According to the article "The World in Numbers: Murder by the State" in The Atlantic Monthly (Nov. 2003, pp. 56-57), killing off large segments of the population during or after a war is not unique to Civ3.* (In the game, it might well be a little extreme, depending on your play style). Per the article, government sponsored murder of civilians/noncombatants (democide) killed about 170 million in the period of 1900-1987, compared to combat deaths of "only" 34.4 million. Of course, "the most egregious form of state-sponsored murder--genocide-- has historically occurred for the practical reasons of empire: to eliminate threats or to acquire wealth and territory."
Sound familiar (commonly used to alleviate threats of culture flipping)?
Example "Lethal Proportions" (percentages of country's population murdered) illustrated in the article are:
Turkey (1909-1918): 9%
USSR (1929-1931): 7%
Nazi-occupied Europe (1935-1945): 6%
China (1959-1963): 2%
Cambodia (1975-1979): 31%!! (Pol Pot)
Iraq (1979-2003): 1%
Bosnia (1992-1995): 5%
Rwanda (1994): 14%
An interesting Civ-oriented article in an interesting issue, overall.
*There is no reference to Civ3 in the article. All parallels between Civ and the statements in the article are my own.
Sound familiar (commonly used to alleviate threats of culture flipping)?
Example "Lethal Proportions" (percentages of country's population murdered) illustrated in the article are:
Turkey (1909-1918): 9%
USSR (1929-1931): 7%
Nazi-occupied Europe (1935-1945): 6%
China (1959-1963): 2%
Cambodia (1975-1979): 31%!! (Pol Pot)
Iraq (1979-2003): 1%
Bosnia (1992-1995): 5%
Rwanda (1994): 14%
An interesting Civ-oriented article in an interesting issue, overall.
*There is no reference to Civ3 in the article. All parallels between Civ and the statements in the article are my own.
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