全 18 件のコメント

[–]DsagjiiggsScjjigsjsb一柱亭亭獨立時/ 狂瀾怒觸未曾欹/ 誰言東魯斯文喪/贏得千秋永賴之 5ポイント6ポイント  (8子コメント)

I'm suffering from popcorn overload, please halp

[–]A_Crazy_CanadianEU4 is a Academic Source 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Try less salt and butter light. It reduces indigestion.

[–]pittfan46 0ポイント1ポイント  (3子コメント)

What drama now?

And I'm surprised Aragon lost so badly to Iberia. I would've just abandoned the balerics and corsica.

[–]DsagjiiggsScjjigsjsb一柱亭亭獨立時/ 狂瀾怒觸未曾欹/ 誰言東魯斯文喪/贏得千秋永賴之 2ポイント3ポイント  (2子コメント)

What drama now?

Everything Ellen Pao did this week, oh and this

I would've just abandoned the balerics and corsica.

Yes.

[–]pittfan46 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

I can't believe she resigned. I was kinda peeved.

[–]DirishDesigner of Alien-built Pyramids 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

The pitchfork crowd has a lot of inertia built up after going for Pao, but I feel that it's ever so slowly turning its wrath on Alexis. Now that they've tasted blood, gods know what will happen. It'll keep me mildly entertained while I'm craving for the next season of GoT.

[–]taylororo 0ポイント1ポイント  (2子コメント)

Yep. It's time to make /r/subredditdrama a default sub

[–]pittfan46 1ポイント2ポイント  (0子コメント)

Yep. It's time to make /r/subredditdrama a default sub

Pls no

[–]DirishDesigner of Alien-built Pyramids 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Poor mod team, please don't do that to them.

[–]taylororo 1ポイント2ポイント  (1子コメント)

Happy 2-year anniversary of Pacific Rim! Let's all talk about what you were doing the first time you watched Pacific Rim. I'll start.

Fistpumps.

[–]Gunlord500 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Going to a nearby mall with my dad to watch it. :o

[–]pittfan46 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Hey guys!

I went to Pittsburgh ' s Waterpark this weekend, Sandcastle. It was a blast. I am sunburnt lol.

The buccos are on a roll going into the all star break . And my friends are going crazy.

I'm working a lot through Thursday this week, then my parents are coming and I'm going to Wisconsin for the weekend apparently.

I have to get a doctor's appointment and TB test. And I am kinda lost. Should I just go to student health? Lol

After next weekend...my time in Pittsburgh is basically done. I'll be sad but ready to go.

In HWP I finally officially got Corisca. And my work in the West is done. Now to focus on annexing Greece, which will take weeks.

[–]Gunlord500 0ポイント1ポイント  (1子コメント)

First again!

...Or, maybe not. :p

Here's a quandary that's been bugging me for a little while. I fear I may have committed some badhistory (or bad geopolitics, but I'll get to that later) myself, but I'm not sure. This didn't happen on Reddit, though, and I thought it would be in bad taste to make a whole thread dedicated to the matter. Thus, I thought our latest 'Mindless Monday' would be appropriate, at least looking at the lax rules for these threads, though of course, mods, please feel free to delete this if it’s troublesome. I was having a conversation with an acquaintance over the subject of the American Civil War, and he brought up an argument I had honestly never heard before. To summarize (hopefully without doing injustice to what he said), it went something like this:

“Slavery wasn’t worth fighting for at all, but here’s something Northerners don’t think of very much: If the Civil War was justified to “end slavery,” why isn’t any American intervention justified if the reason is “good enough?” Should we invade Nigeria to stop Boko Haram (our girls haven’t been brought back yet!) You’d probably say no. But when it comes to Southerners, who you Northerners keep saying are worthless embarrassments the US would be better off without, you still can’t let them leave. So how can you justify intervention to stop slavery but not to stop terrorism or misogyny or whatever? It seems like you just have it out for Southerners specifically.”

Like I said, I hadn’t heard this argument before, and I had to admit he had a point. It’s easy to get on board with a war against slavery, but it’s also easy to get on board with wars against terrorism or maltreatment of women or a lot of other ills, and it’s something to be careful of. Still, upon considering it, I ended up thinking that the North would still have been particularly justified in attempting to subdue the South. Here’s what I replied:

“True, but think of what would have happened if we’d just let the South secede. Pretty much all the seeds of conflict would still be there. Slaves would still try to flee from the South, leading to a lot of acrimony between the old nation and the new one. The South was also pretty aggressive and expansionist; look at the Mexican-American war. It’s likely a separate Confederacy and Union would have come to blows later on even with a peaceful secession. Southerners might be annoy us Northerners inside our Union, but they’d be outright dangerous outside of it. That's why you couldn't justify other forms of intervention through this reasoning, by the way--as bad as organizations like Boko Haram may be, they're far away across the ocean instead of right next to us like an independent Confederacy would have been.”

I don’t want a brigade or a personal army or anything like that (that’s why I’m being vague about who I was talking with and where), but I would be interested in hearing from folks who know more about the geopolitical/strategic setting of mid 19th century America than I do. This was just an off the cuff conversation, so I probably didn’t hew to Rule 5 as much as I could have or should have, but I’m wondering, was my reasoning completely off? If Lincoln had just let the South peacefully secede (I know, he wouldn’t have), would a large conflict (or series of conflicts) between the US and the Confederacy be likely in the future, or was my assessment too pessimistic? (This is a ‘what if’ question too, which is another reason I took it to a Mindless Monday thread rather than, say, an askhistorians thread. :p )

[–]The740Feminists hired Christians to put lead in the Roman water supply 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Pretty much all the seeds of conflict would still be there. Slaves would still try to flee from the South, leading to a lot of acrimony between the old nation and the new one.

I think this is fairly close to it. I figure one of the following two scenarios would have played out. First, assume a peaceful split and no shots fired at Fort Sumter.

In the first scenario, the USA dismantles any type of fugitive slave laws. Maryland's slaveholding farmers are compensated to emancipate, effectively ending slavery in the USA. This causes a crush of fleeing slaves coming north. In response, the CSA does one of two stupid things (possibly both): either cracking down significantly on slaves themselves, or actually attempting to do something about the USA's refusal to repatriate slaves by claiming that slave movements are actually being encouraged if not caused by "Yankee agitators".

So we'd be looking at either widespread slave uprisings or outright war between the two sides in this case.

The other possible scenario would involve a completely hands-off policy from the USA toward the CSA for one reason or another. Even if left completely alone with no slave movements or uprisings, slavery couldn't have lasted because the soil couldn't have lasted. Cotton is extremely damaging to soil, meaning that as time goes on, it's necessary to either let fields lie fallow (which means having slaves is pointless), plant something else to replenish soil nutrients (which means having slaves is pointless since there's basically nothing as labor-intensive as cotton), or else expand territory (which would be pointless as well, since west of Texas can't grow cotton anyway). And even if there was a massive migration of cotton planters into Texas, it would leave behind nothing but a bunch of poor and extremely angry farmers with no real prospect for the future, meaning that a bunch of the CSA may well have been re-absorbed into the USA.

But that's just how I see it.

[–]WorldOneWonAlexander the Great Didn't Real 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

So my friend sent me this yesterday.

I had seen it before, but let me tell you, this video changes completely when you're high.

[–]R_B_KazenzakisKra! I speak for the Downworlders 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Up Yours robot.

Had a pretty fun time at the Go Ruck thing on Saturday. It was just a 5 K, I'm not up to the challenges.

Also, hey! /u/Georgy_K_Zhukov got a SRD thread in his honor! Everyone cheer!

[–]piwikiwi 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

I've never been as angry about politics before as I was last night. This euro/greece criss is bad for my heart.

[–]leton98609 0ポイント1ポイント  (0子コメント)

Still in the glorious PRC. VPN access through the Great Firewall is irregular and often blocked at various points of the day, but Reddit is still safe for now.

Gotten further into Court of the Red Tsar, which I thought was fitting reading in the PRC. The book goes with a bit of an unusual approach: it focuses a lot on Stalin's domestic life, as opposed to just being a broad, general history. The author in the preface goes on a bit about how "demonizing" figures like Hitler and Stalin makes them seem anomalies and inhuman monsters of sorts, allowing us to distance ourselves from them. I have to say that I'm starting to see the wisdom of his approach and his comments, though. Sure, the first few pages depict a lot of interesting and I guess positive features of Stalin's personality, but those only make him seem more monstrous he executes more and more of his old and closest friends. The fact that Stalin was capable of emotions like love and empathy and that he enjoyed literature and comic films, in my opinion, humanizes him, and in doing so makes him all the more of a human monster: someone with alarming similarities to many of us that makes us pause a bit for thought.

The college admissions game is stressing me out even more. Ironically, as more and more successful test scores started coming back, I felt like the pressure and the stakes were getting raised on me even more. Before this year I would have been fine going to UW(in-state) or something, but now I feel obligated to aim higher than that, and consequently I have a lot more worrying to do.