Damanucus wrote:Actually, it is a point. You ejected four nations from the region, leaving six—three, if you consider the possibility of puppets—nations. That, in reality, is still ejecting a community. You've sliced it up, which is worse, but the community is gone in either case.
I don't think we really want to play the numbers game here. You're manipulating the numbers to make your case, but we have no idea how many puppets belonging to the same person were in Christmas. I don't think Research Aide was ever part of any "community." Meanwhile, I've noticed that Lebuckte and Christmas Bunny have an uncanny ability to log in at the exact same time on a fairly regular basis. If there's only one person behind those two nations, that particular "native" still has a puppet in Christmas and hasn't actually been ejected.
It's quite possible that the only active individual who has been ejected from Christmas is Scrooger Codger, and I'm still waiting to hear from defenders on whether or not they even consider him a native given that he once raided the region.
Bottom line: The liberation resolution strongly implies that we have ejected all the natives. We haven't. But what could be the even more serious problem is that the liberation resolution takes for granted that a "community" ever existed in Christmas. It didn't. A community implies interaction, and there's absolutely no evidence that the natives ever interacted with each other -- they certainly didn't on the RMB. Either way, the liberation resolution is inaccurate, misleading, and should be rejected by the Security Council.