Wednesday, February 4, 2015

Hola

Once upon a time a gold farmer who played a [[game]] that can be sold for real money. This gamer was born in a developed country and he competed with people from other [[developed countries]]. The idea of the game is to protect the world from the bad people and the best [[collectivistic]] person. One of the most interesting things about this game is that touches on cultural topics relevant to modern day, such as gender equality, labor laws, and [[human rights]] concerns. Why? Because promotes freedom of speech and avoids censorship which is something that is usually seen in countries like [[North Korea.]] Moreover, this game engages innovative payment network. That means that there's not central authority or central bank. The practice of making video game currency and then selling it to other players for real life money. Many of these players who engage in this are from countries such as China, South Korea, and Vietnam. Gold farming sucks, no I don't want to buy your 1000 gold for $12.95.Depending on your ideology, they're the basic rights to life, liberty, and acquiring/owning property, etc. you get from God that can't be taken away ("inalienable") or similar rights that are granted to you by (but CANNOT be exercised contrary to the will of) the United Nations. "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights..." Thomas Jefferson - Declaration of Independence - July 4, 1776 "These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations." United Nations - The Universal Declaration of Human Rights - December 10, 1948A communist country ran by a short and ugly dictator named Kim Jung Il. It is the only country in the world where the government (rarely) distributes food to you and you can't get it anywhere else unless you enjoy tree bark and grass. It is the only country where concentration camps thrive. It is the only country where everyone shares one religion: Kim Jung-il. North Korea: the greatest theocracy in the world!The opposite of individualism. The belief or socio-economic policy which states that the interests of the collective outweigh the interests of the individual and that the individual exists solely to serve the collective. Under collectivism the individual is subordinate to the collective. Ex. Utilitarianism, Communism, and to some extent all statist philosophies practice collectivism. A term used by political scientists and economists to describe a country whose level of economic development ranks it somewhere between the developing and first-world classifications. These countries have moved away from an agriculture-based economy and into a more industrialized, urban economy.