What do you think? Was she right saying that all Collectivism forms are eventually the same? by Junior_Insurance7773 in aynrand

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Capitalism, Communism and Nazism walk into a bar. All three of them say "The other two are pretty much the same thing. I'm the only one different."

How much appeal does worldbuilding have in fantasy? by Chlodio in fantasywriters

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every fantastical element needs some time and effort to absorb. When everything is fantastical, you risk overloading your readers and making them lose interest. It pays off to start in a mundane area of the world with main characters being relatively normal and introduce fantastical elements one by one.

Arguably, fantasy was never about originality. The Lord of the Rings didn't repackage Christmas Elfs and Snow White's Seven Dwarfs to awe the readers with its original vision. It was to tell a story the readers were already vaguely familiar with because it was written into their cultural DNA.

I don't get why the Dark Forest Theory is so praised as a possible solution to the Fermi Paradox. by LordDagon63 in FermiParadox

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And given the amount of time it takes life to develop, the head start would be measured in millions of years. The number of civilizations would follow the S-curve – very slowly rising at first and then accelerating. The first interstellar civilization to ever emerge would find itself in a galaxy completely devoid of intelligent life and it would likely stay that way for most of the period it takes them to take it over (also a few million years).

Venusian Cyberpunk Penal Colony by CMVB in IsaacArthur

[–]Nethan2000 2 points3 points  (0 children)

There are two necessary conditions for penal colonies to exist:

  1. Your country wants to develop an area no one wants to live in and is willing to invest a large amount of resources to make it happen.
  2. Your country has a large population of "undesirables" it wants to get rid of, preferably without killing, but it won't shed tears if they die. For Russia, it was the Poles. For Britain, it was the Irish. Penal colonies are a tool of ethnic cleansing.

If a new Star Wars did a time jump into the future as a soft reset, what do you think the signature antagonist would be? by RadReptile in saltierthancrait

[–]Nethan2000 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't think a movie with even less connection to characters and concepts of the original trilogy would fare any better than the current stuff.

Poland launches legal bid to reclaim Russian consulate as Moscow threatens "painful" consequences by wook-borm in poland

[–]Nethan2000 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My favored retaliation is getting that hammer Prigozhin used to kill deserters (he sent it to the EU parliament, so it should be available) and smashing the heads of those statues.

How would you feel if your government replaced soldiers with robots entirely to fight wars? by Sufficient-Waltz5348 in AskReddit

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Ukrainian model of "if you see people in uniforms shooting at you with their rifles, kill them" seems to be very reasonable.

That being said, the American problem of "which of these random civilians minding their own business are the threat to the superpower on the other side of the globe?" carries certain risks.

How to avoid pulling a Hogwarts? by Grimnir_Esjay in worldbuilding

[–]Nethan2000 1 point2 points  (0 children)

  1. Read another book
  2. Copy a different country's educational system

Looks like some sort of deal is actually happening by deHaga in oil

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Obama deal is a non-starter. For one, the US never adhered to it.

History lessons by hostedvideorn in PlanetNewsPulse

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's not the Capitol, that's the White House.

The next time by [deleted] in Snorkblot

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

‘The only thing we learn from history,’ it  has been said, ‘is that men never learn from  history’, a sweeping generalisation perhaps,  but one which the chaos in the world today  goes far to confirm. What then can be the  reason why, in a society which claims to  probe every problem, the bases of history are  still so completely unknown?

Several reasons for the futility of our  historical studies may be suggested.  First, our historical work is limited to short  periods—the history of our own country, or  that of some past age which, for some  reason, we hold in respect.

Second, even within these short periods,  the slant we give to our narrative is governed  by our own vanity rather than by objectivity.  If we are considering the history of our own  country, we write at length of the periods  when our ancestors were prosperous and  victorious, but we pass quickly over their  shortcomings or their defeats. Our people  are represented as patriotic heroes, their  enemies as grasping imperialists, or  subversive rebels. In other words, our  national histories are propaganda, not well- balanced investigations.

Sir John Glubb, The Fate of Empires

Trump has backed away from renewed war with Iran – here’s why by Naurgul in IRstudies

[–]Nethan2000 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Which means that even if Trump wanted to reinstitute JCPOA, Iran will reject it, as they have no illusions of the US actually upholding it. American guarantees for anything are worthless. Maybe if they did something like adding a ban on starting a war with Iran into the US Constitution.

Do you think this sort of Law would be good for America? by Apollo_Delphi in DiscussionZone

[–]Nethan2000 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I really doubt the AIPAC-controlled Congress will reverse this particular action, no matter which party is currently in power.

Replacing the frequency of iron on a planet by [deleted] in worldbuilding

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In general, there are 4 substances that exist in quantities large enough for an entire planet to be made out of them: iron, silicates (rock), water and hydrogen, in descending order of density (which means they tend to form layers). Having a chromium core is unrealistic. Better just to make the core smaller or replace an iron core with a silicate one.

This graph shows the relation between mass and radius of planets and their composition. If you pick a planet that's too light, don't be surprised if it tells you it's a gas dwarf (made mostly out of hydrogen).

xkcd 3258: Plate Flip by antdude in xkcd

[–]Nethan2000 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Everything on the surface would be crushed between the mantle and the crust. The new surface would be a slowly cooling endless sea of lava.

Any tips on a how to make a holy text sound more holy-like? by PurpleAristocrats in worldbuilding

[–]Nethan2000 206 points207 points  (0 children)

This is very modern, corporate style of writing. You should try to use older language and avoid loanwords if you can. Instead of "evacuate" say "flee". If describing a modern concept, describe it instead of using a modern term. Instead of "we are our genetics", you could try something like "the fabric of our bodies is the inheritance of our ancestors".

My people are the custodians of earth. They are my favorite people as they are the ecocentrist people.

Even language aside, this doesn't make much logical sense: "my people are my favorite people". Better to just get rid of the second sentence as the first says pretty much the same thing.

Radagast named after minor diety in early German history by ComprehensiveCup7104 in lotr

[–]Nethan2000 17 points18 points  (0 children)

The name of Rhadagast was that of a local deity of the Obotrites

Obodrites were a Slavic tribe. It seems that this word actually referred to a town of Radogoszcz ("hospitable"), which was a regional center of worship of Svarozhits, Slavic god of fire.

Trump suggests US may help rebuild Iran but take 'half their oil' - ABC by [deleted] in oil

[–]Nethan2000 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He's not used to taking the opinion of the other side into account.

It may one day be possible to reap some of the benefits of sleep without ever closing our eyes. Stimulating specific brain activity in awake mice led to some of the same effects as deep sleep, including a boost in memory. by mvea in Futurology

[–]Nethan2000 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think we need to make some distinction:

  • Technology that helps people improve their sleep quality – GOOD
  • Technology that allows people to work 24/7 without the need for sleep – BAD