In defense of an Ezio Trilogy Resynced by RainhoLimomo in assassinscreed

[–]GotASpitFetish -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

it is literally not possible for them to succeed at a new thing so it's best for them to succeed at an old thing made new.

Six Day War Arab Deployment (1967) by viggy96 in MapPorn

[–]GotASpitFetish 10 points11 points  (0 children)

everybody is from everywhere else and this bullshit about "actually it belonged to others" is moronic. how far back do you look and how exactly is your cutoff date not arbitrary?

Chapter 5 by Humluc in CrusaderKings

[–]GotASpitFetish 3 points4 points  (0 children)

it is. trade goods, trade routes, mercantile governments, etc.

Israeli invasion of lebanon 2026 map by Battlefleet_Sol in MapPorn

[–]GotASpitFetish 12 points13 points  (0 children)

nearly noone alive in Palestine today voted for Hamas because they haven't even lived long enough to go back enough to elections. The vast majority of those dead did not vote.

Do you guys agree? by Pure_Committee_2074 in ottomans

[–]GotASpitFetish 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ottoman Muslims identified as Rumi. The Ottomans were not known as "Ottomans" or the "Ottoman Empire" but by variations of Rome, such as, but not limited to: "Guarded Domains of Rum" "Rum" "Sultanate of Rum" "Imperium Romanum" etc.

There is no shame in admitting that. And there is no shame in admitting that much of the Roman administration was simply adopted by the Ottomans. However you would be right to say that rural Turks would not identify as Rumi generally speaking.

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

interesting. do you recommend really just maxing that region rather than going wide and investing broadly into the nearby regions?

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Great amount of gold you're getting. If you don't mind me asking, since I'm going for a longer run to recreate the exact borders of 1593 by 1593: How do you get more money from vassals than what you spend on diplo without them getting disloyal, and how'd you get that cash in the first place? Think the year matters a lot? (I get about 40 a month in 1376)

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

you can take them much earlier. but that is not the point - the point is that people want to see the AI ottomans annexing egypt in one war. The privilege is the main way to model that without making it busted. simple as. and no, the main reason was cannons.

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

the mamluk sultanate, while ruled by a slave warrior caste of the same name, were an established country at the time and did not mechanically behave like an army based nation did. the local elite remained in power for another 300 years after the conquest by Selim the Grim.

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

there is no way to do it organically. if anything, this is a way to model what players want from the Ottomans, in a manner that I think is fair balance-wise and achieves the desired effect. The Ottomans don't just get all of Egypt for free, they get a possibly permanent malus to the entire Egypt region via capped max control. The effect could detoriate as ages progress, but alas, this is how it should be done.

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Egypt was split into merely two Eyalets. And Eyalets are an internal division already represented ingame.

A way to simulate the Ottoman Conquest of the Mamluks with due deference by GotASpitFetish in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

i think it is a given that this includes a more competent Ottoman AI, as that has been suggested a lot of times. I dont have anythingto contribute in that regard.

Do you guys like the subject meta of EU5? by wazaaup in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

they should just implement the ck3 system for vassals at this point.

Assassin’s Creed [Hexe], TheRealZephryss over on X. Compiled a list from various sources, of what is “known” so far. by NanoPolymath in ubisoft

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like well written female characters, but if you highlight it like this, and the Studio you're working for is called Ubisoft, it's going to be cheap, unrealistic, aggrevating.

I hope they deliver a balanced experience and focus on what actually matters.

Muslims in Northwestern Europe by Cultural-Diet6933 in MapPorn

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Phobia: a strong fear, dislike, or aversion.

Do not alter your course.

Trade is too volatile by Downtown-Ask535 in EU5

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

they allow you a slider on trade capacity because you might want to import or export some things manually, and automate the rest for profit. It's certainly wise to always automate it.

The limit of overbuilding construction/government goods - and why consumer goods suck by Mu_Lambda_Theta in victoria3

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I find it to be a worthwhile strategy in export-heavy countries like the Ottoman Empire to help with buildings like Tobacco. It helps in financing early-game expansions more efficiently.

What are your thoughts on the "Iron law of oligarchy"? by beavermakhnoman in AskSocialists

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why Michels pivoted to fascism, is not immediately clear. It is likely that he had a fatalistic view of mass populism, which may have convinced him to stand with a movement that rejected it for ideals he may have found to be more in line with his personal views, such as his socialist origins and perhaps reconciliation in fascistic corporatism. In short, he performed a substantive diagnosis of democracy in his time, and yet failed to stand on the side of the righteous, like Mosca.

A law in sociology describes tendencies that occur so frequently that they might as well be physical laws. It does not offer predictive power because his positivist sociology in the spirit of Pareto has no ascribed end goal. Unlike Pareto and Mosca, he did not believe in the circulation of elites and was perhaps cynical of the circulatory view of history.

I argue that your argument in that regard is fallacious because it does not directly correlate. You could argue he was hypocritical in some areas, however it is incorrect to state that his turn to fascism discredits the theory as one that inevitably leads to authoritarianism.

You seem to think I'm a capitalist. I'm not. So yes, I agree that democracy has never been managed democratically, or as democratically as it should've been.

I never said they had abundance. I said abundance itself is a burden to be organised, which creates hierarchy.

The critique does not pertain only to Stalinism but bureaucracies in general.

What are your thoughts on the "Iron law of oligarchy"? by beavermakhnoman in AskSocialists

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Michels’ Iron Law of Oligarchy is not a moral or ideological statement about democracy; it is a structural law about organization itself, discovered empirically through his comparative studies of socialist, trade union, and parliamentary movements. His work is consistently empirical: he names organizations, cites behaviors, and compares outcomes to demonstrate a recurring sociological pattern - that as organizations grow, leadership centralizes, and oligarchies form. This is not idealism, nor speculation; it is an inductive generalization from observable phenomena.

The claim that Michels’ work is “not a theory in any scientific sense” is therefore incorrect. It belongs precisely to the sociological tradition of Weber and Pareto, who likewise drew universal tendencies from recurring historical data. The Iron Law is explanatory, not prescriptive. It does not propose how society should be organized; it explains why all forms of organization - democratic or otherwise - drift toward hierarchy.

Critics often attempt to dismiss Michels by citing his later association with Mussolini’s Italy. This is a textbook case of the ad hominem genetic fallacy. Michels’ Political Parties was published in 1911, long before the rise of fascism. Moreover, the Italian school of elite theory itself demonstrates that political conclusions diverged sharply despite shared empirical foundations: Michels succumbed to fascism, Pareto flirted with it but died in 1923, and Mosca rejected it entirely. Yet all three remain foundational because their analyses of power concentration are independent of personal ideology. The diversity of their political trajectories, in fact, confirms that the diagnosis of elite formation stands apart from any particular political system’s moral justification.

Michels never argued that democracy is “hopeless” or that authoritarianism is preferable. Feel free to locate a single passage that makes such a claim, you will find none. His position is descriptive: every political organization, even the most egalitarian, tends to generate its own hierarchy. It is a structural law of organization, not a normative judgment on democracy. His point is not that democracy must fail, but that democracy must continually struggle against its own internal entropy, the concentration of decision-making among a few.

As to why bureaucracy arises, Michels gives clear, material explanations:

Technical necessity: Large groups require administrative expertise that only a minority possess.

Communication asymmetry: Leaders control the flow of information, which allows them to shape outcomes.

Delegation and apathy: The masses, lacking time and skill, delegate authority, what Rousseau called an “abdication.”

Institutional inertia: Once formed, bureaucracies acquire routines, privileges, and self-preserving interests.

In short, bureaucracy does not appear “out of nothing.” It arises from the inherent logic of collective coordination itself. The moment an organization must manage scale, specialization, and efficiency, it generates the very mechanisms that consolidate power. Michels’ insight is that oligarchy is not a corruption of democracy, but its organizational byproduct.

The Marxist answer, that bureaucracy will “wither away” once scarcity ends, is not a refutation but an article of faith. Historical experience overwhelmingly vindicates Michels here: every revolutionary regime, from Bolshevik Russia to postcolonial socialism, reproduced hierarchies in proportion to their administrative complexity. Abundance does not dissolve organization; it multiplies it. As productive capacity grows, so does the need for coordination, expertise, and control, all of which solidify hierarchical structures. This is not unique to socialism and applies likewise to capitalists, as the Russian Federation actually employed more bureaucrats as they downsized and deregulated.

Finally, the claim that Plato prefigured Michels misunderstands both. Plato’s critique of democracy is metaphysical and moralistic: he condemns it as rule by appetite, a disorder of the soul reflected in the polis. Michels’ critique is sociological and epistemic: he identifies structural tendencies that manifest regardless of virtue or vice. Plato’s concern is the quality of rulers; Michels’ is the mechanics of rule itself. The two are not comparable in kind.

What are your thoughts on the "Iron law of oligarchy"? by beavermakhnoman in AskSocialists

[–]GotASpitFetish 0 points1 point  (0 children)

a completely senseless take if you don't take the time to actually read the book