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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by Annachie » Fri Feb 02, 2018 3:43 am | |
Annachie
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LA averages around 15inches.
Here where I live, it's 20. The desert I grew up in, less than 11. Currently on tank, and was on tank when I was real young. Though five kids still at home, and a dry spell, we had to buy in water just before christmas. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You are so going to die. :p ~~~~ runsforcelery ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ still not dead. |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by quite possibly a cat » Fri Feb 02, 2018 7:43 am | |
quite possibly a cat
Posts: 341
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This is the truth! |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by ldwechsler » Sat Feb 03, 2018 6:42 pm | |
ldwechsler
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Of course, on the other hand, RFC might just have more than a chapter or two dealing with politics on Terra even if it focuses far more on the League. At this point, I just want the eArc and snippets!! And say, amen. |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by Rincewind » Tue Feb 13, 2018 12:19 am | |
Rincewind
Posts: 277
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Not necessarily. You could read that last quote as referring to the Solarian League's capital only & not Earth's capital as well. It could be argued either way. Probably the only way we could find out which interpretation is correct is to ask Eric Flint. Anybody know how to contact him? |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by pappilon » Tue Feb 13, 2018 4:35 am | |
pappilon
Posts: 1074
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Isn't the Solarain League rather like the United Federation of Planets? EVERY system is independent, even Earth. The headquarters of the United Nations is in New York City, yet it has no bearing on the city government nor New York State government. Why would locating the SL administrative center in Chicago (or Boise or Oskosh or Sheboygan) have any effect on Earth.gov? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The imagination has to be trained into foresight and empathy. Ursula K. LeGuinn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by ldwechsler » Tue Feb 13, 2018 1:22 pm | |
ldwechsler
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The United Nations is located in New York...with some parts in Geneva. But NY is not the capitol of the US. As I've written before, there's a real lot we don't know. Are these separate countries on Earth any more. The EU government is gradually attempting a takeover of most of the national governments and some of the nations are rebellion...as in Brexit (not to mention a growing Irexit, a possible Frexit, a major Italian party pushing for an Itexit and the Greeks always on the edge of a Grexit). So there could be different countries on Terra, perhaps with a UN government or there could be a national government that runs some or part of the world. Or it actually could be run by the Solarian League as Washington, DC is overmanaged by the US government. There is just so much we don't know. |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by pappilon » Tue Feb 13, 2018 8:16 pm | |
pappilon
Posts: 1074
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And not knowing, all is mere idle speculation. We will probably never know, unless it comes out as a short story somewhere. Kind of hard administering an entire planet + colonies on the moon and Mars as a federal enclave. The war's been over for a thousand years. Something resembling a planetary government was possibly forced upon the warring factions, which probably did nothing to settle the disputes, real and imagined; but the near loss of the entire planet may have had a sobering effect on the survivors. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The imagination has to be trained into foresight and empathy. Ursula K. LeGuinn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by ldwechsler » Wed Feb 14, 2018 8:47 pm | |
ldwechsler
Posts: 1235
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Keep in mind that the EU is now signing off on just about all laws by all members. And the EU is not elected. And it is hard to get rid of them...check Brexit. And quite a few other countries might leave if they were allowed to vote on it. |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by pappilon » Sat Feb 17, 2018 5:54 am | |
pappilon
Posts: 1074
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Every other planet in the Honorverse seems to have a unified planetary or system government. Textev Mike Henke talking with the former king of Meyers and asking him if he can actually form a government with the other colonies in the system. Mere KISS within the fictitious universe would beg that Earth have a government like all the others. Its one of the basic laws of writing and creating worlds of magic whether sci-fi or fantasy. your world must be consistent or have good explanations for the difference. RFC has spent a chapter or two justifying the magic drive the MAlign has. No mention of a different gov for Earth and why, so no reason to assume it is radically diffrent. Its just an internal consistency thing. And granted it is harder to maintain with different authors in the mix. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The imagination has to be trained into foresight and empathy. Ursula K. LeGuinn ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Re: What is Earth's government | |
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by Bluesqueak » Sat Feb 17, 2018 8:04 am | |
Bluesqueak
Posts: 434
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No, most planets in the Honorverse have a unified planetary government - a couple are mentioned as not. One of the short stories hints why that is - the two rival countries represent two colonising expeditions. There's also the station that Abigail has to get hostages off (can't remember its name)? The commanding officer remembers that the reason his grandad called OFS in was that even OFS seemed better than the potentially nuclear war that was then going on. So most planets probably have a unified planetary government because they started out with one colonising expedition, one colonising ideology, and later on, a tradition of one planetary government. Brexit is in fact an example of how difficult it is to create a new nation from already pre-existing old nations Myself, I'd say the reason the UK was the first to go was because the legal and political differences from the EU were quite large - much larger than for most of the Continental European nations. Add that to the EU trying to unify too fast, and the population who had the most changes to make became the most pissed off. Add to this a lack of compromise from the EU, who think that the evident problems can be solved by faster, not slower unification. Then have a vote. But most colonies wouldn't have those problems; they're starting from a common tradition, not trying to create one. |
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