tcpip: (Default)
Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2016-06-26 09:58 am
Entry tags:

Brexit, Australian Election, Gaming Updates

As everyone knows, the United Kingdom has voted to leave the EU, albeit by a margin of 1.9%. The key demographic groups voting for 'Leave' came from of lower income, lower education, old age, and anti-immigration, with the latter providing probabily the strongest determinant. The result has serious repercussions; already the Scots, who overwhelmingly supported Remain, have called for a second independence vote, and in Northern Ireland which also voted to Remain there are calls for a reunification referendum. Nationalists on the continent, such as the Front national in France and astoundingly misnamed Partij voor de Vrijheid in the Netherlands have argued for Leave referenda in their own country, further wishing to promote the closing of the European mind. The economy, of course, has taken a battering with two trillion wiped off the global markets, leaving the UK staring down a recession.

In the distant British colony of Australia, we have an Federal election next week. Opinion polls (for what they're worth) suggest a close election, although it is the marginals that matter and Labor is still struggling with the Herculean task of gaining twenty one seats. The loathed Tony Abbott is making a tilt on a comeback based on Turnbull's woeful and dithering performance as Prime Minister. Labor has raised the spectre of a possible privitisation of Medicare first raised in February this year. The critical issue, as I've mentioned in previous posts, is if Labor can hammer home its economic credentials and point out that the Coalition has introduced the worst fall in living standards since records began. I honestly don't understand why Labor isn't hammering this point home.

Three main gaming sessions in the past week, as normal. Last Sunday was GURPS Middle Earth with our GM promising to provide a summary of what lose ends there are in the narrative. Wednesday night was a session of Laundry Files which involved a haunted house scenario in an inner urban environment. Friday night was Eclipse Phase Mars wrapping up a few lose ends from the "Chain Reaction" series. On the latter point I've written some rules modifications which I've circulated in the appropriate forum. Apropos the next issue of RPG Review is almost ready, just in the final editing phase now. Also the Cooperative has purchased a block of ten ISBNs, so publications will commence in the very near future. We have items such as Verge from Nic Moll, Gulliver's Trading Company from Karl Brown, and I have a secret project to be announced in the next issue of RPG Review.

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2016-06-27 11:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Sorry I was a bit flippant to your response yesterday - was busy with a class, so I'll give a proper response now.

> People tired from the fact "savages immigration" destroying our way of living, our culture and civilization.

I'm not sure which immigrants you are referring to here, and what destruction you are referring to. Surely the destruction that has been imposed by the great powers (US, EU, Russia) in developing countries far exceeds the occasional lunatic from those countries.

> In a recent time I see many countries switched to more liberal governments which are highly non-efficient in solving serious problem but very good of talking about "green economy", "global warning" and others easy topics.

I wish those were so easy... What do you think the serious problems are, if not climate change?

> At the same time a real issues like muslim interventions, global terrorism, international drug trade etc are largely ignored.

Global terrorism? Who is engaging in the terrorism, the use of violence against non-combatants for political purposes? Global drug trade? Fine legalise and regulate. That seems to work where it has been implemented, doesn't it?

> Many people now questioning success of Donald Trump.

I'm pretty sure that Trump will not only lose but may actually suffer the biggest loss seen in a hundred years.