by Max Barry

Latest Forum Topics

Advertisement

Search

Search

[+] Advanced...

Author:

Region:

Sort:

«12. . .109110111112113»

Who can guess who is back?

United World Center wrote:Who can guess who is back?

Romanum Empire!
I changed my password,my nation.
I can't leave my home Romania

Wallachians and moldavians

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:How can humans improve the world in the next five years?

I will respond for more activity:
1. More education
2. Nuclear energy
3. Space traveling (to make a colony on Moon for resources)
4. More eco-friendly stuff but out of electric cars (they are dangerous and much toxic)

United World Center wrote:I will respond for more activity:
1. More education
2. Nuclear energy
3. Space traveling (to make a colony on Moon for resources)
4. More eco-friendly stuff but out of electric cars (they are dangerous and much toxic)

Electric cars are a 20th century response to 19th century ICE tech. I agree- Hydrogen powered fuel cells are the way to go, once they make damn sure they do not go hindenburg. Nuclear Thorium reactors are also great. Education is good, but having politicians and governments run them from a national level is bad I think. They should be run from their local attendees... in fact no one should have the ability to impact one school unless their children go there actively! That way industry, agriculture, trades, religious and social norms are all represented in a fashion that reflects the community, and not some political agenda.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:Electric cars are a 20th century response to 19th century ICE tech. I agree- Hydrogen powered fuel cells are the way to go, once they make damn sure they do not go hindenburg. Nuclear Thorium reactors are also great. Education is good, but having politicians and governments run them from a national level is bad I think. They should be run from their local attendees... in fact no one should have the ability to impact one school unless their children go there actively! That way industry, agriculture, trades, religious and social norms are all represented in a fashion that reflects the community, and not some political agenda.

Honestly, I think having schools run by the communities themselves has many advantages but also many disadvantages. For example, more religious communities might focus more on religion and spirituality in school, while less religious ones might focus more on science. Then how do you ensure children will not have problems in college if they are all getting taught different stuff? I think schools should have more autonomy. However, it should not go at the cost of the child's knowledge and there should also be a minimum of everything to ensure the child can have their own thoughts and beliefs. And of course, the teachers should not be biased at all in their teaching.

Waterslandiya and United World Center

Northern Bucovina wrote:Honestly, I think having schools run by the communities themselves has many advantages but also many disadvantages. For example, more religious communities might focus more on religion and spirituality in school, while less religious ones might focus more on science. Then how do you ensure children will not have problems in college if they are all getting taught different stuff? I think schools should have more autonomy. However, it should not go at the cost of the child's knowledge and there should also be a minimum of everything to ensure the child can have their own thoughts and beliefs. And of course, the teachers should not be biased at all in their teaching.

By offering choice, incorporation of religious schooling is an option parents can exercise alongside a regular curriculum. That religion will naturally vary based on demographic need, and support within the community. Since science was born in religious schools in religious eras, the notion the two are incompatible is born out of politics, not factual information.

The same is true with vocational and agricultural schools, they prepare for different market segments that will ebb and flow with needs and interests of the students. By doing this and removing governmental propaganda minds are actually opened, either positively or negatively, by the individual from their educational and experiential base. This is how happiness is found, finding ones path that also fits the community so a life (or part of it) within that path enlightens, and does not oppress.

Since governments have shifting priorities and never focus on the health or safety or happiness of the individual (propaganda may differ) the community is also disserviced. Never has mental and physical health been so poor as this time of big government with lifetime politicians forcing cookie cutter approaches on normal people. Why would we not take local control.

Waterslandiya

These are some great discussions. I call a Romanian Union Convention to discuss:

- motor vehicle emissions;
- open borders within the Romanian Union
- universal healthcare in all of the Romanian Union
- school autonomy
- a new Constitution of Romania

Romanian Union is constructing the Romanian Assembly on land donated by Waterslandiya on its southeastern border.

The big game is over. Did anyone here watch it?

The Socialist Romania was on place 12 for 10 minutes in The Best Nation of the World.
Maybe now everyone will know us.

Just lurking here, apologies for being aloof.

Silvania wrote:Just lurking here, apologies for being aloof.

Not a problem

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:By offering choice, incorporation of religious schooling is an option parents can exercise alongside a regular curriculum. That religion will naturally vary based on demographic need, and support within the community.

This is good for the community, however it will go at the expense of the child's independence. The child should not be pushed in a direction because their parents followed that direction. Letting the child discover other religions and then letting them choose if they want to believe in a God or not will benefit them more.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:Since science was born in religious schools in religious eras, the notion the two are incompatible is born out of politics, not factual information.

They ARE indeed compatible with each other, that's true, but we must not ignore the examples of where science was ignored in favor of religion. The first example that comes to my mind is the Arab World.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:The same is true with vocational and agricultural schools, they prepare for different market segments that will ebb and flow with needs and interests of the students. By doing this and removing governmental propaganda minds are actually opened, either positively or negatively, by the individual from their educational and experiential base. This is how happiness is found, finding ones path that also fits the community so a life (or part of it) within that path enlightens, and does not oppress.

I fully agree with this!

Veritas In Aeternum wrote: Since governments have shifting priorities and never focus on the health or safety or happiness of the individual (propaganda may differ) the community is also disserviced. Never has mental and physical health been so poor as this time of big government with lifetime politicians forcing cookie cutter approaches on normal people.

That's an advantage of tax-payer-funded healthcare, the government has to care because they have to pay for it. I honestly don't think there should be age limits for politicians, however, there should also not be a minimum age. Forcing politicians to take a cognitive test would be nice, however then we would have almost no politicians.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:Why would we not take local control.

Local control is better for some issues, for other issues national control is better. So it depends.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:The big game is over. Did anyone here watch it?

Nope, it was midnight here when they played. I would've liked to watch it though!

Praxideke wrote:Bună ziua!

Bună ziua,bun venit īn Romānia!

Seconds ago: Following new legislation in Silvania, the military maintains a fierce arsenal of 'Cure Missiles'.

I shall be saving it up for this year's Z-Day sooner, but for now, it would be worth investing in these cure missiles to mitigate the spread of the Cadou.

Looks like big trouble in Belgium, our friendly European neighbors. I hope they do not become a dead trophy region like So many real-world nations in Nationstates. That is why I like Romania here, it is free of these worries and even though we sometimes lack activity those awful invaders cannot damage us here.

Let's make a nuclear security faction like last time for Romania this time I will join and defend the region with shields

I joined

And destroyed

Its always just a few groups run by a few puppet masters with nothing better to do. Always the same people, they just change the names.

Veritas In Aeternum wrote:Its always just a few groups run by a few puppet masters with nothing better to do. Always the same people, they just change the names.

The problem is that everyone take this game too serious and just destroy other ones fun for no reason because they anyway don't win

The nation known as SouthernBahama has been banned for Happenings Spam from Romania.

Romanians do not tolerate such behavior here!

«12. . .109110111112113»

Advertisement