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Utopia Talk / Politics / what does total domination look like?
The Children
Member
Sat Mar 17 02:20:41
behold, stupid mofos.
this is how total domination looks like.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8b2odlFFiY


MONSTA HUNTER WORLD.
GOD OF WAR
LAST OF US 2
SPIDERMAN PS4
DAYS GONE

TOTAL FUCKIN DOMINATION.


Hot Rod
Revved Up
Sat Mar 17 03:44:55

Looks like fun.

murder
Member
Sat Mar 17 07:42:34

I don't understand the fascination with watching other people play video games. I remember when we thought kids were getting fat and lazy because all they did was sit around and play video games. Now they are too lazy to even play themselves.

Get off your ass The Children! The next Chinese space station isn't going to fail and plunge back to Earth on its own. :o)





The Children
Member
Mon Mar 19 15:04:28
dayummm...total domination.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=3&v=rClXqZD2Xrs

u got dominated, stupid bots.

Average Ameriacn
Member
Mon Mar 19 15:07:14
Will playing games raise your social score? I guess not.

http://www...dit-travel-plane-train-tickets


China will ban people with poor ‘social credit’ from planes and trains


The new restrictions, which start in May, can last for up to a year
By Sean O'Kane@sokane1 Mar 16, 2018






Starting in May, Chinese citizens who rank low on the country’s burgeoning “social credit” system will be in danger of being banned from buying plane or train tickets for up to a year, according to statements recently released by the country’s National Development and Reform Commission.

With the social credit system, the Chinese government rates citizens based on things like criminal behavior and financial misdeeds, but also on what they buy, say, and do. Those with low “scores” have to deal with penalties and restrictions. China has been working towards rolling out a full version of the system by 2020, but some early versions of it are already in place.

Previously, the Chinese government had focused on restricting the travel of people with massive amounts of debt, like LeEco and Faraday Future founder Jia Yueting, who made the Supreme People’s Court blacklist late last year.

The new travel restrictions are the latest addition to this growing patchwork of social engineering, which has already imposed punishments on more than seven million citizens. And there’s a broad range when it comes to who can be flagged. Citizens who have spread “false information about terrorism,” caused “trouble” on flights, used expired tickets, or were caught smoking on trains could all be banned, according to Reuters.

But the system, as it stands, is opaque; citizens are seemingly just as likely to be flagged for minor infractions like leaving bikes parked in a footpath or issuing apologies that are deemed “insincere” as major credit defaulters like Jia. And it’s often unclear whether they’re on a blacklist in the first place, let alone what kind of recourse is available. “Chinese government authorities clearly hope to create a reality in which bureaucratic pettiness could significantly limit people’s rights,” Maya Wang, senior researcher for the non-profit NGO Human Rights Watch, wrote in December.


Rugian
Member
Mon Mar 19 15:13:45
Chinese authoritarianism really is scary. And it covers like a sixth of humanity. Fuck.
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