• It's wrong for someone to confiscate your money, give it to someone else, and call that "compassion." – Harry Browne

New PC game promotes carbon taxes, world government

By Anthony Coralluzzo  
Sun, 27/11/2011 - 12:57pm
Sun, 27/11/2011 - 12:57pm

A new PC game allows players to control a world government that can institute coercive policies to fight so-called ominous global threats, like global warming, over-population and peak oil, including an option for a Chinese-style one-child policy (i.e. forced abortions).

According to its official website:

"Fate of the World is a PC strategy game that simulates the real social and environmental impact of global climate change over the next 200 years. The science, the politics, the destruction — it’s all real, and it’s scary. Your mission: Solve the crisis. But, like life, it won’t be easy. You’ll have to work through natural disasters, foreign diplomacy, clandestine operations, technological breakthroughs, and somehow satisfy the food and energy needs of a growing world population. Will you help the planet or become an agent of destruction?"

The game was designed by Ian Roberts (BBC Climate Challenge) with climate modeling by IPCC author and global warming alarmist Prof. Myles Allen (University of Oxford). A recent add-on pack called "Tipping Point" places extra emphasis on things like population control, global warming and the need to control human behaviour via world government on the model of the United Nations. You can also develop bio-weapons to target specific genetically-distinct populations, order martial law in specific parts of the world, and institute Tobin Taxes to cure financial crises.

 

 

Listen to the game reviewer below describe some of the gameplay: