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2015 in Retrospect: Where Will You Be Politically?
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<blockquote data-quote="Judge Bean" data-source="post: 9342" data-attributes="member: 42"><p><strong>2015 in Retrospect: Where Will You Be Politically?</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>It occurs to me that this issue may be the key to the Titor puzzle. First of all, he tells us that those who remain in the cities will have had ample opportunity to vacate and join up with the virtuous agrarian rebels. That those who remain in the cities (apparently not including Omaha or Tampa) include but are not limited to the wealthy and powerful-- the "haves." The cities are bombed and the government loses the war. </p><p></p><p>However, if the good guys get to survive by this fortuitous turn of events, and the good guys include the poor, then the poor, who don't have the means to escape the cities, are sacrificed (once again, no surprise) for the sake of the middleclass and upperclass virtuous ones. This is why I can't quite credit the scenario, and one of the reasons I think that Titor is not to be trusted, and, if anything, works for the government.</p><p></p><p>The poor would be the first to incite violent uprising, and would remain in the cities. This means that the theater of a modern American civil war would have to be urban, and it would be nearly impossible to distinguish between the good and bad citizens from the viewpoint of those in power. This accidental circumstance would be the only protection for the rebellion, given that the cities could not be effectively invaded or bombed.</p><p></p><p>The government in such a terrible fix would have needed to convince the rebels ahead of time to abandon the cities.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Judge Bean, post: 9342, member: 42"] [b]2015 in Retrospect: Where Will You Be Politically?[/b] It occurs to me that this issue may be the key to the Titor puzzle. First of all, he tells us that those who remain in the cities will have had ample opportunity to vacate and join up with the virtuous agrarian rebels. That those who remain in the cities (apparently not including Omaha or Tampa) include but are not limited to the wealthy and powerful-- the "haves." The cities are bombed and the government loses the war. However, if the good guys get to survive by this fortuitous turn of events, and the good guys include the poor, then the poor, who don't have the means to escape the cities, are sacrificed (once again, no surprise) for the sake of the middleclass and upperclass virtuous ones. This is why I can't quite credit the scenario, and one of the reasons I think that Titor is not to be trusted, and, if anything, works for the government. The poor would be the first to incite violent uprising, and would remain in the cities. This means that the theater of a modern American civil war would have to be urban, and it would be nearly impossible to distinguish between the good and bad citizens from the viewpoint of those in power. This accidental circumstance would be the only protection for the rebellion, given that the cities could not be effectively invaded or bombed. The government in such a terrible fix would have needed to convince the rebels ahead of time to abandon the cities. [/QUOTE]
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