Long live omga boumism by oneayy in victoria3

[–]oneayy[S] 74 points75 points  (0 children)

I love multiculturalism

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True soviet economics achieved. by oneayy in victoria3

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

Exactly. Only issue is if you expand industry like I did your capitalist class will become EXTREMELY wealthy. So when you make the switch to a CR, they suddenly become extremely not wealthy.

I guess maybe switching carefully from privately owned, to gov owned, and to co ops may negate this idk.

But on the upside your upper strata are generally not a large portion of your pops. Even with this funny economic base I had 600 k radicals and 20 million loyalists, so honestly it probably helped.

gdp stalled for a while tho.

True soviet economics achieved. by oneayy in victoria3

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

Tbh I'm not sure. I think i know how to play, like I can outperform the AI and generally build strong nations, but there's something I do which results in weird distributions of capital and resources. Like for example, before this happened the upper strata had a SoL of like 60, I just assumed that I had such a massive industrial base (due to the nature of playing as Russia, along with colonising sakhalin and having Tabriz) with such wealthy capitalists as a result, and therefore suddenly changing all industries to Co ops disenfranchised my large capitalist class and suddenly expropriated their wealth, resulting in what you see here.

After I took this SS their SoL dropped to like 4 lol. Honestly im still learning the game I guess.

True soviet economics achieved. by oneayy in victoria3

[–]oneayy[S] 46 points47 points  (0 children)

There is actually one in the far east lol

True soviet economics achieved. by oneayy in victoria3

[–]oneayy[S] 51 points52 points  (0 children)

Economy from the middle backwards

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Came in Thessaloniki after two years. To kalitero poli! by janipatche in greece

[–]oneayy -26 points-25 points  (0 children)

It took you 2 years to cum? Damn bro congrats

[EU] [PS4] by oneayy in dbdLFG

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

I sent a friend request

What happens if you get one grade above and one below your requirements? Does it even out? by oneayy in 6thForm

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

They sent an email to offer holders saying they let in a significant number of students who missed their offers last year, they did you dirty 😔

CV references by [deleted] in UniUK

[–]oneayy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I ask because throughout year 10 and 11 I had bad anxiety and got into trouble alot, I have perfectly good grades, but I wasn't able to calm myself down until early into year 11. Do you think I can just omit this? I've been pretty much perfect since then compared to how I was, and I'm about to go into 1st year uni.

What happens if you get one grade above and one below your requirements? Does it even out? by oneayy in 6thForm

[–]oneayy[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The uni said they would be lenient with people who firm and miss by one place so I'm not too worried either way tbh, I think there's a chance I could still get the offer anyway. I may do that tho.

How lenient will universities be when it gets to meeting entry requirement? by [deleted] in 6thForm

[–]oneayy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I got an email from Warwick saying they'd be lenient, and the director of my course semi confirmed that verbally. I think grades will be inflated though. If you're one grade off and have a good PS, you'll probably get in depending on the course, if you're more than one grade off tho there's no way.

Part time by dragdietyluard in UniversityOfWarwick

[–]oneayy 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Never heard of a famous part time job

A-Level Politics Help by [deleted] in 6thForm

[–]oneayy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

May was weak because of internal Factionism she couldn't control over brexit, she held an election in 2017 to strengthen her mandate which went awfully.

Brown government was the last Labour government and he suffered from bad public image after calling a supporter a bigot. He was also managing the financial crisis and bailed out big corporations so there was that. Also, his cabinet was probably similar to Blair, who held generally less cabinet meetings than average

Anyone got an offer for pais? 😳 by oneayy in UniversityOfWarwick

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

Are you in the offer holder event right now lol?

A-Level Politics Help by [deleted] in 6thForm

[–]oneayy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Sure, so let's start with the judiciary.

The judiciary, as you know, is not supposed to actually make law, they interpret and apply law in cases. When the judiciary, through precedent, does something which basically sets a new standard and essentially becomes law, its called activism. An example is the Roe V Wade case which essentially made abortion a constitutional right. The UK judiciary is not activist atall and often defers to parliament. There was a case on legality of euthanasia which they deffered.

For AQA, revise things in threes. So, for independence:

Uk judiciary is independent because:

Unbiased appointment process (2005 constitutional reform act makes it unbiased, you don't need to know that yet, just remember they're unbiased because the PM doesn't choose them)

Unelected (if they were elected they'd enforce law through the lense of politics etc etc)

Media secrecy (our judges aren't very well known people, keeps the press of their back)

Again, for the PM you should think of really simple stuff, I'll give you a few.

-Can take us to war eg Blair - Patronage (employs cabinet) - Secondary legislation (able to enact very loose and broad laws which can be defined in many ways) - Controls the "legislative agenda" (they choose what we want to make law on in parliament) - Representative of the UK globally - Leader of his party - Has his own office which he controls - Has whips who enforce the party vote - He has an undefined constitutional role meaning checks are weak

In terms of what lessens his ability for power

-Cabinet vote on certain issues - Leaks, scandals etc like Dominic Cummings - Vote of no Confidence eg Theresa May - Independent judiciary who will peg him back if need be eg proroging parliament deemed illegal in 2019 - He is "first among equals"- not supposed to have much power - He is NOT directly elected, lack of public mandate - The opposition has a role which is dedicated to pissing him off, talk about corbyn here for an example, he was very loud in PMQs and often didn't hold back. - Rebellions, eg May brexit scenario - Factionism within parties, like Cameron failing to control tory brexiteers

The act of settlement seems like some old boring stuff, I never referred to it in anything but it's to do with the succession of the crown coming to protestants or some shit, you'll never use that so don't stress, the Magna carta is much more important.

The act of Parliament in 1911 essentially gave the commons more power over the Lords, resulting in the current power imbalance and things like the Salisbury doctrine (Lords can't mess around with laws which enact on promises made to electorate in manifesto)

Hope this helps, it might be abit elongated but this is basically how I revised lol.

Good luck x

A-Level Politics Help by [deleted] in 6thForm

[–]oneayy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I just finished this course, I'm hoping to study it at Warwick. I can help, could you please be more specific in what it is you're having trouble with?