NationStates Jolt Archive


Flip Flopping

13-12-2003, 06:04
What happens to those issues that have been decided. What if a government wants to reverse its position or repeal the law and dismiss the issue?

D.A.

(aka President of the United States of Anberica)
Der Fuhrer Dyszel
13-12-2003, 06:06
The next time you receive the issue, click on another option. If you have just clicked on it, then you could just reclick another one.
Der Fuhrer Dyszel
13-12-2003, 06:08
Also, those issues are then incoperated into your economy, political freedoms, and civil rights, depending on how you have answered them. They effect the outcome of your nation.
13-12-2003, 06:20
Also, those issues are then incoperated into your economy, political freedoms, and civil rights, depending on how you have answered them. They effect the outcome of your nation.

Thank you, but neither answer answered my question. I was aware of the information you gave me.

My question is again: What happens AFTER the law has been implemented?

D.A.
Ultimate_apocalypse
13-12-2003, 06:42
Also, those issues are then incoperated into your economy, political freedoms, and civil rights, depending on how you have answered them. They effect the outcome of your nation.

Thank you, but neither answer answered my question. I was aware of the information you gave me.

My question is again: What happens AFTER the law has been implemented?

D.A.

im sorry but can you please define that alittle better to me it seems Der Fuhrer aswered that one perfectly well..
13-12-2003, 08:51
DF suggested that I have to wait until the next time the issue came up. Duh! No... I thought that the next time the issue came up, I'd choose the SAME option despite my thread centering around how I can CHANGE it! :lol:

I'm just being facetious though.

My question is: After the point when the law has been implemented and before the issue is sent again at an undefined point in the future, how can the law be repealed or an alternate position on an issue be taken? Or is it impossible? (If it is not possible, then I think that this represents a significant failing of this otherwise fine simulation.)

D.A.
13-12-2003, 18:48
13-12-2003, 18:48
13-12-2003, 18:57
any answers?
13-12-2003, 19:01
Q: "as above"

A: it can't. this was dicussed once in the tech thread. if i read the answers right, the effects of the issue get roled into the stats for your country and the issue and the decision is "lost". but, look in the tech thread, sulsa secondus (sp?) probably explained it better.

it really isn't a failing, it is more of a tech issue. where to you draw the line about how far back to keep an issue? etc. the greater problem is the amount of data that would have to be stored for each nation. given the age and number of nations you would easily hit the terabyte range. which ain't cheap.

MOD/ALERT :arrow: TECHNICAL