Re: With all the goofy revolution talk in the US...
Originally posted by tsscls
Who would the factions be in a modern civil war? I;m assuming there would be more than two. 1. Who would win?
2. Who should win?
3. What side wold you ne on?
Factions would be GDI and NOD.
I take dibs on the Mammoth Tank.
Re: Re: Re: With all the goofy revolution talk in the US...
Originally posted by Robtard
Bought the 'RA' version of that years ago at a bargain, couldn't get into, sold it on ebay shortly after.
The newest one is pretty good. They very actively support the game so just about every bug has been fixed, play is very even.
I like the expansion, too.
I haven't played in ages, but it reminds me a lot of Starcraft and we all know how legendary that is.
Originally posted by BackFire
Robtard, try RA3, it's awesome. I like the RA games more than the traditional C&C games, they have a more unique and distinct feel.
I'll probably just wait for SC2, as my gaming time is extremely limited, still occasionally wake up yelling "you require more vespene gas", and it's been many a year since I played.
Re: With all the goofy revolution talk in the US...
Originally posted by tsscls
Who would the factions be in a modern civil war? I'm assuming there would be more than two. 1. Who would win?
2. Who should win?
3. What side wold you be on?
The only way there could ever, possibly be a revolution in this country is if everyone in the military refused to take orders. Otherwise, there can never be a revolution because whom ever controls the military controls the country. Civil War would mean Government implemented nuclear holocaust. There is no way to beat the machine. Start revolution and you do just as they wish. Yield and enjoy life, well, they will bleed you dry just as they enjoy. So, who wins...,the machine wins. Dammit, i just depressed myself again 🙁
I think the culture war is a tool of propaganda used to continue to split a group of people who are way more in agreement with each other than not. EDIT: This largely serves the power brokers, who are able to control people by appealing to the side they are told they belong to. Not to point fingers, but I feel this was more apparent in conservatives, especially the "out of the church and into the street" christians comming out of the 80s, though the lib-tards have quickly caught up in their ignorance.
Funny how a "free" two-party system produces what can be interpreted as bi-modal opinions, /sigh and lol.