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    I was in the Navy in the early 50"s and believe me the current crop of youth for the most part( not all) are much ( how shall I put it?) softer momma's boys -something along that line. It's not all their fault there upbringing is not rthe same as it was years ago.Even my upbringing was softer then my parents etc. Post depression changed everything. Most people think it was the Vietnam war (and that war had a large sonw balling effect) but it really started after the depression when people who lived through it said "My kids will have it better then we did".

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    • Alright....this convo has turned into a political rant.nothing more..

      Lets either close it or move it to off-topic
      Citizen of the Apolyton team in the ISDG
      Currently known as Senor Rubris in the PTW DG team

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      • Poll

        Yep -- It's about time I figured out how to set up a poll ...

        -Oz
        ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

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        • No French and Germans in the game please

          Salam Alaykum

          I am an Arab, as you can see from my name.

          No hard feelings, but I think the Germans and the French should be taken out of the game. You know "France and Germany are both in Europe and thats too crowded." Babylon may dissappear too.


          So what do you think of this? Nonsense? But why do some want the Arabs out?

          I want them all in (the French and Germans too) but if someone doenst want to play with them in the game, they shouldnt choose them as adversaries in the game!

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          • Re: Poll

            Originally posted by Ozymandias
            Yep -- It's about time I figured out how to set up a poll ...
            Here 'tis:



            -Oz
            ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

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            • Traelin

              Keep in mind the old saying: Believe nothing you read and only half of what you see".

              Also folks the only countries in the Mid East that are "Arab " are Saudi and the other sand dune countries in that area. Egypt-Jordan-Lebanon-Syria -Persia etc, are not Arabs.The Media are the people that give them this name,they lump all the countries except Israel as Arab and as usual the media is wrong and inaccurate. I am not an Arab by the way.

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              • Re: Traelin

                Originally posted by roalan
                Keep in mind the old saying: Believe nothing you read and only half of what you see".

                Also folks the only countries in the Mid East that are "Arab " are Saudi and the other sand dune countries in that area. Egypt-Jordan-Lebanon-Syria -Persia etc, are not Arabs.The Media are the people that give them this name,they lump all the countries except Israel as Arab and as usual the media is wrong and inaccurate. I am not an Arab by the way.
                It's a pity I couldn't insert the poll in this thread ...



                --Or, to partially quote:
                -------------

                "Arabs" is the term most commonly used to ethnically label non-Jewish Semites (who "originated" in the Arabian peninsula and spread far enough north along the eastern end of the Mediterranean to include the Akkadians - ca. 2750 BCE - and Amorites - ca. 1850 BCE - and Assyrians - ca. 825 BCE) AS WELL AS the Hamites, who include the Egyptians, Ku****es (the northern side of the Horn of Africa westward to the Nile) and the Berbers (from the Egyptians to the Atlantic).

                ------------
                --Of course, you're quite correct about the "Persians", who are ethnically "Iranian", a group which has encompassed Aryans (yep, you read that right, the folk actually migrating eastward into India), Mitanni, Medes, Sakas, and Scyths.

                Of course, as we're speaking of another people whose Civ-esque greatness seems little known, the Persian Empire (ca. 500 BCE) included Egypt, and stretched from the Balkans to the Indus.

                -Oz
                ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

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                • Arabs

                  That is what the media has fostered on the public when it lumps everything together. Arabs and Semites are not the same.Just because it is reported that way does not mean it is correct. It may be a common used term but again it is incorrect.

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                  • Re: Arabs

                    Originally posted by roalan
                    That is what the media has fostered on the public when it lumps everything together. Arabs and Semites are not the same.Just because it is reported that way does not mean it is correct. It may be a common used term but again it is incorrect.
                    Hmmmm ... You are, um, "technically", correct -- I never said that "Arabs" and "Semites" are the same, but, rather, that "Arabs" ethnically comprise both Semites and Hamites, and that "Biblical" (perhaps "pre-Diaspora" would be more correct ... ?) Jews are, likewise, ethnically Semites.

                    Of course, at some point, "Anti-Semitic" unarguably came to mean "anti-Jewish", but, again, ethnologically, my earlier points are quite correct.

                    ... Or is it really so amazing that people so closely related should -- in some cases -- hate one another so much?

                    Mercifully, where I live, the most avid debate over the kinship is whether the Israelis or Yemenis make the better falafel ...

                    Yet again not-so subtly signing off with two clearly related words --

                    Salaam, Shalom,

                    Oz
                    ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

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                    • Semites-Arabs

                      Question. What Arabs comprise semites? Jordanians are Semites.
                      And yes I can get over the fact that Israel Semites and other country Semites ie. Jordan and Egypt hate each other so much. I do not know why and have always wondered why? Also I do not understand why the Muslems hate the Jews so much when they have a common heritage in Abraham and Mosses. Both worked together in as little a 100 years ago. What happened to make them so bitter foes?

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                      • Re: Semites-Arabs

                        Originally posted by roalan
                        Question. What Arabs comprise semites? Jordanians are Semites.
                        And yes I can get over the fact that Israel Semites and other country Semites ie. Jordan and Egypt hate each other so much. I do not know why and have always wondered why? Also I do not understand why the Muslems hate the Jews so much when they have a common heritage in Abraham and Mosses. Both worked together in as little a 100 years ago. What happened to make them so bitter foes?
                        You are asking the most heart-wrenching of questions. How did Germany and Austria go to war in 1866? Why does "brother murder brother" in civil war? -- Because our beliefs overlay our kinship, and our madmen will always throw emotional gasoline on emotional flames for their own gains. And then there are the "real" disagreements based upon even "reasonable" people desiring radically different outcomes from the same set of events.

                        A hunted and haunted people return to an ancient, ancestral land and reclaim it, millenia after they have lost political control of it. Those who have lived there during those very same millenia object. Both sides become pawns in greater powers' hands. Kinship is forgotten, if ever it is remembered, and weapons are smuggled in, which the dominant power strenuously objects to, choosing to forget that their own predecessors also engaged in shameful acts of terror which also killed innocent civilians (e.g., the bombing of the King David Hotel, then run by the British in British Palestine). Wells are poisoned, literally and metaphorically. Innocents die and die and die, and those who would impose their will, without pity, send them to their graves -- on every side! -- with a righteousness to shame any claim of morality, let alone moral superiority.

                        -- Or, as T.S.Eliot so succinctly put it --
                        "May the judgment not be too heavy upon us."

                        -Ozymandias
                        ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

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                        • pawns

                          Pawns is correct. The Arabs use the Palentines as pawns they really do not care or like them. Jordan and Syria smashed them in war when they felt threatened by them. But I fell it goes back further then 1948 .something started it and it came long after the exodus. Wish I knew.

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                          • Wow, I haven't read this thread in a while, but something told me there would be some political commentary on it, I just wasn't sure how much.

                            Of course everyone has thier opinion on the unrest in the Middle East, and it's effects on the rest of the world. Probably the last thing you need is another one, but I'm just to vain not to, so here goes!!!

                            First of all, the current Administration of the United States has been using circular logic to justify this war the entire time. Now this doesn't mean it shouldn't happen, but the American people should at least understand why we are going to war, and it should be a good reason. At the beginning it was because Saddam harbored and supported Al-Qaida, then it was because of Weapons of Mass Destruction (slightly more viable), but really it's just because he is a bad guy and impossible to work with in the International community and he controls a large quantity of a resource that it invaluable to the world economy for the next 20 or so years.

                            Before we go too much further into the WMD thing, remember that the chemical attacks we're talking about haven't happened (unless there's something I'm missing), since the Gulf War and since the 80s (against the Iranians) with weapons the we (the United States) provided him because at the time we were angry with the Iranians and Iraq happened to be fighting a very popular war against them. Many of the other middle eastern countries at the time "supported" that war by loaning Iraq and Saddam money to carry it out. Of course, as soon as the war was over, everyone hated Iraq again (maybe because Saddam is such a lovable character), and wanted thier money back. This is largely the cause for Iraqs recent economic woes.

                            So his stockpile of chemical and biological weapons is as a result of our interferance in the politics of the area at the time. Were we justified in helping Saddam in his war against Iraq? Perhaps, but remember what happened in Afghanastan not so very long ago. The very people that we armed to stop the Russian's invasion were the ones we had to fight to take over Afghanistan recently. Is it possible that the Russians were having the same problem we were at the time? Perhaps this is part of the reason we have a bad reputation as a nation amongst these people since we have used thier conflicts to further our own causes and then quickly backed out after our purposes were served?

                            Anyway, a popular theory amongst the hawks is that Iraq invaded Kuwait in the early 90s because they thought they would get paid to pull out of the area and that this would be a quick solution to thier financial problems. Of course no one but Saddam knows if this is even partially true, but certainly possible. He didn't expect the type of international responce he got, that's why his troops didn't really fight...it was a ploy, not a real invasion. Once the U.S. and the U.N. imposed sanctions after the war, that was just the excuse Saddam needed to blame the country's financial woes on the "evil" United States, exhonorating him of responsibility for his people's sufferings.

                            So should we go to war now? Well Iraq is not even as powerful as it was at the beginning of the Gulf War, he's probably not harboring as many terrorists as is Iran for instance, and he's not likely to use any weapon of mass destruction that could be directly tied to him, as he is certainly intelligent enough to know that this would end his reign, the only thing which this man cares about. So probably not, but if he does continue to ignore the international community, I guess he'll get what he deserves. In this economy and this global world, you can't get away with this type of behavior forever.

                            The Palestinians? Of course he doesn't really care about them, but Isreal is a local country representative of the U.S., and thus makes him sympathetic to thier cause, much as we had been to his when he was beating up our erstwhile enemy Iran.

                            People have been fighting over the Middle East for ideological reasons seemingly forever. Who thinks it's going to stop now, even if we come up with an amicable solution that makes both the Palestinians and the Isrealis happy? BTW, this started (at least in a modern way) with the Balfour resolution of the British government in 1917 (I believe). The resolution that started the whole Isreali state issue.

                            As to the game, it was noted that the elimination of the Arabs from the game wouldn't be any different than eliminating the French or the Germans from the game since Europe is crowded to. While I agree this very thread could be interpreted as somewhat racist, I think the topic here is being proposed as a gameplay issue. Clearly the french and the german people are a different culture. Can you say the same about the Ottomans, the Arabs, Persians, Babs, Egypt and the Carthaginians (I know, I know...northern Africa)? Besides, I wouldn't care nearly as much if they didn't disclude the Incas, the Mayans, the Sioux Indians or some other power from the early days of the American continents. When you play on a world map, BOTH Europe and the Middle East are brimming with Civs. Asia is too, but at least they have some space. North and South America? Three civs vs. 21!!!! So before anyone turns this into a race issue, let's take a step back and look at why this thread was created. P.S. - the Hebrew Civ apparently wasn't even considered.

                            Ok, I'm done for now...
                            Thanks for reading and bearing with me.
                            An assassinated leader, war in the Balkans, and the German Chancellor calling for a unified Europe...what's the worst thing that can happen? - Dennis Miller

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                            • Originally posted by Buster13
                              As to the game, it was noted that the elimination of the Arabs from the game wouldn't be any different than eliminating the French or the Germans from the game since Europe is crowded too ... I think the topic here is being proposed as a gameplay issue.
                              This is only true if you posit a game starting in 4000 BCE, using an obviously ahistoric group of Civs.

                              Given that PTW will allow turn lengths to be redefined to, IIRC, one year each, then games of equal length can start very much later, say somewhere between 800 and 1100 CE when Europe was indeed crowded with Civs -- many of which became extinct -- and there was still plenty of technology to discover.

                              As an aside, I find it ironic that the French and Germans have become the Euro poster-Civs for overcrowding, as "overcrowding" (anybody remember "Lebensraum"?) led to sporadic warfare between the two from their mutual fission from Charlemagne's empire in 887-8 until oh, say, 1945.

                              There are also historical theories aplenty (cf. "Guns, Germs, and Steel") that intense competition was what put Europe in the cockpit of the world to begin with. In Civ terms it means already established cities -- and improvements and wonders -- to conquer and technology to acquire.

                              In some cases, I would suggest that "crowding" is not only reasonable, but necessary to model historical forces -- which is different than suggesting that using every Civ in the box, at once, makes any sense (or fun!) at all.

                              -Oz

                              PS Sometime after PTW comes out, keep a lookout for my "1000 CE" mod ...

                              -O.
                              ... And on the pedestal these words appear: "My name is Ozymandias, king of kings: Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!" Nothing beside remains. Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, the lone and level sands stretch far away ...

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Ozymandias
                                As an aside, I find it ironic that the French and Germans have become the Euro poster-Civs for overcrowding, as "overcrowding" (anybody remember "Lebensraum"?) led to sporadic warfare between the two from their mutual fission from Charlemagne's empire in 887-8 until oh, say, 1945.
                                Come on, I don't know any two neighbouring countries in Europe that have always lived together in peace. There were wars between Russia and Poland, Spain and France, Poland and Germany, Italy and Albania, Germany and Austria... this list is endless.
                                Germany and France are just the best and most common examples for this history of wars...

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