Thenewwwguy
Deity
isn’t accepting that capitalist rulers are acceptable but communist ones aren’t a by-definition ideological stanceSo, not really wanting to end up being seen as taking a side on ideological debate or modern wars, my guess would be Firaxis would go for a different leader. I personally wouldn't care about moral considerations of Ho Chi Minh being included or not, my only issue would be that I'd find him boring when I'd rather have a much less recent leader for such an old country, same goes for my problem with Gandhi.
Ho Chi King’s biggest controversy is being someone whom the average american knew nothing about but hated anyway cuz the president and CIA told them to. Out of any communist ruler from the cold war period, Ho Chi Minh is far less controversial than Fidel Castro (although I personally would love to see Castro myself), and leads a far more important. civ than Julius Nyerere or Thomas Sankara. He also died in 1969, prior to the (seemingly arbitrary, to be fair) cut-off of 1975 set by Civ 5’s choice of Haile Selassie.Ho Chi Minh falls into a similar trap, in which his leadership was recent enough for there to still be controversies that further destabilize his image. Even if claims against Ho Chi Minh don't pan out, his inclusion will still be perceived as a political choice and alienate at least some amount of potential players. TR is indeed very recent (at least compared to other leaders), but his problem also stems from the fact that the American 'civilization' is so recent that you can't avoid these problems. Washington and Lincoln were therefore always safe picks, though both of them aren't necessarily immune to criticism, either. The history of Vietnam, in contrast, is long and diverse and should have no problem giving a leader who can make everyone happy and evoke only positive feelings of the country. If Civilization is still around in 50 years, Ho Chi Minh could be a leader then.
In fact, the only reason I’ve seen used to justify not including Ho Chi Minh is that he opposed the US in the Vietnam War...which isn’t a real concern, imo. Ppl here don’t really hate him for it. Vietnam is generally very positively viewed these days in the US.
I'd say, if you know about the BJP and Modi and Hindu nationalism you will know that it's that part of India in the north that is to the day the country's core. Your way of splitting up civilizations is just arbitrary, I'm advocating a consistent approach based on giving distinct cultures representation. Maurya is essentially a dynasty of the core Indo-Aryan Indian civilization, as is the Gupta empire. India and Maurya being the same civilization isn't really that hard to justify, there is continuity there. When we are talking about Tamils, it is different, that's a region that has had a distinct history for most of it's existence.
You didn't answer my questions about Tibetans and etc., because that is a perfect example of what I'm talking about. Tibet being within the modern borders of China doesn't mean that it shouldn't be represented (even if it won't be anyway for political reasons). Likewise the Tamils are a distinct people, and Tamil nationalism is a real thing, many of them consider themselves a distinct nation. They might be regarded as the largest stateless nation in the world. You haven't really refuted this, you've just stated that 'Modern India represents all Indians' or something. Well the UK is a country currently where Scotland is not an independent state- that's still in the game.
This: all of this.