replies
Open
Hermes (100 D)
31 Jan 11 UTC
1 slot left!
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=48732
0 replies
Open
Hermes (100 D)
31 Jan 11 UTC
New Live Game starts at 9pm GMT
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=48721
0 replies
Open
centurion1 (1478 D)
30 Jan 11 UTC
how to lose a game.
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=48551

sweet mother of jesus your name suits you quite well.
40 replies
Open
djbent (2572 D(S))
31 Jan 11 UTC
live game today (mon jan 31) at 10am eastern?
i know i should post this in the live games thread, but oh well.
i would like to play a quality live game today at about 10am eastern (4pm spanish time, in about 3 hours) -- classic, small pot, anonymous or not, full press. any takers?
13 replies
Open
Furball (237 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
Diplomacy: Best approach?
I'd just like to discuss about how to approach in compromise and resolve through diplomacy. I'd like to know your guys opinions about what you think is the best form of diplomacy.

I'd also like to ask your guys opinions about what basis you guys form when creating an alliance. As in, do you guys form rules to be kept when you guys make an alliance?
21 replies
Open
MadMarx (36299 D(G))
24 Jan 11 UTC
WACcon (Seattle) 2011
Dumbass of the Tournament Award: MadMarx
66 replies
Open
Serioussham (446 D)
27 Jan 11 UTC
One last game.
A dynamic game would be nice.
15 replies
Open
airborne (154 D)
31 Jan 11 UTC
My First Commentary
The quality should be better going to fix those issues soon I hope.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_OhOUiWeMQ
0 replies
Open
Troodonte (3379 D)
27 Jan 11 UTC
Another Big Pot Gunboat
Post your interest and conditions
It will be Anonymous and WTA. Buy-in > 200 D (to discuss).
36h (to discuss) with COMMITMENT TO FINALIZE (this is important!).
70 replies
Open
The Czech (40499 D(S))
30 Jan 11 UTC
Gunboats?
Anyone up for Live gunboats?
30 replies
Open
Tolstoy (1962 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
The Revolution WILL Be Televised
http://english.aljazeera.net/watch_now/
Darwyn (1601 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
And the dominoes begin to fall...

Change is coming...to a country near you!
Tolstoy (1962 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
From one of the comments at http://mondoweiss.net/2011/01/biden-see-no-good-hear-no-good-speak-no-good.html :

"That reminds me of an Egyptian joke I heard back in the Bush era:

Bush is getting worried that he might lose to Kerry in the Presidential elections, so he asks his ally Mubarak for help: “You seem to have a knack for getting re-elected every time, maybe you can help me out.” Mubarak says: “No problem, I’ll just send my team of specialists to show your guys how it’s done.” The team arrives, sits down with Bush’s team and give them a three-week course on properly doctoring an election, after which they go back to Egypt.

A few months later. The preliminary results of the US Presidential elections are appearing on the TV screens:

5.3% for Kerry.

9.7% for Bush.

and 85% for Mubarak."
Do you think this spirit will touch off something in Iran again?
alamothe (3367 D(B))
28 Jan 11 UTC
Maybe even Kyrgyzstan?
scagga (1810 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
Egypt is a different kettle of fish. If the expressed dissatisfaction leads to results it may have significant repercussions for many of the Arab states.

If the day comes that the Arab dictatorships become democracies, things might get very interesting.
Tolstoy (1962 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
http://www.lewrockwell.com/blog/lewrw/archives/76642.html

"We will not be silenced, whether you're a Christian, whether you're a Muslim, whether you're an atheist, you will demand your goddamn rights, and we will have our rights, one way or the other! We will never be silenced!"

Freeedooommm!!!!! All they're missing are the claymores and blue face paint. :-) Thank God for cell phone cameras and youtube. Governments can't hide anything anymore.
That is, unless they shut down the internet and all cell phones.....
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
ENJOLRAS
Do you hear the people sing?
Singing a song of angry men?
It is the music of a people
Who will not be slaves again!
When the beating of your heart
Echoes the beating of the drums
There is a life about to start
When tomorrow comes!

Will you join in our crusade?
Who will be strong and stand with me?
Beyond the barricade
Is there a world you long to see?
Then join in the fight
That will give you the right to be free!

DO YOU HEAR THE PEOPLE SING?
SINGING THE SONG OF ANGRY MEN,
IT IS THE MUSIC OF A PEOPLE
WHO WILL NOT BE SLAVES AGAIN!
WHEN THE BEATING OF YOUR HEART
ECHOES THE BEATING OF THE DRUMS

THERE IS A NIGHT ABOUT TO START WHEN TOMORROW COMES!!!!!!!
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
*life
obiwanobiwan (248 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThvBJMzmSZI
Invictus (240 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
While it would be great for these revolts to be the dawn of a new era of democracy in the Middle East, it's far too early to know whether a new and much worse regime will follow in Egypt and elsewhere (assuming the governments even fall). The Iranian people threw off the cartoonishly oppressive Shah, and what do they get in return? An authoritarian theocracy which imposes medieval religious law and scoffs at democracy.

I hope this is a transformative period like 1989 in Europe and all these Arab dictators make way for secular democracies. That would be amazing. But there's no guarantee at all that that is what's going to happen. If Mubarak and his regime go, will there still be peace between Egypt and Israel? You wouldn't even need a strict Islamic government there to destabilize the area, just a populist one which thinks rejecting the tons of American aid and embracing the more radical anti-Israeli positions is in its interest. Even without war, a more prickly Egypt will further complicate the already near dead Palestinian peace process. That's without even going into what could happen if Yemen goes, setting the stage for New Afghanistan on Saudi Arabia's border...

So stay hopeful that these movements truly are for freedom in the true sense of the word, and that these revolutions are not hijacked and used to impose a more entrenched dictatorship or a equally repressive theocratic government. It's far too soon to start quoting Les Miz.
Draugnar (0 DX)
29 Jan 11 UTC
Or we could quote A Tale of Two Cities - a now timely novel of another revolution in the early 19th century.
I agree with Invictus. We must watch this with a wary eye now that the Muslim Brotherhood has joined the protests. I wonder what Bask thinks about all this?
Thucydides (864 D(B))
29 Jan 11 UTC
Yeah, don't count on it.

I think the most likely thing is the sort of democracy you see in the PLA and Iraq. Some secular parties, some not, none with a majority, and none with a dynamic leader.

Then they just squabble it out.

Like Turkey with its Islamists. In fact the only one of these democracies or wannabe democracies I can think of that doesn't have a sectarian thing going on is Tunisia - unless I'm not aware of it.

Egypt has Coptics, Palestine has Gazans, Turkey has Kurds, and Iraq has Sunni Shia. So yeah.

orathaic (1009 D(B))
29 Jan 11 UTC
"The Iranian people threw off the cartoonishly oppressive Shah, and what do they get in return?"

The Islamic theocracy was able to propel itself in the name of nationalism. Had it not been for the US propping up the Shah this nationalist cause would have been much harder to harness.

Egypt does not have the same US influence. And the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt does not have the same political influence.

"Then they just squabble it out." - compromise...

And Turkey has been Secular for decades, and ruled by the military. There is little difference in my mind between the Turkish Islamists and the American Christians in terms of either political ideology or morals.

America has blacks, hispanics, and asians... but maybe they all want to be there, while Kurd separatists want their own state (a Kurdistan which Iraq, Iran and Turkey all oppose) Is that the significant difference?
I'm taking a class on Turkey right now, and it isn't just the Kurds who are the Islamists, if I am getting what you are saying. Secularism was forced on that country my Mustafa Kemal during the Turkish revolution, but was only really able to penetrate in the urban areas. Now we have seen a mass migration of the rural, religious people to the cities over the past 50 years, and now they have gained significant power, to the extent that the religious-democratic AKP won the elections in 2002. Plus, with the whole situation with the Israeli attack on Gaza in 2008 and on the aid flotilla most recently, Turkey is now in more danger than ever of losing its status as a secular state
Darwyn (1601 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
It started in Iceland and spread to Greece and Tunisia. What we are seeing here will not going away. It will spread, for the good of freedom and to the detriment of tyrants everywhere.
Invictus (240 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
orathiac, your little blurb there has very little to do with my quote. Sure the Ayatollah was able to propel clerical government in the name of nationalism, but that just lead to a new oppressive state. I doubt the people went out to the streets in 1979 so that they could be governed by unelected religious leaders rather than an unelected secular one.

If anyhting Egypt has more US influence since the US has been shoveling them money since Sadat agreed for peace with Israel. Egypt is a "Major non-NATO ally", a level of strategic cooperation that includes the likes of Australia and Japan. Egypt has been a rock of stability due to that aid, and while in principle we must celebrate a possible democratic change for the Egyptian people, there is no doubt that this will destabilize the region in a way not seen for thirty years. Egypt without Mubarak would be even more trans-formative than Iraq without Saddam. As the saying goes with regards to Israel: no war without Egypt, no peace without Syria.

As for Turkish Islamists = American Christians, please keep in mind that while there are a lot of Christian crazies, they don't represent a wide swath of the voting population. No Christian with a snowball's chance in hell of being elected coroner would advocate putting Old Testament Law into practice here, while even "moderate" Islamists demand the law of the state should be based on sharia. This is because that allegedly God-made law is seen as incomprably superior to man-made law from legislatures (aka democracy). I'm no apologist for the loonies who want to recriminalize sodomy or any other sort of limits on personal freedom some fundamentalist Christians want to impose, but creating a moral equivalence between a movement which at best guilts people into feeling bad and another which wants to negate the Enlightenment is absurd.

As for Darwyn, Iceland, Greece, and Tunisia are all very different situations. Iceland made its government call early elections after banks collapsed and people lost money. Apart from a new Prime Minister and a half hearted push to join the EU not much is different. Greece has unrest due to its sovereign debt and the cuts it is being forced to make. They didn't even have an election yet, and at the bottom of it the protests are about civil servants wanting to keep on retiring at 40. Hardly an oppressive system there. Tunisian was a police state in every sense of the word and the people threw off a dictator due to a wrecked economy and lack of opportunities.

For a good look at possible consequences of this Second Arab Revolt (my term, hope someone important starts calling it that soon, it's catchy right?) read this

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/01/28/the_new_arab_world_order?page=full
fiedler (1293 D)
30 Jan 11 UTC
oh get a grip people! independant democracies are the last thing the powers-that-be want in the middle east. Aint gunna happen.

The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. - George Bernard Shaw
orathaic (1009 D(B))
30 Jan 11 UTC
@goldfinger - the Kurds were not a reference to the amount of religion in Turkey, check it, he said Sectarian, he's saying that as Iraq is divided between the Shia and Sunni, Palestine, Turkey and Egypt all have internal divisions. (i made my reference to blacks and hispanics in the US because the Kurds are a different ethnicity from turks)

@Invictus, in fairness i didn't compare US Christians to Afghan Islamists, the current ruling party in Turkey is a group of moderate Islamists and have not implemented Sharai law.

I don't know that they have even called for the implementation.

It seems a fair comparison when you admit that some US Christians call for a literal interpretation of the bible, and presumably application of the rules in leviticus as law. These are NOT a majority, but neither have the Islamists making calls for an implementation of Sharai law in Turkey become a big enough majority to do so.

@Fiedler, you are so cynical.

"The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who have not got it. - George Bernard Shaw "

Sure, your observation may be accurate 'independant democracies are the last thing the powers-that-be want in the middle east' HOW and EVER the cynical bit was your prediction 'Aint gunna happen'

Which isn't an observation by a long shot, unless you claim to be clairvoyant!
largeham (149 D)
30 Jan 11 UTC
I don't think myself a cynic, but I think fiedler is right. The Islamists have the money (Saudi Arabia, another US ally) and they will fund any Islamist uprising, especially as Egypt is generally seen as the 'moderate' country when dealing with Israel/Palestine.
Invictus (240 D)
30 Jan 11 UTC
That's still not fair, orathiac. The AKP, while certainly not the Taliban, is an Islamist party and that means basing the law on sharia rather than the democratic process of legislatures. Sharia to Muslims is the final, definitive law given be God, so an Islamist party worthy of the name would push for this supposedly inerrant set of rules to be the basis of the state, not a secular system as we understand it. Christians might make noise about putting the Ten Commandments in courthouses and affirming the US is a "Christian nation," but virtually no one would argue for the scuttling of all American law and legitimization of Congress in favor of Leviticus law. Even if these people did exist, they have literally zero influence on the political process.

These two movements come from radically different philosophical positions. To equate them misrepresents both.


22 replies
Kingdroid (219 D)
30 Jan 11 UTC
Maybe this should be deleted? lol
http://webdiplomacy.net/board.php?gameID=7239#gamePanel
8 replies
Open
basvanopheusden (2176 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
Why can’t I surrender?
My proposal: let players vote for resignation, and if everyone agrees, the game ends.
28 replies
Open
iMurk789 (100 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
CoHO
just wondering if anybody else on webdip enjoys the scrumptious online action of this game
10 replies
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gunboat in the ancient med!
join epicicity, the epic game of epicness!48548
0 replies
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gunboat in the ancient med!
join epicicity, the epic game of epicness!
0 replies
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idealist (680 D)
28 Jan 11 UTC
Resolved: Democracy flourishes through compromise
discuss
21 replies
Open
SkitchNM (100 D)
29 Jan 11 UTC
I think I've played way too much Diplomacy lately
Every time I watch the news, I can't help but think: Egypt has gone into CD!
12 replies
Open
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