Why is this ModMod Not in C2C Already?

it can only be beneficial for us all to react
Not necessarily. If some people actually get hostile to technological progression, this could be very detrimental (and this has happened, at least in some countries). In the end, we might solve a problem that doesn't exist (by your premise), but lose the ability to solve any problem in the future. In Germany, some people have become hostile to nuclear fusion (because anything nuclear is evil, right?) and to space travel (because "we should solve the problems on earth first", because there is no interdependency of technologies, right?). We (now explicitly not restricted to Germany) refused to destroy malaria in the 60s because of some birds, leading to about a 100 million dead people (more than both world wars, put together). And certain people openly hope for a reduction of mankind to a few 100 million (without mentioning who needs to go), so that earth can provide for them.

I have no problems with environmental protection, but I don't like "sustainability". There is nothing more sustainable than an absolutely static lifestyle where nothing changes for centuries (think ancient times) without any ability to cope with unforeseen problems.

Does mentioning a book count as advertising, or is that allowed? Because there is an interesting (IMO) book that deals with exactly that problem.

When something CAN be proven
:nono: It's "refuted". :) Or perhaps "is refutable but not refuted". I know this is more confusing, unless you try to explain how Newton's theories could ever have been supplanted if they were "proven".
 
So why have Reef Bleaching as an Air Pollution when we already have 3 Smog, 3 Ozone (which should cover RB), 3 Global Warming (which would also cover RB), plus another group which includes Acid rain, Toxic Atmosphere, and Blackened Skies. How much overkill is needed in a game?
Yeah, it's when the coral dies that it has a specific impact on things, the bleaching is an intermediate step that corals can survive if it doesn't last too long. We should rather have an event called "Coral loss by Coral Bleaching" that randomly removes coral features in plots with high air/water pollution.
Does mentioning a book count as advertising, or is that allowed? Because there is an interesting (IMO) book that deals with exactly that problem.
It would be odd if we were not allowed to discuss literature on cifanatics.
 
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<iTrainReluctance>10</iTrainReluctance>

What does this do? Only 3 Property systems have this, Education, Air and Water Pollution. Why was another Tag deemed necessary for these particular systems?

Did some reading on Reef bleaching. It's as much related to Water pollution as it is Air. I moved Reef Bleaching into Water pollution to give each category 12 "items". Each Pollution has 4 groupings with 3 "items/buildings" per group.

Will also be extending Range from 0-1000 to 0-2000 as posted before.

Will still keep 1st entrant for each Pollution at the 400-450 range. But will not allow next step to level up to be only 50 points high than previous for any category or group.

Also slowing the rates of accumulation by ~20%.
 
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It would be odd if we were not allowed to discuss literature on cifanatics.
In that case, the book I was talking about is "The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations that Transform the World" from David Deutsch.
it's about foreseeing future problems
The problem is that most of the future's problems are unforeseeable. How many of our current problems could have been foreseen in 1917? Or in 1817? Can we even begin to estimate what might worry the people of 2117? (Yes, I am assuming here that humanity will not die out in the next 100 years.)
grown by 8 billions the last 100 years
7.5 billion (today) - 1.9 billion (1917) = 5.6 billion (source: https://singularityhub.com/2017/02/15/how-the-world-has-changed-from-1917-to-2017/)
Eternal economical growth
A truism if you mean a truly infinite time, but very debatable if you mean "eternal" in the colloquial sense. There are more planets in the universe than grains of sand on earth.
seriously consider what's a sustainable population size today
The problem is always when you have to say who needs to go. Please keep in mind just how close this topic is to something horrendous. And according to https://ourworldindata.org/food-per-person/ - chart "Daily food supplies for countries around the world" - food production per person [Edit: worldwide] has constantly increased at least since 1960 (2200 -> 2700 kcal/day).

And regarding "sustainability": In the book I mentioned above it is pointed out that there are two different points of view about humans - either they are mostly consumers of resources, or they are mostly problem solvers. Guess which option is always picked when people speak about "sustainability"? And the "arrogance" you mentioned is a funny thing. Science and technology really have transformed and enriched our lives (to the point where a middle-class person today has a vastly greater wealth than medieval royalty), whereas "sustainability" still has a lot more to prove. What is more arrogant - asserting that you can continue a story of incredible success that has already lasted for a few centuries, or claiming that switching over to a completely untested lifestyle is preferable?

"Sustainability" is not about stopping progress
According to https://www.researchgate.net/public...nd_its_underlying_sustainability_correlations - quoted by https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability - "the term 'sustainability' should be viewed as humanity's target goal of human-ecosystem equilibrium (homeostasis) ..." - How can you be in an equilibrium (and it's obviously a static equilibrium) and still make progress?

Edit: Why is it not possible that they are speaking about a dynamic equilibrium? See above - the living conditions worldwide have increased in the last few decades, and our current system is not what is called "sustainable". Malthus' catastrophe was averted, not by limiting the increase of population (in fact, population grew faster than ever before), but by new technology - and (I know how much some people on this forum like it) capitalism. The poor living conditions in the 19th century are not even a shadow of Malthus' prophecy, but somehow capitalism is blamed for the fact that people were not better off.:wallbash:
 
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We may need to start a 'debate' thread where we take conversations like these that erupt. But for this last response:

Not necessarily. If some people actually get hostile to technological progression, this could be very detrimental (and this has happened, at least in some countries).
If some people get hostile to technological progress:
1) usually it is specific TYPE of progress, or means to make that progress, that comes under attack - and we should take care to be responsible with progress and how we make it.
2) as a movement, it may often be a faith-based argument, which is usually led by religious leaders that are afraid of us 'refuting' something within the realms of the claims they make, causing massive amounts of followers to realize a critical fallacy of their belief system. This, in fact, is a very GOOD reason to continue scientific progress so we can find more to agree on and less to war over. Once this dissatisfaction is processed out of the human thought pool at least. I'm thinking mostly of fundamentalists like ISIS as a current force operating with such motives right now. The Catholic church spent a long time behaving in this manner but has decided lately to clean up its act and roll with the punches of progress instead, finding scientific proofs to at times require an adjustment to the way they interpret things - they've decided to bend and adapt, rather than break, in the face of evidence driven discoveries. Good signs of growth from those folks, imo.
3) it would be extremely unlikely to have a huge rise of people clamoring to stop all scientific progress simply because they fear what it could bring when science has brought us all so many solutions to our most fundamental problems.
4) is based on good cause to fear the progress because of negative consequences OF that progress.

I have a very hard time believing that a shift to renewable energy sources would for a moment cause any social damage that would cause backlash of any form. What are people going to complain about? The added jobs? The cleaner air to breath? Having our energy bills alleviated due to the relief from dependency on an outdated, finite resources, replaced by a wide array of effectively infinite resources? The reduction of war and tension over those finite resources? The avoidance of massive catastrophic earthquakes that are growing more frequent as we hollow out pockets of those limited resources from the Earth, destabilizing the crust? Would people complain they no longer have to contend with huge clouds of smog infesting their cities, causing massive pulmonary health problems? Would anyone complain that this added biospheric health allows us to push the globe to further food production which can help us continue to avert mass starvation for at least a bit longer? In fact, WHO would complain at all? Even the wealthy who fear the loss of their precious fuel driven profits will be forced to play ball and shift their investments and will likely still be just fine and benefitting as much as the rest of us... at least they'll have a world where they can still profit, whereas the alternative is LIKELY massive catastrophic loss of life and economic collapse that would put many of them on their butts right along with the rest of us.

In the end, we might solve a problem that doesn't exist (by your premise), but lose the ability to solve any problem in the future.
If people are so stupid as to take all the positives of the shift to renewable, sustainable energy and convert that somehow to fear, then by all means, we've earned the right to suffer for our stupidity.

In Germany, some people have become hostile to nuclear fusion (because anything nuclear is evil, right?)
Anything nuclear is inherently very dangerous and probably something we're playing with that could cause a lot of damage. We have to admit our capacity for fallacy and if a mistake means mass destruction, we probably should look elsewhere for our solutions. This doesn't mean we shelve it forever. We should very well continue to develop out mathematical theories on the subject and once we can place such energy generators far outside the reach of their capacity to destroy our planet, then we should go ahead and see just how stable we can make such generation methods.

and to space travel (because "we should solve the problems on earth first", because there is no interdependency of technologies, right?).
Yeah, I've heard a lot of American idiots making comments like these. I guess I understand the thinking, but as you say, we gain more by striving for space exploration and the effort to inhabit offworld locations than we do trying to make sure we fix everything first here. The big thing those that think this way overlook is that space travel and expansion may well BE the solution for Earth! We are building up a great deal of pressure from overpopulation and if we cannot provide more land for people to diffuse into, we're going to have some pretty horrific future mass death events I think we'd all like to avoid. If we cannot release the pressure somehow, it's not going to be pretty.

They also say, why would we want to take our problems to other planets? But it's not like there's ever going to be a moment where we can relax and say, ah... there we go... we have no problems any more! There's always something and we all grow together, and the sustaining of more human life can only help us to find more solutions, as it has so far which has allowed us to overpopulate so dramatically already.

We (now explicitly not restricted to Germany) refused to destroy malaria in the 60s because of some birds, leading to about a 100 million dead people (more than both world wars, put together).
I guess that bought us some time...
Always look at the bright side ;)
And certain people openly hope for a reduction of mankind to a few 100 million (without mentioning who needs to go), so that earth can provide for them.
Surely most of us feel this way, secretly hoping we, and those we care about, may survive and the Earth is somehow made MORE healthy in the process rather than taking down wildlife along with it. But I think we can all realistically also admit, there's no way this can happen 'cleanly' and respectfully to the feelings of the people who are currently alive. There is likely no way this can happen with any sense of justice either. The wealthy are more responsible for driving us towards destruction than any of us, so should THEY be given the greater right to survive? As it stands, we generally all agree that wealth is the measure of a person's worthiness to survive if things become scarce, as well as the right to make decisions for how we go about reacting to crises, aka react or don't react.

Again, another reason we need to revolt against the economic system we are trapped in. So that when honest scarcity becomes a real problem, there is some justice to who suffers and perishes first.

I have no problems with environmental protection, but I don't like "sustainability". There is nothing more sustainable than an absolutely static lifestyle where nothing changes for centuries (think ancient times) without any ability to cope with unforeseen problems.
According to https://www.researchgate.net/public...nd_its_underlying_sustainability_correlations - quoted by https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability - "the term 'sustainability' should be viewed as humanity's target goal of human-ecosystem equilibrium (homeostasis) ..." - How can you be in an equilibrium (and it's obviously a static equilibrium) and still make progress?

Sustainability does not mean 'no change'. Your life has been sustained from birth to now - does that mean you never grew? Sustainability simply means we can continue to operate on the system we've devised without a predictable point approaching when that system will become insufficient for our needs. Establishing sustainability does not mean that we stop growing and developing... it actually frees us to put our efforts into other priorities, enabling greater achievement and overcoming more problems. Getting stuck on political BS when we HAVE beneficial solutions but are just having a hard time convincing humanity to stop being its own worst enemy is far more frustrating than not having the means to solve our issues at all.

:nono: It's "refuted". :) Or perhaps "is refutable but not refuted". I know this is more confusing, unless you try to explain how Newton's theories could ever have been supplanted if they were "proven".
We're arguing over semantics? As in, when to use the word refuted or not? Is that not just a little miscellaneous?

We should rather have an event called "Coral loss by Coral Bleaching" that randomly removes coral features in plots with high air pollution.
Agreed. An event would probably be far more suitable anyhow. That's a bit of a project for someone of course.

Eternal economical growth is not "sustainable" because it's an impossibility. Economical growth is of coarse a good thing, but we should not adapt our morals towards always pushing that growth to the limit. Often times we as a species call something that produce more bads than goods for economical growth, the bads can for example be ecological damages or health issues which in the long run is more costly than what we gained by making them. In other words we should start broadening our economical equations, at least try to include ecological factors.
As long as we cannot take dramatic steps towards getting our population to spread out to other planets very quickly, you are absolutely correct. It is horrifically damaging that our economic system must promote population growth to avoid collapse. If we don't change our ways, this will very soon cause very very bad things to be necessary.

Science can make what is not sustainable today sustainable tomorrow, but we should not run far over that limit thinking technology will catch up soon enough, that is simply arrogance.
I agree that it is arrogance to think we can rely on answers forthcoming that we do not currently have. There's always the distinct possibility we've cashed too many checks we cannot cover and there's simply no way out. At some point, no amount of problem solving can get around hitting walls like this. Even a surfer has to hit the beach someday.

I also agree with you that this is particularly the case if we ignore the answer we already have, which is that we MUST begin to accept, globally, that we have to start actively depopulating.

The best way to do that is to start making having less to no children be a popular concept. We CAN make this happen voluntarily. The argument is actually pretty solid... what's the point of life if every generation simply lives for the next? Be the generation that spends your time accomplishing the pinnacle of your family line's achievement rather than enabling another generation to potentially be the one to take that action. AKA, stop breeding if you can possibly emotionally handle the concept! Besides, having children is a huge sacrifice in your life... are you SURE you want to lose all that time and effort from other things you could experience?

We need to make it fashionable to deny breeding. We also need to strongly support birth control and educational efforts to back its use. For those who would argue this is against the value of 'life' I would argue that it is instead absolutely FOR the value of life. If we don't lean some global society-wide personal responsibility to diminish the population rather than expand it, we're just inviting more to the mass death party we're setting ourselves up for. I think we'd all like to avoid that hell wouldn't we?

It would be pretty bad from a human rights perspective to have to pull a China on that though. But it IS a pretty dramatic problem and growing worse fast.

The problem is that most of the future's problems are unforeseeable. How many of our current problems could have been foreseen in 1917? Or in 1817? Can we even begin to estimate what might worry the people of 2117? (Yes, I am assuming here that humanity will not die out in the next 100 years.)
Ok, point taken. So can we at least agree to cut the red tape crap and SOLVE the problems we know how to solve and stop being stuck on stupid so we can free our systems up to approach problems we haven't solved? Knowing we're going to be presented with even more to come someday that we cannot predict? What we CAN predict is already pretty daunting.

But no... our economic system needs continues to keep us stuck in self-defeating decisions in exactly the same way as an addict's emotional process keeps him stuck in a cycle of addiction. Those with power MUST let go of a lot of that power (permanently) or we're in very deep trouble.

A truism if you mean a truly infinite time, but very debatable if you mean "eternal" in the colloquial sense. There are more planets in the universe than grains of sand on earth.
But our ability to reach them as fast as we populate to support our economic growth needs is extremely questionable at the moment. Probably something we can eventually overcome, if we survive long enough to. When populations implode (easily observed phenomenon in nature in most animal populations), it's often enough to take down every individual in that population and can lead to extinction of the species, at least locally.

On Easter Island, this pretty much happened to humanity and is a good prediction model for Earth as a whole. Sure we found some natives there when we discovered the islands, but they may not have had much more time to survive there at all with how much they had stripped the land of its capacity to support any human life at all.

The problem is always when you have to say who needs to go. Please keep in mind just how close this topic is to something horrendous. And according to https://ourworldindata.org/food-per-person/ - chart "Daily food supplies for countries around the world" - food production per person has constantly increased at least since 1960 (2200 -> 2700 kcal/day).
I guess I've already addressed this thought above. It IS a big issue, yes. And a huge reason to change the way we do things.

And the "arrogance" you mentioned is a funny thing. Science and technology really have transformed and enriched our lives (to the point where a middle-class person today has a vastly greater wealth than medieval royalty), whereas "sustainability" still has a lot more to prove. What is more arrogant - asserting that you can continue a story of incredible success that has already lasted for a few centuries, or claiming that switching over to a completely untested lifestyle is preferable?
When you know that the incredible success you've achieved with the system you have has also presented a growing price to pay for its use that will eventually lead to mass devastation of all that success, you must start looking at other, better ways to proceed. With mathematical modeling, nothing is ever truly 'untested'. Plus there are also many small scale examples of many attempts to find better ways, and problems have been identified so as to be potentially then solved (a problem cannot be solved until its determined what the problem is and what it stems from, which is exactly what a human mind can currently do that an AI struggles to do.)

We're back to our old debate here of socialism vs capitalism of course. The problem, then, specifically, with capitalism, in these frames of discussion, is that it is based on the ponzy scheme of relying on a larger population in the next generation to pay the debts of the previous generation by nature of economic expansion. It constantly borrows from the future for current benefit and the boulder over our heads grows larger and larger every year. Meanwhile we can all feel like everything is sunshine and roses now so our system must be great right? So long as we blind ourselves to the innevitable implosion that any ponzy scheme runs up against eventually if it cannot find more victims to wrap into its illusion of wealth.

Someone always ends up paying the price at some point. And at that point we all realize we can't allow anyone to do all that to people again and regulatory laws emerge. It'd be nice if we took corrective action towards our whole economic system now and in a measured manner, rather than letting it all collapse uncontrollably leading to massive starvation and death someday in the future.


OK, back on the mod development directly (and please keep in mind that the above conversation does relate to how we politically craft the future experiences under various systems someday):

<iTrainReluctance>10</iTrainReluctance>

What does this do? Only 3 Property systems have this, Education, Air and Water Pollution. Why was another Tag deemed necessary for these particular systems?
This is a peg in the latest AI advancements. It has given me an effective and necessary tool to help them determine if and when to 'give up' on over-extended efforts to control a property that may not require absolute control or would be too expensive to try too hard to address to perfection. It limits the AI willingness to expend limited resources (gold basically) towards property control. You'll probably have to let me tweak that as I find it necessary by deep code evaluation to do so. It may even become necessary to deepen the AI structure yet further eventually.

Only Education, Air and Water Pollution should generally be shown restraint in direct responses with unit production, thus why only these three have any value there. Crime and Disease are pretty much an 'always keep training more units if you need them' type of affair, up to a second limiting check in the code that I've discussed elsewhere that is a lot more tolerant. That limiter is based on the defined 'operational range' tag.

So for example, if you didn't have this tag in use, you could - actually no... you WOULD - end up with runaway training of entertainers, park rangers, or ecologists, that could sink a nation's economy. The Park Rangers are the most dangerous, to be honest, because they make such a small dent in the pollution problem that you can invest an entire economy into them and still barely address the pollution issue.

Did some reading on Reef bleaching. It's as much related to Water pollution as it is Air. I moved Reef Bleaching into Water pollution to give each category 12 "items". Each Pollution has 4 groupings with 3 "items/buildings" per group.
I won't argue against it as it's subjective to some extent how to model it. However, I don't necessarily think that trying to make Air Pollution have the same amount of autobuilds as Water Pollution really does us any benefit, though I do understand the design elegance motive. I've made some sacrifices for design to that end as well.

Have you considered what it might be like if we turned this into an event instead though? Maybe just taking it out of the autobuilds and putting it there may be the best way to go.

Will also be extending Range from 0-1000 to 0-2000 as posted before.

Will still keep 1st entrant for each Pollution at the 400-450 range. But will not allow next step to level up to be only 50 points high than previous for any category or group.
Big fan of your approach here. I'm hoping it has a significant effect but I suspect we may want to extend it even further eventually.

Also slowing the rates of accumulation by ~20%.
How are you achieving this? One thing I've always thought about pollution imbalance is that early early buildings are giving far too much impact and could use dramatic reduction. You shouldn't be able to build up to a noticeable problem with something like a cooking fire. Sure it should be there to play a role in slow buildup that later becomes larger buildup but I think we should look at the values of pollution assigned and ramp them up more gradually and smoothly until a huge boost in the industrial era when it starts being something we really are causing a problem with.
 
How are you achieving this? One thing I've always thought about pollution imbalance is that early early buildings are giving far too much impact and could use dramatic reduction. You shouldn't be able to build up to a noticeable problem with something like a cooking fire. Sure it should be there to play a role in slow buildup that later becomes larger buildup but I think we should look at the values of pollution assigned and ramp them up more gradually and smoothly until a huge boost in the industrial era when it starts being something we really are causing a problem with.

I just started plugging hard numbers into the property system and then started doing the math on diffusion and decay as laid out in each property. I found that with the recent adjustments I've made that I've slowed down the accumulation/build up approximately 20%, varies a bit by the round down factor of BtS. When you are working with 4, 5, and 12 %s even changing a 4 to a 5 or a 5 to a 6 can have this effect.

And I 100% agree with the rest of this paragraph of yours. I itch to go into the RegularBuildingsInfos and make changes. But I've held of until after these property adjustments get some play time from the Players.

In another post you mentioned the Ecologist and Park Ranger. Why doe the Ranger and Ranger Station give such minuscule reductions to Air and Water Poll. And does the Ecologist even address these 2 Areas of pollution at all? Or is it just a "healer" unit? It really should address them so that if you sent a group of 5-10 around the empire they could "rest" on a tile and reduce the pollutions that are there. Cleaning up the country side so the diffusion from the city to adj tile is reduced and then the send back diffusion to the city is less slowing down the build up in the city. And of course like Healers and LE they can be stationed in the city to reduce the main city tiles build up. I actually hope they are designed for this and just need a small buff.

That Ground Scrubber though can not give +100 Air P. Even though it is reducing Water P by +200. The Artificial tree farm only does a -50 Air and -50 water.

And on the subject of factories, the modders that made then cookie cutter designed them. 90% of them all have +5 Air P and +5 Flamm, with the other 10% giving Higher. The Factory could be building Toothpicks and still have these cookie cutter penalties. And when you have at various Eras as many as 20+ factories to build from the Air P and Flamm build up fast. Not even counting smelters/smithies/shops in these calculations.

You may not remember this but when Hydro 1st put out the Smokehouse I argued how in the world does a Smokehouse give +20 Air P and +10 Flam. Is the smoke house the size of a football field? Don't think so. And look at the Era it's introduced in too! Got the Stone Ear treatment and the Name Mr. NoNo from arguing with him over stuff like this. :lol:
 
Why doe the Ranger and Ranger Station give such minuscule reductions to Air and Water Poll.
Because although they do try to clean up some and they try to enhance awareness of responsible habits, it isn't truly the heart of their job to be an EPA agent. Their efforts are more towards keeping things presentable to the public than in reaction to any real large pollution concerns like we know them today.

And does the Ecologist even address these 2 Areas of pollution at all? Or is it just a "healer" unit? It really should address them so that if you sent a group of 5-10 around the empire they could "rest" on a tile and reduce the pollutions that are there. Cleaning up the country side so the diffusion from the city to adj tile is reduced and then the send back diffusion to the city is less slowing down the build up in the city. And of course like Healers and LE they can be stationed in the city to reduce the main city tiles build up. I actually hope they are designed for this and just need a small buff.
They are the upgrade of the Ranger and they are much more effective. They are to be comparable to a modern EPA agency crew today. I've seen the EPA do some amazing things to reverse pollution effects locally, particularly water pollution. They took the Silver Valley in Idaho from a toxic dump of lead and toxic smelting byproducts and total scorched earth from hydraulic mining practices and returned the region to a fairly healthy woodland paradise once again. They really can be quite amazing, but it takes a lot of work and we're working at this stage with fairly young technologies to address deep pollution issues so they aren't as good as units I think we still need to have come later in the game... perhaps simply merging into the worker line from here on after. I haven't done the review to see where we'll go there yet but I figure we should let ecologists upgrade to the next levels of workers and have workers at that stage be potentially quite effective, both naturally, and with promotions, in particular buildups, that can specialize them in a particular type of cleanup.

That Ground Scrubber though can not give +100 Air P. Even though it is reducing Water P by +200. The Artificial tree farm only does a -50 Air and -50 water.
It's supposed to be an out of the frying pan and into the fire thing. If it's too strong for the 0-2000 scale, I suppose +50 Air Pollution, -100 Water Pollution might work better perhaps? Or even keep the -100 WP but just reduce the AP penalty to +50. It really should stay true to its original concept to some degree. Rebalancing is one thing but destroying the point of the thing (something you may want to think twice before committing to building to solve a large WP problem) is another.

And on the subject of factories, the modders that made then cookie cutter designed them. 90% of them all have +5 Air P and +5 Flamm, with the other 10% giving Higher. The Factory could be building Toothpicks and still have these cookie cutter penalties. And when you have at various Eras as many as 20+ factories to build from the Air P and Flamm build up fast. Not even counting smelters/smithies/shops in these calculations.
I agree. We've needed a dramatic rethinking of how we work these factories, not because it was bad design for a human player to consider, but because it does not work for the AI who will gladly ignore the penalties for the benefits and build them everywhere they can.

There's also big problems with balancing these with the corporation system. This is a MUCH bigger issue that the pollution factor.

My current thought on these is that perhaps a city should be able to build a generic factory, perhaps multiple generic factories, each one more demanding than the last on population requirements. Each generic factory enables the construction of a specific product producing factory, which we model as the choice that the generic factory decided to start producing. The generic factory establishes nothing but the ability to build the specific ones and the specific ones create the bonuses being produced there along with all the nasty pollution and such that the industry for that product tends to produce. Yeah, it will take a little deeper research into what polutants a particular sort of product tends to create as byproducts. But it would help us with balance a lot to use this approach.

You may not remember this but when Hydro 1st put out the Smokehouse I argued how in the world does a Smokehouse give +20 Air P and +10 Flam. Is the smoke house the size of a football field? Don't think so. And look at the Era it's introduced in too! Got the Stone Ear treatment and the Name Mr. NoNo from arguing with him over stuff like this.
I remember. I was with you on this and over time he started seeing the light. I still think we need even further rethinking. EX: A fire pit may create 1 Air Polution. A bonfire, perhaps 2. A smokehouse, perhaps 3 at most. Measure AP in bonfires-worth, perhaps. Being as forgiving as possible, while simply using the numbers to give perspective on the amount of output being more or less than other contemporary examples, at least until real industry sets in and it starts getting severe. I don't even think a forge would give ALL that much. Perhaps as much as 4 or 5 at most. Foundaries and we're starting to get a bit more severe. And so on.
 
I say we need to consume less and work less, have less children for a couple of hundred years, and this would of course mean a massive economical degrowth. Good luck winning an election with that slogan. ^^
You'd not only have my vote, you'd have my savage grassroots efforts behind you. I would commit my life to that campaign if I FULLY believed you meant it.

Of course, there would then be the difficulty of overcoming those who believe you have good intent but an absolute inability to achieve your aims. To which, my argument has always been, our votes aren't supposed to be tempered by our pessimism, they are purely to be used to declare our intent as a people. I intend not to accept defeat before we try to reach for everything we should be demanding of our government.

But such a campaign goal would also have to at least suggest how we'd make it work, and sadly, few have been able to make that case because what it really means is a dramatic change to our capitalist systems and would mean we're ready to start paying down on the debts made against our futures. It WON'T be a comfortable path, so yeah, most won't think it's a good thing. But surprisingly, I think the most dramatically radical ideas being floated in politics these days is going to become the means to achieve these goals while avoiding a complete economic collapse... the key here will be socialist programs like base income, unconditionally free higher education, and treating health care as an absolute right rather than a privilege. We'll probably have to find ways to declaw the tigers of big money to achieve these goals though. So we may be in for some real uncompromising socio-political revolution to achieve it.
 
I had Uncles that fought in WWII that faced ppl with the same kind of "ideals" you propose. Your Nation was our ally, but your hatred of America is very saddening.
I'm not sure many of us have a very clear understanding in the States here about what ideals we were fighting in WWII because they were very different from those we went to war with in Vietnam and after. I'm just saying that the victor writes the history books and often leaves out some very interesting details.

But from what I have come to believe I understand, we are now finally today closer in our own ideals to those of the leaders we defeated in WWII than we have ever been. This is because, once defeated, our foes from then have not died as a political entity, they just picked plan B, blend with them and make them become us. And right now, right NOW in this moment in time, these enemies from WWII are winning in that effort. We have, as a nation, under the current regime, politically begun to reflect their core values far more than those we were defending at the time.


That said, I say this with some reservations about many of Toffer's statements. I'm with him up to about half of his points and then, where I feel he has been blinded by the very propaganda that led him to more truth than most of us here in the States will ever be exposed to, he continues to believe the feed as they wove some tremendous lies into that same fabric.

To clarify, my opinion is this, there are two primary factions of Oligarchs currently wrestling for control in this world, three if you count the Chinese leadership in there. One is the Freemason/Illuminati/Rothschild banker globalists that invented banking and the Federal Reserve and the World Bank and so on.

The other is a group of more individually powerful individuals in a coalition aligned against the first group. THIS group is the 4th Reich, primarily funded by the results of Nazi reinvestments. Both groups are capitalists at heart. Both want globalism. But the second wants to eliminate all resistance to their increasing power and are on the rise and have finally stepped out of the shadows AS a coalition to start revealing themselves through 'collusion' between nations you might think were never going to be allies before now. This 2nd group is much less concerned with the well-being of people at all and are almost little more than a coalition of powerful global criminals frustrated with the limits placed on individual wealth and power. They just want to break through this net holding them down but they have done well to sell themselves to people as the 'saviors' against the globalists.

The original globalists, call them the Illuminati, would at least try to manage us, as a herd, as effectively as they can, although they see a very clear distinction of the difference between pawns (the poor) and themselves and carry a deep belief in their own superiority and value. They will NOT allow those outside their collection of hand selected family dynasties (they have a strong belief in superior genes) to become true equals and although they promote ideas like human rights and liberties, they more honestly can be seen as caste system adherents, believing the caste established travels in the family. They do give some ability for a family line to take steps up or down the caste ladder but there are limits. Rockefeller, for example, did well to earn a very high caste ranking for his family.

Truth is, neither of these groups are good for us to follow, yet they play us right and left against each other, each being deeply evil by definition because of their total lack of respect for human life. To both, we are just a pool of resources to wield or discard as the need may be. They both have plans for how they will survive the coming Earth Changes and how they might even avert some problems by bringing on a major population destroying war between them in a bid for global domination. The trick would be to do so without allowing the nukes to fly, thereby reducing the planet's overall ability to support these (admittedly diminishingly) useful resources they call the masses of humanity.

You said that you were dissapointed with Toffer's hatred of America but he's never stated that he feels any hatred for America directly. From what I read in his statements, he doesn't. He hates the Illuminati globalists that rigged 9/11 to take place to justify our expanding invasions of lands for their natural resources and to feed the military industrial complex, as well as put us in strategic positions that give 'us' an upper hand against Russia and/or China depending on who our true foes end up being in this coming war. The coin is still flipping in the air on that determination at the moment, but it will come to rest somewhere. Toffer has the Russian propaganda's viewpoint and the truths in it that most Americans reject as quickly as they hear it because it would mean they'd have to understand just how evil some of our leaders have been and we can't accept that because it means too great a blow to our own personal egos.

I'll not take the time to go through Toffer's very interesting list of what the West has done and clarify how I feel those events were often much deeper than either side's propaganda wishes to push. However, there are just as serious a set of lies coming from that other side too and I feel a lot of those were swallowed along with the truths they fed to conceal those lies. If anyone would like to explore my thinking on this and how I've come to this conclusion, PM me because I think we're starting to make for a universally offensive thread, much as I find it quite interesting.

There's a lot of potential ways we could be headed here in the near future as the public is caught between the crossfire in this rapid fire war of propaganda (soon to be much more physical) that we are witnessing now. Probably most people are confused about something about their own outlook because of some kind of inconsistency that comes from not having the full picture. This is causing many of us to grow powerful in denial of these blind spots in their worldview, and to hunker down and stop taking in opposing viewpoints as being potentially valid, like ships anchoring in a storm. Many of us are taking solace in the fact that we can feel we are on a 'team' to adopt one side's way of thinking or another (the reason die-hard political party supports simply cannot understand how so many people they know can believe in a different way.)

However, on an international level, if you REALLY follow the thinking of 'your side' you'll find that there are webs of lies that have tremendous gaps in them on both ends. These are confusing because neither side has presented a model of political truth that can account for or answer for these inconsistencies and most of us haven't found a personal objective model that can.

My advice in the coming days is to not pick any sides to the point that you're willing to send or take a bullet for that side because no matter how much you may think you are on the side of right, there really isn't one here... just a couple of demons fighting over their dinner... you... and how they're going to eat it. Try to stay OUT of the conflicts if you can. The rare side of light and love doesn't have a leader at the moment. But we do outnumber both of these world powers if we could manage to unite, and maybe we will someday.

I share my thinking on political ideals because I believe I see serious problems with our current ways of doing things and better ways that we can. You might notice I try to understand the positions of my opponents as much as possible and this is because usually there are truths in any set of ideals, and there are also things those that support those ideals don't want to admit. I believe there's a true IDEAL somewhere in the middle grounds to be found.

However, when it comes time for those who support unconditional love to rise and try to install the rug made from the golden threads of many opposing ideals, any revolution for good MUST adhere to the fact that the means must be just, or the ends become corrupted once achieved, thus our effort to change and improve our ways need to be non-violent in nature... purely a matter of logical convincing, making the truth so obvious that it cannot be refuted. ;)

Love thine enemy, for this is the only way to open their 'eye' so they may see and become your ally. ALL life is valuable. As is our continued friendship here, despite our disagreements. We all shared some ideas that needed to be heard by those reading, or at least considered, so as to promote the growth of deeper understanding. So let's try not to get too down on each other on this stuff.
 
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Please read the following Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buzzword - You basically define unsustainable to mean "not working" - but you can just call it "not working".
Looks like you linked the wrong word, no definition of sustainability there.
I define unsustainable as something that works for now, but won't over a period of time.
This discussion started with you saying, that you dislike the concept of "sustainability", that made it sound that you are saying we should not worry about the reasons behind the problems but rather keep on going because someone will find a way to treat the symptoms (in the metaphor: the reason is the disease). That we should continue to have faith that we are not to blame for any problems we may face, that we can continue to pollute because sustainability is stupid.
Do you see a mismatch between these two sentences?
Not really, you are trying too hard to disagree with me.
You might have to build factories, you might have to train workers (or even engineers and academics), and if you are really unlucky, important knowledge has been lost (think Saturn V).
You makle it sound like life is a perpetual war where we must always be on high alert.
There are professional programmers, you know.
Sure, but they are not free to work on whatever they want, and they usually don't have the capacity/interest to do programming much outside of work.
That's mostly related to taxes.
People will help their neighbors more if they have more free time and unspent energy, and if we consume less we can have more free time regardless of taxes.
Fun fact: Population growth has been slowing for quite some time according to the World Bank: https://blogs.worldbank.org/futuredevelopment/rapid-slowdown-population-growth - Besides, the problems you mention are real but far less urgent than you make them out. I already mentioned global energy consumption rate could theoretically rise to Kardashev II (17.35 * 10^12 W -> 4 * 10^26 W) and the farming area (currently about the area of asia) could still be increased (not by that much, of course) and the gain/area could - perhaps - rise still further before humanity gets in trouble. Our energy crisis is more like a technology crisis, since we cannot access better energy production methods right now (that problem might be solved by mid-century), and the problems of farming are mostly technological as well (is GMO food save to eat - if yes, there should be no crisis at all, although additional research might still be necessary, otherwise we might have to look for other avenues).
The longer we wait with tackling global warming the more urgent the problem becomes, did you find my 1000 year disaster prognosis too urgent?
Overpopulation is the main reason for global warming and many other problems like people living far too dense for comfort.
What was the problem with Crimea / Eastern Ukraine again?
The difference is that I believe the inner enemy was those who performed the coup against a democratically elected leader.
The main force behind the coup was fascists who believe some people are born better than others, people who openly have expressed their opinion on how russian speaking ukrainians were generally less worth as human beings.
I think it was two days after the coup that the new government announced that russian was no longer gonna be the official language anywhere in the country, the east have long had russian as the official language, no longer would children be able to write their native language in school and so on. No wonder people in the east were angry and demanded a reelection where the old president could be a candidate, only a week or two went before the newly established government ordered the army to confront those who were conducting civil unrest.
There are also about 10 % Tartars who have greatly suffered from the Russians a few decades ago. Oh, and...
You seem to confuse Russia with the Soviet Union.
Since the 1930s / 1940s have already been mentioned, you might compare your description with https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anschluss - and then you can tell me if you find the similarities a bit disturbing. Although you have by now defended Stone-Age totalitarianism (North Korea), a dictator who had absolutely no qualms about terrorist acts (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pan_Am_Flight_103) and the Taliban (another interesting read: Afghanistan, Where God Only Comes to Weep).
I'm not defending the North Korean political system, I'm attacking our way of handling it. The country might have been as ordinary as any others today if we had made peace with them much earlier, their only demand was independence. They would probably not have spent all those resources on acquiring a nuclear weapon if they were not at war with the USA, they would probably not have isolated themselves if we offered them trade and diplomacy, they would probably not have brainwashed their people with crazy propaganda and so on if they had been treated as human beings.
 
There are two facts that don't seem to have sunk in yet:-

  1. Based on world statistics we passed "peak child" sometime around 2000-2003. All population growth since then has been due to people living longer and so not making way for the newly born.

    There are only a few nations in the world where the birth rate is above replacement value, I think it was 12 or less.

    Spoiler a bit of rambling :
    Food production at the moment is enough to feed everyone but distribution is not getting it to places it is needed. Improving the agricultural practices in many countries would improve yield and distribution.

    Humans have followed the standard biology "S" curve in population growth the issue is if we want to sustain this level of population (until new frontiers open up) or we let it crash. Those are the two options.

    The crises we currently face are distribution, climate change, etc.. Failure to address these will mean a population crash. Population crashes happen all the time. Many species survive them, many don't and go extinct and some end up on the brink eg the cheetah.


  2. We will eventually have to move away from fossil fuels to other means because they will eventually run out.
    Spoiler another bit of rambling :
    (I don't see importing them to Earth from Titan as possible in time. Nor do I expect us to find significant fields in the asteroid belt. Although it is possible based on the physics of space.)


    Doing so before is better economically. As with the move from horse and cart to the car it wont be without pain but it will be better for everyone in the long term.
That did not come out quite right....almost but not quite...close enough to post anyway
 
You said that you were dissapointed with Toffer's hatred of America but he's never stated that he feels any hatred for America directly. From what I read in his statements, he doesn't. He hates the Illuminati globalists that rigged 9/11 to take place to justify our expanding invasions of lands for their natural resources and to feed the military industrial complex, as well as put us in strategic positions that give 'us' an upper hand against Russia and/or China depending on who our true foes end up being in this coming war. The coin is still flipping in the air on that determination at the moment, but it will come to rest somewhere. Toffer has the Russian propaganda's viewpoint and the truths in it that most Americans reject as quickly as they hear it because it would mean they'd have to understand just how evil some of our leaders have been and we can't accept that because it means too great a blow to our own personal egos.
What you said there about 9/11 make me sound like a conspiracy nut-job, I wan't top distance myself from it, although I do believe we have mostly ourself to blame for most of the terrorism we see today. It was we who declared war on terror, counterstrikes are to be expected. Our handling of the israel/palestine conflict is nothing to be proud over either. A legacy from the age of colonization is also still haunting us in hard to define way.
About russian propaganda: I do not frequent any russian outlets of news or forums. All my opinions are only based on the BBC news I've listened to for every day the last 20 years, and sometimes also based on some Norwegian news outlets.
Love thine enemy, for this is the only way to open their 'eye' so they may see and become your ally. ALL life is valuable. As is our continued friendship here, despite our disagreements. We all shared some ideas that needed to be heard by those reading, or at least considered, so as to promote the growth of deeper understanding. So let's try not to get too down on each other on this stuff.
My principles on tolerance and freedom of speech won't allow me to get angry at those with different opinions. Debates are the foundation of civilization.
 
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Based on world statistics we passed "peak child" sometime around 2000-2003. All population growth since then has been due to people living longer and so not making way for the newly born.

There are only a few nations in the world where the birth rate is above replacement value, I think it was 12 or less.
This is a good point to remind us of during this discussion. That the method of creating a reduction in breeding (social promotion and education) is actually happening and slowly working is also a truth the media doesn't like to share because it's actually GOOD news. (Nobody likes GOOD news much it seems.)

Food production at the moment is enough to feed everyone but distribution is not getting it to places it is needed. Improving the agricultural practices in many countries would improve yield and distribution.
Again true, and in many cases the challenge is political rather than a matter of not having solutions determined. Example: many African leaders, when their nation receives aide, hoard those incoming resources and use them to derive more wealth while their people continue to starve when they didn't have to.

The part that's disturbing about food production, however, is that we are largely strip mining the soil to create so much food and using some very unsavory practices among GMO (which is not inherently a bad word but Monsanto does corrupt it more for profit than for true benefit for people and is NOT taking good care with it - the disappearing bee crisis, for example, may be related to their attempts to (successfully) grow parasite resistant crops that have the unfortunate side-effect of poisoning the bees that try to cross-pollinate with those crops) and setting ourselves up for a point where the food production we have cannot continue at the rate it's currently at for very long, yet we'll somehow need to be ramping it up to cover other stripped resources bases (Toffer's fish example, particularly in the Pacific since the damage that the Fukushima generator leakage is far greater than the media wants us to know - trying to keep us from being as concerned about nuclear generators as we should be) right about the time that we start seeing those food production methods decline in effectiveness.

On the positive, I think we can, with increasingly efficient science and agricultural methods, easily rise to the occasion to enhance food output further still and make it more sustainable than it currently is with our modern nitrate soil injection methodologies. I foresee yet another green revolution so to speak, in agriculture where controlled biospheric systems are employed and we further benefit from it by stopping how badly we currently pollute our oceans and rivers with our current, at one point not so long ago, ground-breaking AG methods. Another benefit of that wave of the future will be that we can pretty much perform this kind of ultra-controlled power-agriculture in space or on other planets as well... effectively anywhere we can simply provide energy.

Not that food is the only problem with over-population. There again, we need to work on improving our governmental systems worldwide so that we start being more about making things as good as we can for everyone over a select successful few.

Humans have followed the standard biology "S" curve in population growth the issue is if we want to sustain this level of population (until new frontiers open up) or we let it crash. Those are the two options.

The crises we currently face are distribution, climate change, etc.. Failure to address these will mean a population crash. Population crashes happen all the time. Many species survive them, many don't and go extinct and some end up on the brink eg the cheetah.
This has been my biggest point, in a nutshell. I know I say a lot more words to get to the same conclusion. We closely agree on this at least.

Doing so before is better economically. As with the move from horse and cart to the car it wont be without pain but it will be better for everyone in the long term.
Again... such a simple truth. Why is it so hard for us to all agree that this is obvious?
 
Looks like you linked the wrong word, no definition of sustainability there.
Looks like you really didn't understand what I meant here. I gave my definition when I quoted myself. And it was exactly that definition ...

According to https://www.researchgate.net/public...nd_its_underlying_sustainability_correlations - quoted by https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sustainability - "the term 'sustainability' should be viewed as humanity's target goal of human-ecosystem equilibrium (homeostasis) ..."

... that I disagree with. Trying to reach a lifestyle where you can continue to live pretty much indefinitely without change. I am not disagreeing with the need to solve our (current and future) problems. And there will always be problems, having to solve problems has been a constant (at least) of humanity from the beginning.

Not really, you are trying too hard to disagree with me.
You don't see a problem with the reasoning: They [the majority] is not always right, so they are usually wrong. Interesting.

You makle it sound like life is a perpetual war where we must always be on high alert.
Or at least ready to face the problems we have. And some of these risks have a much higher probability of occuring than a nuclear power plant meltdown (without people acting so incredibly stupid that you have to wonder how they ever made it past elementary school).

Sure, but they are not free to work on whatever they want, and they usually don't have the capacity/interest to do programming much outside of work.
It's also a profession where there are many freelancers.

I think it was two days after the coup that the new government announced that russian was no longer gonna be the official language anywhere in the country, the east have long had russian as the official language, no longer would children be able to write their native language in school and so on.
"The government"? Sure, the right-wing bloc (which I am not defending by the way) made a few demands, but I think that particular proposal was quickly shot down - by the new government. Implementing these rules was not even attempted.

You seem to confuse Russia with the Soviet Union.
And you seem to confuse Russia (the country) with the Russians. According to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_the_Soviet_Union#Ethnic_groups more than half of the SU's citizens were Russians.

The country might have been as ordinary as any others today if we had made peace with them much earlier, their only demand was independence.
First, who started that war again? Second, you can try living in a divided nation for a few decades and see if you like it. The complete separation from some of your relatives is really fun, and there is always the suspense if you can ever see them again.

if we offered them trade and diplomacy
as opposed to those care packages they blackmailed, you mean?

if they had been treated as human beings
We could always treat them like they treat their citizens.

our foes from then have not died as a political entity, they just picked plan B
I saw that movie, too.
 
The latest report from CSIRO, the Australian science research organisation, shows that the improved wheat farming techniques, including such things as "no plough" seeding, have increased efficiency (defined as reduced effort to get same yields) of wheat farming a lot since 1901 when figures were first collected. Unfortunately those same figures show that these improvements are only just keeping pace with climate change affects that reduce yields. Given that they only have 10-20 years of data from this source they were not willing to say how quick climate change was happening, but the figures suggest it is closer to the worst case than to the best case.
 
What you said there about 9/11 make me sound like a conspiracy nut-job
Well... please try not to blame America, or... 'the west' as a general whole. I am saying this was what a small cabal of US intelligence operatives setup and implemented (largely through Bush family contacts.) AKA, Osama wasn't doing anything he wasn't told to do. One need not call those who understand these facts and connections 'nut-jobs'. They're just widely self-educated enough to see how the pieces fit together is all. Any limited source of reporting these days will only present one side of a story and they're all trying to evade expressing the truths in different places.

About russian propaganda: I do not frequent any russian outlets of news or forums. All my opinions are only based on the BBC news I've listened to for every day the last 20 years, and sometimes also based on some Norwegian news outlets.
You wouldn't have to. They've been very effective at infiltrating sources you might not expect it to be coming from. It's when you actually DO start reading their outright propaganda material that you start to be able to identify it for what it is, a whole worldview being promoted.

I didn't mean to be offensive about this either. I'm pretty sure your alignment with the propagandic outlook they have been subtly promoting for decades has been more about seeing through the lies the 'West' (Illuminati propaganda) have been shoving down our throats. Russian propaganda operates strongly on reaching out to those who see through our own Western hypocrisies. You've likely come to similar conclusions they'd have you come to because you are more insightful than most. The problem is they're twisting the minds of those who see through so you're in a position right now where I would hope you might start looking very closely at them to make sure they are as innocent as these statements make it seem you feel them to be
.. to demonize Russia, when they have not been the aggressor in any wars while we have been the aggressor in dozens since the formation of Russia.
.. to unconditionally support the fascist coup in the democratic country of Ukraine, lead by a party that openly have categorized all that resemble russian culture as bad; this in a country with a long history of discrimination towards all its russian speaking inhabitants.
.. to demonize Iran as revenge for the time they threw the Americans out of their country.
That it was right to embargo Cuba all this time for no apparent reason.
Russia has been very solidly making move after move to become a dominant force calling the shots on the global stage, not seeking to compromise at all on obvious matters which require such compromise. They have shown tremendous unwillingness to accept that they are no longer in charge of the entire region that was once the USSR and they react to defensive measures against them in NATO as if those defensive measures are offensive when the reality is, if they didn't plan to eventually enable their ability to start taking invasive steps into other nations in their region, they would have no cause to be concerned with measures like missile shield arrays.

I'll be the first to admit that we have meddled with them and now call them demon for doing the same in return. But they haven't exactly been doing all they can to promote peace and cooperation these days. Admittedly, neither are we.

The 'fascist coup in Ukraine was largely just propaganda to call them fascists. It's the cat calling the kettle black. Truth is, the Kremlin has made more white supremacist policies and comments than a few Nazi flags being waved (by who exactly?) by fighters in Ukraine. The policies they have against the LGBTQ community is a horrendous human rights violations and numerous rivals to Putin's power have been brazenly assassinated. He commands a cabal of Oligarchs that have spread a whole lot of influence out into the world of the West and only now are we beginning to see just how deep this cancer has grown. I don't want to touch too deeply on anti-semitism because you have to be a true conspiracy nut-job to navigate that mess.

And sure, Iran has been demonized in many ways, but when they openly state without shame that they wish to nuke Israel off the map I think we have some cause for concern. What bothers me is that we've taken a hard approach with them on keeping them de-nuclearized while we allow for the potential death toll from an innevitable conflict with N. Korea to grow by the thousands daily as they continue to push for further nuclearization and we do nothing but argue for more trade embargoes because tha'ts worked so far, hasn't it? I know N. Korea is reacting to a very real understanding that we are trying to globalize and they wish to never allow this to happen. I know N. Korea is pretty justified in being irate with the US. I know that our capitalist leaders have pushed us into war and conflict with the spread of communism simply because it counters their ideals that have been their meal tickets. However, what N. Korea is doing is playing chicken with nukes and that can't be allowed to happen. Thankfully we stopped Iran from running the same gambit much earlier and more firmly. That we do continue to demonize Iran... is dangerous to world stability, yes. But it's not ALL about the hostage situation right?
 
I saw that movie, too.
The movie authors were not presenting mere fantasy. They were trying to help you see the truth of what's happening here.

There's been a lot of fragmented info on this coming through on the History Channel as well. Follow the post-war Nazi money and their reinvestments. It's very interesting indeed. (Though you can easily get lost in the web of minutia.)
 
@DH,
@Team,
We have a later game building called Ground Scrubbers. It costs 100 :gold: and reduces Water Pollution by 200 (which at it time in the game is Good), But.... for some reason the maker decided that it should also give a +100 to Air pollution (this is very bad). It is buildings such as this one that I want to change immediately. The +100 Air actually needs to be a -100 Air pollution.

The ground scrubber is based on the Sim City: Cities of Tomorrow building.

http://simcity2013wiki.com/wiki/Ground_Scrubber

"Extract ground pollution or radiation, converting it into air pollution."

It IS correct that it converts water pollution into air pollution.
 
Back On Topic:
So why have Reef Bleaching as an Air Pollution when we already have 3 Smog, 3 Ozone (which should cover RB), 3 Global Warming (which would also cover RB), plus another group which includes Acid rain, Toxic Atmosphere, and Blackened Skies. How much overkill is needed in a game?

To slowly have the process increase over many buildings rather than all their effects in one building. And as TB said it was to represent some more details on the subject. Just like how there are many kinds of crops, minerals, goods, buildings, crimes, pests, you name it I tied to go into detail about many different subjects to have a more gradual and personal feel to the game.

On thing i loved in the Sim City games is that they would report individual crimes that happened based on your crime level. That's why i added such to crime and in turn more specific pollution effects.
 
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