Until recently I never truly grasped that the fundamental social contract of Democracy is that the losers of elections accept the results and graciously cede power.
Board games are a critical part of teaching that lesson to children.
A short thread.
Candyland, Chutes & Ladders, and other classic first games are not about teaching strategy & tactics. They are about teaching the building blocks of games – taking turns, and being a gracious loser and winner.
And, not coincidentally, these are important societal lessons as well
Democracy is the *voluntary* adoption by those in power of rules about taking turns, winning, and losing. It is the magic circle writ large – so large perhaps, that we don’t realize we are in it until we see people who break the unwritten foundational rules.
It is a magic circle helped along by Washington stepping down after two terms, John Adams for being the first incumbent president to lose an election. It’s about Nixon in 1960, Gore stepping aside in 2000, and all the local elections settled by coin flip.
The foundation of all of that is games and play. Government and elections are fundamentally games – serious games, but games with rules we agree to play by. And the most important part is that the losing side accepts the results of elections.
They don’t have to be happy about it. They shouldn't be happy about it. But they have to accept it. Without that our democracy’s days are numbered.
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I read the main paper from France that started the craze over hydroxychloroquine, and there are some things you should know. Here’s the paper if you’d like to read along: sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
1. Sample size was small – 26 received hydroxychlorine (hxc) and 16 were in the control group, who did not get hxc. The groups were not randomized, and were not blind. Everyone knew who was getting what.
2. If anyone was moved to the ICU they were REMOVED FROM THE STUDY. This is because the test they were doing was nasal swabs to see how much virus was in the patient (viral load). They couldn’t swab patients in the ICU.
First, I think that a lot of the differences of opinion are about terminology. Many of you said - no that's uncertainty, but it's not randomness.
In "Uncertainty In Games", Greg Costikyan argues convincingly that every game has uncertainty. If it doesn't - if the path and outcome of the game are known in advance - then it isn't a game. So just calling it "Uncertainty" is completely unhelpful.
In early 1942 many of the Allied naval forces were being diverted to the Pacific, and the German U-Boats were becoming increasingly deadly.
The British navy appointed Captain Gilbert Roberts, who had been sidelined due to tuberculosis, to head up a small team called the Western Approaches Tactical Unit, or WATU. Their mission – figure out new tactics to regain the upper hand over the U Boats.
1. I apologize for once again leaving the realm of gaming and dipping into politics, but I need to express my deep and sincere concern for the mechanism of government in the United States.
2/ Over the years many democracies have slid from true representation into defacto one party rule – what is called ‘illiberal democracy’. Hungary, Poland, and Turkey are recent examples..
3. The process is the gradual undermining of the institutions of government. And there are an alarming and increasing number of incidents that are pushing us in this direction.