magnusmarcus
Prince
classical_hero said:I wonder why the Pres voted against it?
It is my understanding that Emp believed we could still work out an alliance...
classical_hero said:I wonder why the Pres voted against it?
I cannot believe he still wanted to deal with them. War was the only option, it just depended upon who would have declared first. Maybe his ties, when he was C3B Ambassor go to him to much.magnusmarcus said:It is my understanding that Emp believed we could still work out an alliance...
Cheetah said:And we can, with our shroud of hate?![]()
That would be just crap! TheyRegentMan said:Well, when you're an ambassador to a nation for, what, four terms, then I can see how he might have voted no. He was their friend as they were his. He just couldn't see the situation clearly through this shroud of friendship.
Matrix said:I can't believe that would be the reason. He's not that stupid.![]()
Unfortunately he is blinded by that close friendship he had with them. Unfortunately he does not see that they lied so many times when we were "friends", that are no longer trustworthy. They used and abused us, so it is there turn to fell what it feels like. Lets drive them to the ground.Matrix said:That would be just crap! Theydeceived us! if Emp can't see that he shouldn't be president!![]()
I can't believe that would be the reason. He's not that stupid.![]()
Matrix said:13 for, 2 against. One of the two was our own president.![]()
magnusmarcus said:It is my understanding that Emp believed we could still work out an alliance...
RegentMan said:Well, when you're an ambassador to a nation for, what, four terms, then I can see how he might have voted no. He was their friend as they were his. He just couldn't see the situation clearly through this shroud of friendship.
Stockholm Syndrome describes the behavior of kidnap victims who, over time, become sympathetic to their captors. The name derives from a 1973 hostage incident in Stockholm, Sweden. At the end of six days of captivity in a bank, several kidnap victims actually resisted rescue attempts, and afterwards refused to testify against their captors.
While some people are suggesting the recent Elizabeth Smart kidnapping sounds like a case of Stockholm Syndrome, the most famous incident in the U.S. involved the kidnapped heiress Patty Hearst. Captured by a radical political group known as the Symbionese Liberation Army in 1974, Ms. Hearst eventually became an accomplice of the group, taking on an assumed name and assisting them in several bank robberies. After her re-capture, she denounced the group and her involvement.
What causes Stockholm Syndrome? Captives begin to identify with their captors initially as a defensive mechanism, out of fear of violence. Small acts of kindness by the captor are magnified, since finding perspective in a hostage situation is by definition impossible. Rescue attempts are also seen as a threat, since it's likely the captive would be injured during such attempts.
It's important to note that these symptoms occur under tremendous emotional and often physical duress. The behavior is considered a common survival strategy for victims of interpersonal abuse, and has been observed in battered spouses, abused children, prisoners of war, and concentration camp survivors.