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RE: Learning the wrong things from the right games?

in #gaming7 years ago (edited)

O dear
this first bit confused me Taxation is theft the best! with theft crossed out. then you used words that did not exactly support taxation. Hence my ?
Then i admit it i got a little tense with the things you were saying about the Nazi party and the game and.... so i felt the need to inject a little reality. What really append, who funded it and why, the sooner we can wake up to why the world is such a cunt of place for so many people, the sooner people will understand what they need to support, and what the need to stop supporting to make it a better place.
Are you one of those people who demands comments be strictly in line with what you want or at least your main point? Actually i could have done that but what i did just seemed more important.
You should see what happens at a dinner party after a few drink, a reply is always connected to what has been said before, however it has been described as coming from an obtuse angle I can get more laughs from that than my jokes
Another way of labeling it would divergent thinking. It has an upside to it, try not to be too pissed off

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I wouldn't presume to demand anything, but I feel free to challenge you.

I don't support taxation, but I don't know that it is relevant to the post. I'm questioning whether or not accepting taxation orthodoxy is taught by these kind of games, even a little bit. I concluded that I think it is, but that there are plenty of opportunities for challenging that idea as life goes on.

I used the antisemitic board game as an example of ideals being transmitted very overtly in games, nothing really more, certainly nothing about the British Royals' connection to the Third Reich. What you said does remind me of what someone who's had a few too many drinks might say at a dinner party 😂