Ultratwinkie said:
3. There are so many logical fallacies in that story its not even funny. Ill give the gist:
First off, it's not "logical fallacies," it's plotholes.
Ultratwinkie said:
- Prices are regulated. price too high? people stop buying and the product becomes worthless. Happened before with oil when it got too high.
Can you provide a source for "people stop buying and the product becomes worthless."? Because people didn't not stop buying oil either in the 1973 [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1973_Oil_Crisis#Price_controls_and_rationing] or 1979 oil crisis [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1979_oil_crisis#United_States] (when prices reached the second highest price recorded) OR the 1990 oil price shock [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1990_oil_price_shock]. Half of the US energy comes from oil. I suppose people will just run their cars on magic, huh?
Ultratwinkie said:
- picking natural resources using slave labor? How? How are they going to get it back to Korea without oil? Strap barrels on the Koreans and make them swim across the damn pacific? America doesn't have much oil anymore, so attacking America would be useless. Oil shale? We put more energy (and water) into it than we get oil out. You might as well put out a house fire with kerosene.
It's 2027, you think oil shale technology development is going to remain static? Tthere already is a plethora of oil shale extracting tech. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shale_oil_extraction#Classifications]
Ultratwinkie said:
- the idea of North Korean power is based on Germany and Japan. Both nations were in totally different situations. North Korea =/= Japan. North Korea =/= Germany. North Korea becoming big and powerful is no different than saying Somalia became big and powerful. In fact, its so similar that could be Homefront 2: The wrath of Somalia.
I hope you realize that the developers were referring to similar policies of expansionism [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expansionism] and imperialism [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperialism], NOT geography.
Ultratwinkie said:
- Korean peace is impossible. Either side would need to conquer the other in order to be unified. This would create problems because that would spawn rebels on North Korea's home turf.
What a massively ignorant and baseless comment. Do you know how many Koreans want peace so they can see long-lost relatives on either side? Do you know that many Koreans draft-dodge to other countries so they don't waste 2-3 FUCKING YEARS of their lives training FOR A WAR MANY DON'T EVEN THINK IS GOING TO HAPPEN?
Also, case study. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany#Division_and_reunification_1945.E2.80.931990] I bet people like you said back in the day that East and West Germany would never reunite.
Ultratwinkie said:
- the second Amendment. The American populace is more heavily armed than any other populace in the world. Hell a Russian general was too scared to invade America because he learned every house had a gun. If the Russians and all their power were too scared, what makes you think North Korea would be able to? Including the lack of vehicles?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afghanistan#History
No empire ever completely conquered Afghanistan, yet the US is in there now, and they're paying for it in blood and money. This is not even taking into account that the US armed the mujahideen in the 1980s and that most every child in Afghanistan can handle an AK-47.
What's your point?
Ultratwinkie said:
- EMPs kills the device. It doesn't disable it for a short while. If a city was hit with an EMP, it would kill every device there. Every computer, wire, and light would need to be replaced. In short, you demolish the city and build it again. If it destroyed most of the electricity grid in America, what do the mines run on? What do the oil rigs run on? Do you extract the oil from the oil shale with magic? You would need to ferry mining machinery (which requires oil to ferry) to begin extraction. If they get the oil out, they need to ferry an oil processor as well. Oil lost going in, oil lost going out.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_shale_economics#Competitive_level_of_oil_price
According to a survey conducted by the RAND Corporation, the cost of producing a barrel of oil at a surface retorting complex in the United States (comprising a mine, retorting plant, upgrading plant, supporting utilities, and spent shale reclamation), would range between US$70?95 ($440?600/m3, adjusted to 2005 values). This estimate considers varying levels of kerogen quality and extraction efficiency. In order for the operation to be profitable, the price of crude oil would need to remain above these levels. The analysis also discusses the expectation that processing costs would drop after the complex was established. The hypothetical unit would see a cost reduction of 35?70% after its first 500 million barrels (79×10^6 m3) were produced. Assuming an increase in output of 25 thousand barrels per day (4.0×10^3 m3/d) during each year after the start of commercial production, the costs would then be expected to decline to $35?48 per barrel ($220?300/m3) within 12 years. After achieving the milestone of 1 billion barrels (160×10^6 m3), its costs would decline further to $30?40 per barrel ($190?250/m3) .
What do you fucking know, it's economically feasible. Sure they're going to run on a loss the fist few years, but eventually there will be an gain.
Ultratwinkie said:
- With all this money being tossed around, where is Korea getting it? The government has expenses of its own like military, healthcare, etc. All the world's governments are suffering, so who's flipping bill? Bill Gates?
It's a gamble, very similar to WWII. Japan and Hitler hoped to sustain their economies through annexation of other countries, centralizing the natural resources of those occupied areas into the domestic market.