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Helm_Lardar

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Posts posted by Helm_Lardar

  1. I voted yes, and I'm happy with what I got. Am I alone in not regretting this? I got to help and be helped by friends, got to PK in the wilderness, got to buy items really easily, and even got to have a go at dice games, most of which are legitimate. Good fun, nothing wrong with it.

     

    Sure there's a few more bots, but in the long run that's helping me too. I don't rely on resource skills for money anymore, so all I do now is things like barrows or clue scrolls for money. On the flip side, bots are making monkfish, herbs, and logs much cheaper, which is something I appreaciate. So there you go, my honest opinion on the matter. I haven't been scammed yet: I know what the basic scams are, and as a result I'm just generally careful.

  2. People actually buy those t-shirts? I wouldn't enter this competition simply because I couldn't care less if the Jagex store has a discount.

     

    Kudos to them for working on their marketing though. We need new players in the game if it's to ever stay frresh, and new players are increasingly hard to find.

  3. I honestly think they should have a raffle for free tickets. I wouldn't go as I'm not of age, but I think it would be a very nice gesture. Hopefully they'll market it better than they did last year and avoid the 'fiasco' that led to them refunding the tickets.

  4. I've never really understood why some people get annoyed when people pray. It's part of my combat triangle, it's part of how I fight, it's part of the reason I am able to take on people at my combat level. To not pray would be to weaken myself deliberately, just because another person doesn't have the same advantage as me!

  5. Y'know, I've always thought magical orbs would be a lot better than staves. Have the character hold, say, the orb of fire, for an increased defence against the opposite element (water) and infinite fire runes. That would circumvent the attack req completely.

     

    Staff of light? Just make a really funk kind of orb with a metal frame. You could clobber someone with it, but that wouldn't be very effective when it's clearly brimming with Icyene magic.

  6.  

     

    College students aren't forced to have no sleep for a week. They aren't beaten into submission if they don't attend lectures. These people are.

     

    One of my friends here on TIF (who I now know IRL, and attends the University of Washington in Seattle) has been complaining non-stop this quarter about how he is lucky to get 10 hours of sleep per week, because of incompetent professors assigning reports at incredibly late hours, and the oversized workload. For the same reason, he's barely been able to play Runescape, or in fact, do anything else besides work. I assure you - he is not alone. Not to mention, he doesn't work yet - plenty of students have part-time jobs, compounding this problem.

     

    And students in Taiwan within the past few decades WERE beaten into submission if they misbehaved. It was expected of the teachers that they were proper disciplinarians. Even elementary and middle school students were punished this way (although they weren't beaten as badly).

     

    Wow...err...umm...well....there we go then... :blink: .

     

    I'm scared of university now.

  7. The point isn't that it's a lesser wrong, the point is that calling it torture is practically an insult to proper torture. Forcing inmates to play WoW, however inhumane it might be, really doesn't come close to being in the league that people typically associated the word "torture" with. Physical abuse? Does it involve daggers being stuck into you while you're trapped in an iron capsule? Whipped raw in public? Skin peeled away, an inch at a time, with a razor? Head forced into ice cold water until you're barely conscious? A caged rat placed on your body, with the cage set ablaze, forcing the rodent to burrow through the victim? Sleep deprivation... don't make me laugh. Dedicated college students undergo sleep deprivation all the time simply due to schoolwork overload, on top of having to manage a job. And they're paying for it.

     

    Inhumane as this situation might be, calling it torture is laughable. This isn't being done in some sadistic way, and it doesn't even come close to the brutality that the word torture generally implies. It's horrible that there are people are doing this to each other, but the reactions here are way exaggerated.

     

    Ahh, but here we have the problem, sleep deprivation is a longer-term way of wearing someone down. Unlike the ways you describe, this can be continued for a long, long time...whereas someone having daggers stuck into them won't live the day out.

     

    College students aren't forced to have no sleep for a week. They aren't beaten into submission if they don't attend lectures. These people are.

  8. You'd make it a lot easier if you organized them better and didn't repeat yourself.

     

    If you want to open China's treatment of prisoners to scrutiny, and condemn them for the things they do, then you'd better be damn well prepared to condemn the treatment of prisoners in some other countries -- particularly those barbaric countries where prisoners are executed, and others held in secret off-site locations where they are routinely tortured. Hell -- in one of the more barbaric countries, some of their prisoners have even been waterboarded 183 times within a 30 day period. It's disgraceful! It's disgusting!

     

    Personally -- I'd rather be playing video games -- even if it is WoW ...

     

    China isn't the only country that doesn't recognize the U.N.'s definition of human rights. Islamic countries operating under Sharia law don't recognize it either.

     

    Not to mention that amongst the list of Universal Human Rights that ISN'T included is the "right to refuse to kill" -- but THAT's another issue entirely ...

     

    @Those who say 'don't feed the troll': this is turning into an interesting discussion. Don't invoke some form of "Goldwin's Law" and ruin it.

     

    Yes, I shouldn't have rambled. But I wanted to get the response out there and get feedback and...yeah, I was lazy.

     

    I would be condemning other countries if I knew about them. The thread is specifically about China however. I'll have a look at AmIn's website tomorrow once I've done my Physics exam and see what they have to say.

     

    You seem to be underestimating the way the video games become a method of torturing someone. Sleep deprivation is truly a terrible thing, which you seem to think is actually just another way of executing justice. Forgive me if I'm getting the wrong end of the stick. I know you are comparing it to physical labour, but...phsycological torture also results in pain, even if it isn't as visible.

     

    Yes, and I'm not happy that Islamic countries don't accept the UN's human rights. I should have thought that would be mandatory to the organisation, since they aren't exactly...shall we say...incredibly and terrifically ground-breaking or difficult?

     

    It is another issue.

  9. STOP USING AD HOMINEMS.

     

    Some thoughts:

     

    Which is worse: a tortured existence of pain against pain until you die, or a normal existence until you die. (That's for someone with a long sentence).

     

    Runescape money-->Amnesty money: There's a difference between sacrificial ethics and just being ethical as you go about your business normally. For example, buying fairtrade coffee is the latter while donating to the people running the plantation is the former. Put it this way: most people care enough to be ethical while doing things but don't care enough to go all out for it. That doesn't mean they don't care.

     

    Sleep deprivation is a form of phsycological torture. I wouldn't call that the least of punishments to prisoners.

     

    I think it would be good if a scheme could be arranged to open everyone's punishment system to scrutiny, however China's is particularly relevant as the west uses it for any cheap products etc...it's particularly related to the countries we live in in a way that, say, bolivia isn't.

     

    China is part of the UN and should therefore subscribe to the UN decleration of human rights.

     

    Sleep deprivation through video games is, as I've said before, torture. You can't see the effects with blood and bruises, but the effects are there. Think before you act like they are just half-awake, gently cutting down yew trees (or the wow equivalent).

     

    I'm sorry if that sounded awfully rambly, but those were my thoughts. Make of them what you will.

     

    Oh, and yes, I do think you make good points. What annoyed me was when you acted like this was some evening jolly for the prisoners.

  10. On the contrary, it's a hilarious situation. You've got murderers, rapists and goodness-knows what other types of known criminals who, instead of being punished through hard-labour, are now all huddled in front of computer screens playing video games -- and complaining about it ...

     

     

    Okay, let's use you as a real-life example. You've been out all day cycling, then instead of bed you are told to spend 12 hours at the concentrated coal rocks in the LRC. 3 toilet breaks, and you've got to be as efficient as possible to reach a specific quota. You play until you can barely see. Exhausted, you slump onto the screen. You are smacked round the back of the head with a drainpipe, and told to carry on. You do, but not so well. You get beaten for 10 minutes afterwards with plastic pipes until you collapse on the floor.

     

    You remain exhausted.

     

    Video games are not pleasant in this situation. Indeed it would be illegal here in the west to do anything similair-it constitutes a 'cruel and unusual punishment'. Removal of human rights etc. Sadly, this is china, where it's not just your liberty that's taken from you in a camp.

  11. Gee, I never thought of it like that before. I guess loafing in minigames is fair enough-after all, in something like CastleWars there is no limit on the amount of players so as long as you join the stronger team you're helping balance things out.

  12. 1. I wish the rerquirements were lower and the King of the Dwarves thing was altered so you already knew about the lava flow mine before starting the quest. That would make more sense.

     

    2. The golden outfit might not be amazing for xp, but DAMN that looks cool!

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