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Sims Online Presidential Campaign Shapes Up

Ant writes "Wired News has an article on a campaign for the presidency of Alphaville, the biggest city in The Sims Online. Two challengers will square off in a final primary for the opportunity to unseat Alphaville's incumbent president, the appropriately named Mr-President, in next month's general election."

7 of 212 comments (clear)

  1. SIMS IS NOT A DEMOCRACY by bethane · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You do not have a right to free speech on games like "The Sims Online".

    These games are a privledge, and if the communities are outraged about censorship, or anything else, well they should fight with their money.

    Sidenote:
    This may not be the case with TSO, but i've noticed in many MMORPGS (think EQ), people are so addicted to it, despite the fact they hate the company that owns it, they continue to play it.

    They still piss and moan about it but they never actally cancel the game.

    Maybe thats what happened here.

    --


    Bethanie: Whore...
    Fan Whore
    1. Re:SIMS IS NOT A DEMOCRACY by redJag · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A democracy doesn't imply free speech.

    2. Re:SIMS IS NOT A DEMOCRACY by maxpublic · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Democracy - Government by the people, exercised either directly or through elected representatives

      Not true. A democracy can easily become a dictatorship, a tyranny of the will of the majority over the minority. It'd be quite easy for a democracy to outlaw any speech it doesn't agree with, e.g., a fanatically religious democracy could outlaw any mention of atheism, or religions other than those approved of by the state, or any criticism of the state church.

      This is why our Founding Fathers were quite careful not to choose democracy but rather a limited, Constitutional form of republicanism for their new nation. So that a rabid, banal majority couldn't legally seize control of the government and use it to cruelly oppress the minority.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  2. Only two parties? by fuzzy12345 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    With only two candidates running, there won't be much of a diversity of viewpoints, and they'll no doubt have virtually (grin) indistinguishable policies on everything, in the middle of the political spectrum.

    Art imitates life, I guess.

    --

    Everybody's a libertarian 'till their neighbour's becomes a crack house.
  3. Democracy & Free Speech by Baron_Yam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'd argue that a democracy without freedom of speech is not a true democracy.

    If you can't speak freely, you can't expect to exchange information regarding the government - which means you're not able to freely cast an informed VOTE... in which case you have a sham democracy. QED.

    1. Re:Democracy & Free Speech by jfengel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      True. But true democracies are rare.

      The United States, for example, has had to find ways to cut into political speech because it is possible to hijack it with access to media. That is, rich and poor were all allowed to speak, but the rich seemed to speak louder.

      (The poor sometimes got together to form "unions" to speak with a loud, united voice, but that, too, got hijacked by corrupt people, which cast an unpleasant pall over the entire concept, even when it's still executed well.)

      It appears that laws are never able to make a truly level, fair playing field, and therefore any democracy is going to be slanted one way or the other. The fact is you're still allowed to say whatever you want, but the louder you speak, the more likely it is the law will intervene. The laws are an unpleasant compromise.

  4. Is this newsworthy? by Rexz · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Thousands of small, self-elected Internet organisations with no power beyond their own membership elect leaders every day. I don't see how this story is any different from a medium sized EverQuest guild choosing a new leader or a discussion board adding a new moderator.

    This "Government" appears to have no control other than through the actions of 100 or so voluntary members who have no more power than a normal player. Using this election as a case study of such small, self-policing authorities is valid, but it has no more authenticity than the politics 10 year-old's Secret Agents club.