Gaming Life In Iraq 61
Thanks to GameGirlAdvance for pointing to a Healing Iraq weblog entry about the state of gaming life in Iraq. The Baghdad-based author says: "Videogames are a huge part of our society. Almost everyone I know, regardless of their socioeconomic status, either owns a console or has regular access to one", and goes on to note that "The most popular console in Iraq is the Sony Playstation. Dreamcast and the PS2 also have their devoted fans. The Xbox and Gamecube aren't very popular here." The games industry may not be raking in much money from Iraq, though: "We have a special gamers district at Bab Al-Sharji at the heart of the city where you can find hundreds of videogame vendors. Of course all the games we get are copies and we rarely find originals."
Re:Hate to say I told you so (Score:2)
I did actually - however wasn't it the original Playstation and the more I think about it I'm sure they were banned from being exported to somewhere like Iraq as the graphics chips were allegedly being pulled for being "so powerful" that they could be used in missile guidance systems.
It could, of course, simply have been Sony's marketing department again.
If they've got bandwidth... (Score:1)
IMHO, shooting up virtual Iraqis is better than the real thing.
Re:If they've got bandwidth... (Score:1)
Re:If they've got bandwidth... (Score:2)
Re:If they've got bandwidth...followup (Score:1)
Lets see.. (Score:1)
2.Sell to the people of Iraq.
3.???
4.PROFIT!!!
Re:Lets see.. (Score:2)
Re:Lets see.. (Score:1)
Re:Lets see.. (Score:1, Funny)
Leave it to a liberal to make a statement that a leader who gassed his own people was loved.
Re:Lets see.. (Score:1)
Re:Lets see.. (Score:2)
I dunno how far that would get since well into the 90th percentile of iraq's population felt he was a good ruler.
More likely 90% of the Iraq's population felt it was safest to say they felt he was a good ruler. The reason US leaders have such low popularity ratings, comparatively, is because US leaders don't as a rule have dissident citizens shot.
Re:Lets see.. (Score:2)
Re:Lets see.. (Score:2)
OH NO!! (Score:5, Funny)
Now we know the real reason as to why we invaded them. Weapons of mass Infringement. Maybe the MPAA, RIAA, and BSA can help foot the bill too.
Maybe I missed something (Score:2)
If you don't have a TV, how can you play a console? Or, perhaps, this only addresses former (current?) Baath party members?
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:2)
Offer some evidence. I at least gave some information about where my idea came from. You
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:2)
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:4, Insightful)
Or at least, they did have all of this until the US bombed the crap out of the infrastructure and power plants prior to invading - and now extremists keep blowing up all the power lines whenever they get them repaired.
Of course, much of the country is desert, and there are still uneducated country peasants (the lower class) who want to shoot rocket launchers at anything that moves because Saddam told them to. Kind of like the redneck US stereotype, but without beer to pacify. Sure, there are some people like that, but by no means everyone.
(Uneducated armchair statements from somebody who's been paying attention to the news outlets that report things about Iraq other than "stuff blows up").
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:2)
Actually, power in Iraq is back to pre-war levels [yahoo.com].
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:1)
going back to the original poster, he is correct. pre-desertstorm iraq was doing well, but it goes back further; pre-gulfwar (iraq vs iran) iraq had THE best schools and one of the highest standards of living of any middle eastern nation. its easy to understand why these people were (and are) fed up with USA and Hussein.
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:1)
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:2)
The only place in Iraq before March 20 like what you describe was Baghdad, where the palaces of Saddam's family stood. Much of the rest of Iraq didn't even have electricity, potable water, or paved roads.
The U.S. made careful plans to destroy as little of Iraq's infrastructure as possible. The U.S. is rebuilding Iraq's infrastructure. Not rebuilding what we destroyed, but what Saddam let fall into disrepair over the last 30 years. Th
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, after the severe PR issues in the original Gulf War where the US deliberately wiped out as much civilian infrastructure as possible, they were much more careful in the last round of bombing.
The mainstream Iraqis are on our side.
No. The mainstream Iraqis don't necessarily want a harsh dictator running things, but neither do they want to be occupied by the same country that's been blockading them, restricting their air service, and bombing them for years. It's not an either/or proposition.
Heck, one of them married an American soldier.
You *definitely* go for the whole American media thing, don't you?
The *only* poll (loudly trumpeted) that I've seen that vaguely supported the US was one put out by the occupational authority (and how would *you* vote if soldiers from an occupying nation showed up at your door and asked you to fill out a form about them, eh?) that claimed that a majority of residents of Baghdad felt that they were better off after Saddam's overthrow than before. Sure as hell doesn't mean that they want continuing occupation.
Now, foreign Saddam-loving terrorists have come in and keep blowing up Iraq's infrastructure while the United States is trying to fix it... at its own expense, paid with American blood and money.
American blood tends to be armed and behind guarded barriers. Remember that the first set of obstacles into the occupational authority's compound is through a checkpoint manned by hired unarmed Iraqis -- ironically enough, the US uses human shields just as much as Saddam did.
As for American money, Iraqi oil was supposed to be taken and used to pay for reconstruction, giving the US control of a lucrative nation with little cost. As it happened, massive damage to national infrastructure caused by a combination of a decade of war and blocked trade (by the US), in addition to imperfect management by the Hussein regime, has meant that oil won't begin to cover the costs for years to come.
The US occupation in Iraq was not the freedom-bringing thing that many American citizens think it is, bringing glorious democracy to the Iraqi people. The occupational authority does not allow the basic rights that the American people enjoy, such as that of free press. Arabic media that criticized the occupational authority was banned from operating. US soldiers enforce curfews with assault weapons.
To be fair, this is not all a particularly US trait. Invading and occupying an unwilling country and then blitzing your own citizens with happy propaganda about it has happened for many, many, many years, with other countries taking the US's role (think of Nazi Germany, for instance). Brutal treatment of the people of that country is not unheard of, either. And sabotage (not terrorism -- terrorism is defined as controlling civilians through terror, which if anything the US is doing more than Iraqi car bombers) of the occupying country's military installations and attacks on collaborators is not unusual either (again, see World War II).
Hell, I remember going back and watching WWII propaganda material (on both sides -- the US and England certainly had as much bogus material as Germany did) and wondering how amazingly gullible people had to be to buy into it back then. Well...now I'm seeing it in action, and it still amazes me.
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:1)
Beer to pacify?
Maybe _I_ missed something...
Re:Maybe I missed something (Score:1)
Fodder for Dubya's next speech... (Score:4, Funny)
Well, at least the White House can now prove SOMETHING illegal has been going on in Iraq.
Nothing illegal went on in Iraq (Score:1)
Actually, under Saddam, many things weren't illegal. Like feeding people feet-first into shredders, and developing strains of Congo Crimean Hemmoragic Fever.
So technically you are right, the Baathist regime committed no crimes in Iraq, since they defined the law and were legally immune to it anyway.
Re:Nothing illegal went on in Iraq (Score:1)
Actually, head-first is better. Less pain, and you die instantaneously. Qusay Hussein would opt for head-first shredding whenever he felt merciful / bored.
I can see them iraqi boys (Score:1)
Of course all the games we get are copies??!! (Score:2, Insightful)
besides, the whole idea of such a survey is obssured, can you tell me how many sick kid is in Iraq without medication, how many elder is threatened to die beucase of lack of medicine/food????
No instead we go and see how many of them pay games, on what stations, of what type....
PLease give me a break..
Re:Of course all the games we get are copies??!! (Score:2)
sweet, sweet alcohol
Re:Of course all the games we get are copies??!! (Score:1)
BUT
what he does find, he does buy. Which is really quite amazing.
Forget that WMD stuff!! (Score:2)
I bet they pirate CDs and DVDs also.
Now I know why we invaded, be beware the long arm of the MPAA, RIAA, etc
PlayStation 2s in Iraq (Score:2)
Hahahah! The irony! (Score:1)
But to their disappointment, they're on the bad side! [planetcnc.com]
Gaming in Afghanistan (Score:3, Funny)
--
hecubas
Re:Gaming in Afghanistan (Score:2)
What? And you thought the source code was stolen by some domestic kids?? Pfft.