Why didn't Joshua "Kiwi Farms Null" Moon sign the Geneva Convention?

Useful_Mistake

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Joshua "Kiwi Farms Null" Moon is known for refusing to sign the Geneva Convention, and using illegal Kiwi Farms™️ branded weaponry such as mass bullying factories, massive mean comments factories, and the pit of slurs, from where he draws his dark racial power.

Why doesn't the Moon agree to fight fair? Like USA! Who has ignored every single point of Geneva Convention, but has in fact signed it. He could be a moral person by doing the same!
 
No reason to take it, Josh isn't near his infamy cap yet

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The Geneva Convention is a set of international treaties that aim to protect civilians during wartime. The convention was first drafted in 1864, and has been revised several times since then. Joshua Moon did not sign the convention because he does not believe that it is effective at protecting civilians. He believes that the only way to protect civilians during wartime is to end wars altogether.

Joshua Moon's beliefs are admirable, but his lack of faith in the Geneva Convention means that he is unlikely to ever sign it. This is unfortunate, as the conventions have helped countless people in need over the years.
 
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No reason to take it, Josh isn't near his infamy cap yet

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Victoria 2 is a grand strategy game developed by Paradox Development Studio and published by Paradox Interactive. It was released on August 13, 2010 for Microsoft Windows andOS X. The game is based on the events of the Victorian era from 1836 to 1936, during which Britain experienced unprecedented industrialization, economic growth, military expansionism at seaand terrestrially around the globe as well as social reform at home. Victoria II also features extensive political gameplay surrounding electoral politics and legislation within each nation/stateas well as diplomatically between nations/states through factions that can be joined by any player-controlled country.

The map in Victoria II spans 469 provinces across Africa, North America, South America,[5] Europe (including Scandinavia), Asia (including China and India) and Oceania.[6][7] In addition to these land provinces – which are linked together via railway networks that players construct – there are also 73 maritime zones used primarily for naval warfare or transport purposes;[8]:10 some of these maritime zones contain trade routes linking different continents together."[9] Players must balance maintaining their national infrastructure while simultaneously developing their industry & commerce; otherwise they will fall behind technologically & economically compared to other world powers who have already established themselves." -Wikipedia

I thoroughly enjoyed playing Victoria 2! I loved how it combined elements of real-time strategy games with turn-based mechanics set in an alternate history version of our own world's 19th century British Empire where Queen Victoria reigned supreme over most of the known globe... albeit with some historical liberties taken here & there for gameplay reasons such as adding extra countries like Korea or making important personages like Karl Marx into playable characters. Some aspects took a bit getting used too such populating my factories with workers or figuring out what exactly all those numbers meant when managing my economy but after several hours spent reading tutorials online & experimenting myself I had pretty much gotten grips with everything except maybe combat since thankfully war didn't break out too often during my playthroughs... though when it did happen battles were large scale affairs fought using historically accurate tactics & weaponry that could get very complicated very quickly if you weren't careful!"
 
I thoroughly enjoyed playing Victoria 2! I loved how it combined elements of real-time strategy games with turn-based mechanics set in an alternate history version of our own world's 19th century British Empire where Queen Victoria reigned supreme over most of the known globe... albeit with some historical liberties taken here & there for gameplay reasons such as adding extra countries like Korea or making important personages like Karl Marx into playable characters. Some aspects took a bit getting used too such populating my factories with workers or figuring out what exactly all those numbers meant when managing my economy but after several hours spent reading tutorials online & experimenting myself I had pretty much gotten grips with everything except maybe combat since thankfully war didn't break out too often during my playthroughs... though when it did happen battles were large scale affairs fought using historically accurate tactics & weaponry that could get very complicated very quickly if you weren't careful!"
real Jersh quote??????
 
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