Italian simulation

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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 11:21 #69409
fabiolanzafame
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26 posts
It's possible simulate a Italian station?
Fabio Lanzafame
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 12:44 #69415
arabianights
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138 posts
Of course
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 14:34 #69421
Danny252
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1461 posts
Could arabianights account be locked temporarily? The posts being made on it are becoming more and more off suspicious, and I wonder whether its original owner is still in control of it.
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 15:11 #69422
Temple Meads
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307 posts
" said:
Could arabianights account be locked temporarily? The posts being made on it are becoming more and more off suspicious, and I wonder whether its original owner is still in control of it.
Arabian has always been somewhat eccentric, so I see nothing amiss.

Username TIM in multiplayer
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 15:25 #69423
Muzer
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718 posts
" said:
Could arabianights account be locked temporarily? The posts being made on it are becoming more and more off suspicious, and I wonder whether its original owner is still in control of it.
This doesn't look suspicious to me... it's clearly a joke about Italian railways!

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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 15:42 #69425
Peter Bennet
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5362 posts
It's not been the same since Mussolini.

Peter

I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs!
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 15:47 #69426
belly buster
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368 posts
" said:
It's not been the same since Mussolini.

Peter
http://www.snopes.com/history/govern/trains.asp

Claim: Italian dictator Benito Mussolini made the trains run on time.

Status: False.

Origins: Every political leader — whether he be a democratically elected representative or a usurping tyrant — seeks to gain broad public support, because the greater his support, the greater his power. That power may ultimately be used for good or for bad, but either way it must be obtained before it can be wielded.

One Benito Mussolini of the best ways to gain the support of the people you want to lead is to do something of benefit to them. Failing that, the next best thing is to convince them that you have done something of benefit to them, even though you really haven't. So it was with Benito Mussolini and the Italian railway system.

After the "march on Rome" (which was itself a myth of fascist propaganda) on 28 October 1922 that resulted in King Vittorio Emanuele's appointment of Benito Mussolini as prime minister and the accession to power of the fascists in Italy, Mussolini needed to convince the people of Italy that fascism was indeed a system that worked to their benefit. Thus was born the myth of fascist efficiency, with the train as its symbol. The word was spread that Mussolini had turned the dilapidated Italian railway system into one that was the envy of all Europe, featuring trains that were both dependable and punctual. In Mussolini's Italy, all the trains ran on
time.

Well, not quite. The Italian railway system had fallen into a rather sad state during World War I, and it did improve a good deal during the 1920s, but Mussolini was disingenuous in taking credit for the changes: much of the repair work had been performed before Mussolini and the fascists came to power in 1922. More importantly (to the claim at hand), those who actually lived in Italy during the Mussolini era have borne testimony that the Italian railway's legendary adherence to timetables was far more myth than reality.

The myth of Mussolini's punctual trains lives on, albeit with a different slant: rather than serving as a fictitious symbol of the benefits of fascism, it is now offered as a sardonic example that something good can result even from the worst of circumstances. As Montagu and Darling wrote:
Mussolini may have done many brutal and tyrannical things; he may have destroyed human freedom in Italy; he may have murdered and tortured citizens whose only crime was to oppose Mussolini; but 'one had to admit' one thing about the Dictator: he 'made the trains run on time.'
No, thanks. I'd rather walk.

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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 15:57 #69427
Peter Bennet
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5362 posts
" said:
" said:
It's not been the same since Mussolini.

Peter
http://www.snopes.com/history/govern/trains.asp

Claim: Italian dictator Benito Mussolini made the trains run on time.

Status: False.

Origins: Every political leader — whether he be a democratically elected representative or a usurping tyrant — seeks to gain broad public support, because the greater his support, the greater his power. That power may ultimately be used for good or for bad, but either way it must be obtained before it can be wielded.

One Benito Mussolini of the best ways to gain the support of the people you want to lead is to do something of benefit to them. Failing that, the next best thing is to convince them that you have done something of benefit to them, even though you really haven't. So it was with Benito Mussolini and the Italian railway system.

After the "march on Rome" (which was itself a myth of fascist propaganda) on 28 October 1922 that resulted in King Vittorio Emanuele's appointment of Benito Mussolini as prime minister and the accession to power of the fascists in Italy, Mussolini needed to convince the people of Italy that fascism was indeed a system that worked to their benefit. Thus was born the myth of fascist efficiency, with the train as its symbol. The word was spread that Mussolini had turned the dilapidated Italian railway system into one that was the envy of all Europe, featuring trains that were both dependable and punctual. In Mussolini's Italy, all the trains ran on
time.

Well, not quite. The Italian railway system had fallen into a rather sad state during World War I, and it did improve a good deal during the 1920s, but Mussolini was disingenuous in taking credit for the changes: much of the repair work had been performed before Mussolini and the fascists came to power in 1922. More importantly (to the claim at hand), those who actually lived in Italy during the Mussolini era have borne testimony that the Italian railway's legendary adherence to timetables was far more myth than reality.

The myth of Mussolini's punctual trains lives on, albeit with a different slant: rather than serving as a fictitious symbol of the benefits of fascism, it is now offered as a sardonic example that something good can result even from the worst of circumstances. As Montagu and Darling wrote:
Mussolini may have done many brutal and tyrannical things; he may have destroyed human freedom in Italy; he may have murdered and tortured citizens whose only crime was to oppose Mussolini; but 'one had to admit' one thing about the Dictator: he 'made the trains run on time.'
No, thanks. I'd rather walk.
I was waiting for that.

Peter

I identify as half man half biscuit - crumbs!
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 16:18 #69428
Danny252
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1461 posts
" said:
" said:
Could arabianights account be locked temporarily? The posts being made on it are becoming more and more off suspicious, and I wonder whether its original owner is still in control of it.
Arabian has always been somewhat eccentric, so I see nothing amiss.
I can't see what the link actually is - it just comes up as a blank page! I do agree that eccentricity has always been a hallmark of his, but he's been unusually so recently...

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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 19:06 #69431
Steamer
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3923 posts
Online
" said:
" said:
" said:
Could arabianights account be locked temporarily? The posts being made on it are becoming more and more off suspicious, and I wonder whether its original owner is still in control of it.
Arabian has always been somewhat eccentric, so I see nothing amiss.
I can't see what the link actually is - it just comes up as a blank page! I do agree that eccentricity has always been a hallmark of his, but he's been unusually so recently...
It links to a pdf of an academic paper titled "Simulating Chaos".

"Don't stress/ relax/ let life roll off your backs./ Except for death and paying taxes/ everything in life.../ is only for now." (Avenue Q)
Last edited: 21/02/2015 at 19:06 by Steamer
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Italian simulation 21/02/2015 at 21:50 #69442
Muzer
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718 posts
" said:
It's not been the same since Mussolini.

Peter

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