Guynemer
King
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2002
- Messages
- 887
I hope not everyone is like this. You will end up with the same cesspool but just keep moving the turds around.
There are always going to be turds. I am under no obligation to entertain or employ them.
I hope not everyone is like this. You will end up with the same cesspool but just keep moving the turds around.
Well, let them speak! If they don't speak their terrible opinions out loud, we don't have the chance to tell them that they are wrong or should see the world in a different way!
And how many more of these kinds of folk have caused damage, or some other form of harm? How do you weight this, beyond a hypothetical you're putting forward in a forum thread? Do you even know, or do you simple prefer the hypothetical good over any amount of hypothetical bad?Well, let them speak! If they don't speak their terrible opinions out loud, we don't have the chance to tell them that they are wrong or should see the world in a different way! There are a lot of videos online about ex-Klans member or people who were brought up in Westboro Baptist Church who got changed, surprisingly enough, not by the people who yelled labels at them but by the people who let them see a different perspective. There are people who are too far-gone that we can't change them, but there are that we can. Maybe I'm too optimistic, but I believe people have a capability to change for the better. Otherwise, they will just recede to their own echo chamber where everyone shares with one another disgusting world views.
@Guynemer Ok, let's say that is the situation, an employee believing in racial superiority and you fired her. Sure, and what did you achieve there? I'll tell you what you achieved, you were able to move a terrible person from one place to another, instead of her being your employee and your responsibility, you just made her, with her same terrible views/opinions, the responsibility of her future employer. Other employees in your company with the same terrible views now learned that instead of voicing their opinions publicly, they will now have to do it with anonymity. Nothing changes, same number of terrible people in the same society when you go home patting yourself on the back for combating racism successfully. Good job.
When I said "When you are criticized, you get a chance to rethink your decision and make a change accordingly," it means if your "criticism" doesn't get followed up by some level of education, or some chances to let people change, that "criticism" doesn't achieve anything.
Back to the first comment I made that you quoted, I said people were capable of change if there was enough compassion to allow the change to happen, but people won't change easily, or at all, if they are dealing with people like you, whose knee jerk reaction is "certain consequences/punishments must be dished out" instead of how to change bad world views, but apparently what you could only pick out from that initial comment was "CriTIcisM iS noT CenSoRshIP." If focusing on consequences truly works, the correctional system of America must be 5 stars. The same people you silence today without any effort into changing them are the same people going into the voting booth with you tomorrow.
Well, the only way I would know this hypothetical employee was racist would be if she said or did something. If she keeps said thoughts entirely to herself, I'd never know.
Or saying a dumb joke asking if Hitler was a Lesbian or something like that.But you understand that, like, "she said or did something" can range from "she tweeted something with Hispanic instead of LatinX in it" to "she called a customer the N-word" to "she stalked and murdered a black coworker"...so it doesn't help much.
Cancel Culture can range from "Understandable" to "Why is this an issue to you?" Most of the time it could be the latter.Are you referring directly to me? Please enlighten me, what form of harm and damage have I caused?And how many more of these kinds of folk have caused damage, or some other form of harm?
From your tone I guess I don't know. Do you?Do you even know,
Wow, I guess it's superior to prefer any amount of hypothetical bad to hypothetical good.Do you even know, or do you simple prefer the hypothetical good over any amount of hypothetical bad?
I guess let me take a step back and ask do you think it is conceivable at all that an employee could suffer an injustice from an employer?
This is ultimately going to get down to the question of what is the game and what isn’t. Taking at its most extreme ends, a totally historical simulation would have zero user input whatsoever, making for a rather boring game. The flip-side of this is having no preset civilizations at all and everything input by the user, which would be... probably equally uninteresting.From what I remember, a lot of discussion centered on things like leader gender ratios (spurred by the last addition to the New Frontier Pass, Joao III, being a man when previous precedent on gender ratios led many to predict a female leader), eurocentrism (again spurred by Portugal's inclusion, as each addition to the pass was drawing a civ/leader from a specific area of the world, and before Portugal was confirmed, we had already gotten a European pack (gaul and byzantium) and hadn't yet gotten a North American one), and a lack of a direct slavery mechanic in-game.
This is ultimately going to get down to the question of what is the game and what isn’t. Taking at its most extreme ends, a totally historical simulation would have zero user input whatsoever, making for a rather boring game. The flip-side of this is having no preset civilizations at all and everything input by the user, which would be... probably equally uninteresting.
It is kind encouraged in Civ VI. You can win the game while playing in a way that is pretty much pure evil. The goal is to win the game which can basically be said to be the last civilization remaning, even if it is not a sustainable victory, if your civilization just last a day longer than the rest it would be a victory in civ terms. Also if any other civilization is getting close to a victory, you are encouraged to destroy them, even if the victory would not hurt anyone. Bascially the game rules encourage you to play in a way which could be described as destructive and evil.As for slavery, I’m not sure how I feel about it included as a game mechanism. Does it serve any function, really? Genocides also happened in history, but the consensus seems to be that we don’t really need to make ethnic cleansing part of the game in order to make it enjoyable.
Every day in every city on the planet, yes.
Does it serve any function, really?
If players want a game that simulates more reality, then it will be more Eurocentric and male-centric as modern history was largely shaped by European domination and those leaders tended to be men.
Are you suggesting that these injustices should be largely taken as a given, and not worried about overmuch? Or am I misreading tone here?
Definitely misreading the tone.
I mean you could substitute another, less controversial, mechanic for the same effect. I had Civ4 but haven't played it in many years. See personal title for what I'm playing now.In Civ 4 you can get more hammers with it than any other way, at least for most of the game.

I'm thinking about it as far as years/turn go; the closer we get to the modern era, the more the game "slows down," so I think having more European influence than not reflects how the game itself is structured.Just want to point out that Civilization covers a 6,000 year period extending far beyond just the modern era. And that for most of that time period, Europe was a savage backwater with nothing very interesting going on.
Okay, great, so let's go back to my question which you never answered: employee makes a pro-BLM remark on the job and as a result gets fired. Has an injustice been done here? One that society should care about?