- Joined
- May 25, 2024
Yeah, because the Varna system, despite the claims of Indian leftists, has been in use for nearly two thousand years.didn't they even have the caste system in ck2?
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Yeah, because the Varna system, despite the claims of Indian leftists, has been in use for nearly two thousand years.didn't they even have the caste system in ck2?
Johan, save us, Johan, release Project Caesar and have it be good, Johan, save us.Vicky 3 is a huge dissapointment.
Never going to beat the communist allegations.
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Fucking lol, lmao even, they spout off the narrative that caste was a mean imposition by the British rather than the taking advantage of the preexisting systems. They even essentially admit as such almost immediately after, but in a backhanded fashion. Apparently codifying a common system to be legally entrenched in a universal legal system is "colonial creation". Indian leftists are the worst.
These are all factors that went into it, but it's quite clear from the evidence that if they attacked later than they did that the shortages they were experiencing would have seriously jeopardized the operation, to the point where they were going to have to demotorize and disband a significant portion of the army to get them back into the fields and factories.Here's the problem, Tooze concludes that Germany HAD to start Operation Barbarossa because pre war rearmament wasn't sustainable, which gets the priorities of the German leadership wrong and doesn't account for how the economy changed once the war began.
Germany wasn't bankrupting themselves and thereby putting themselves on a path of war, they were purposefully seizing what they saw as a diminishing window of opportunity to go to war, which wasn't sustainable, but which the leadership knew could be supported by going into a command economy once the war began. Operation Barbarossa had to happen as well when it did. The soviets were expanding their forces too, and every year spent waiting simply meant fighting a more prepared Soviet Union.
This is only true if you think that a) the leadership was banking on robbing Europe to pay Germany and b) they were going to be successful. Premise a) is certainly at minimum a shade of correct, but b) was clearly incorrect per history.There was never any danger of the economy collapsing because the leadership knew exactly where they were taking things.
Yes, Tooze is certainly a pinkie, however that does not discount the economic evidence he puts forward. Command economies and warfare economies, whether we are referring to Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, wartime United States, the Soviet Union, Japan, etc, they are incredibly inefficient. Even the United States, despite the results and propaganda, saw a massive reduction in productivity and real economic growth during the war period that didn't really disappear under the mid 1950s because of this. They could certainly turn Detroit into a gigantic tank farm, but the reality is that turning a train factory around and freezing prices does not help an economic system run efficiently. Luckily the United States did this temporarily, but for Nazi Germany it was the economic system.Tooze especially shows his colors when he starts writing about the Soviets once Germany invades.
The caste system under the Raj was very different to the prior systems in place, but it was definitely bourne out of them, and the British eventually turned it around closer to the end of the Raj. This effort still lives on with the scheduled tribes of India, but hey, the constitution of India isn't going to get in the way of a caste society when the country is virtually feudalism with cars.Never going to beat the communist allegations.
Fucking lol, lmao even, they spout off the narrative that caste was a mean imposition by the British rather than the taking advantage of the preexisting systems. They even essentially admit as such almost immediately after, but in a backhanded fashion. Apparently codifying a common system to be legally entrenched in a universal legal system is "colonial creation". Indian leftists are the worst.
You had me until this tidbit. I think the noted decline in productivity during the first few years of the conflict had to do more with around 16 million working Americans leaving their old jobs to fight and the typical disruptions within the manufacturing sector as production lines were retooled, labor force standards readjusted, and luxury resources rationed in response to the demands of war rather than any true decline in inherent productivity potential. The planned war economy was strong, but not enough to completely snuff out the civilian markets like other nations had to do to keep the army supplied. It was ineffective compared to a peacetime US economy but that's a foregone conclusion and doesn't prove much beyond stating the obvious that valuable resources spent outside the typical civilian economies will not benefit it until much later when the situation stabilizes to the point where excess war material is no longer needed in droves.Even the United States, despite the results and propaganda, saw a massive reduction in productivity and real economic growth during the war period that didn't really disappear under the mid 1950s because of this.
This was actually precisely my point, and I'd recommend The Economic Consequences of U.S. Mobilization for the Second World War by Field. It goes into far more detail than I could put in a single paragraph. You had millions of workers leaving for the front or for non-productive work and they were replaced by those without skills or women who had no experience and far less ability to achieve the output of men in industry. You had massive impacts to trade as shipping lines were completely abandoned in favor of the convoy system and many still did not get through. You had the lack of foreign imports requiring massive investment in home-grown sources or synthetic replacements (where Germany invested exorbitant resources in coal hydrogenation and rubber production for little gain, the US actually succeeded). All of this lead to opportunity costs, investment costs, production delays, etc, that sorely hit productivity. The saving grace for the US was that they had a huge amount of slack in the economy that Europe and Asia did not in the 1930s and 1940s.You had me until this tidbit. I think the noted decline in productivity during the first few years of the conflict had to do more with around 16 million working Americans leaving their old jobs to fight and the typical disruptions within the manufacturing sector as production lines were retooled, labor force standards readjusted, and luxury resources rationed in response to the demands of war rather than any true decline in inherent productivity potential.
They fall under the "etc" portion. It applies to every economy in the war. The results of the economic devolution can be seen in their loss of status and continuance of rationing for almost a full decade after the war.You also forgot to mention Great Britain which had a really inefficient bureaucracy to the point it sometimes rivaled the Soviets in the 90s.
It's nice to paint maps with the editor and not much more.Age of History 3 released and it has quite a few players for such a niche game. Anyone played it? How does it compare to paradox games?
Sorry for doubleposting, but Johan added Extraterritorial Countries to simulate Daimyos.
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And the Takeda are historically still in Chūgoku. I trvly knvvl.
Just glancing at it it looks like that is SPECIFICALLY about actual economic class, not cultural change.View attachment 6554699
Victoria 3 is adding caste to the game.
I suppose this will also be used to represent US segregation and Irish discrimination.
I'm interested in it, but it does like shit graphically.View attachment 6538561
Any y'all play Grand Tactician/Ultimate General/Civil War 2/other AGEOD and grand strategy stuff?
Problem is that since Total War maps are basically unmoddable nobody can make a proper Civil War mod. The mods that do exist just for battles tend to be so autistic (one million units and none of them work) that they're broken.
I like how granular the map is getting. I'm even more worried about how well it will play.
In one of the earlier dev diaries Johan said that in the current builds the ticks are as fast as in EU4Victoria 3 runs like garbage in the late game so this is actually my biggest worry. Project Caesar looks like it will have way more going on in general.
Fuck yeah. Now if only Paradox could give the USA something similar. Democracy in Latin America is non-negotiable.a aggressive Democracy by force Germany