#there are incentives to keep them apace with their peers
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Obviously, DnD characters are wish fulfillment and lots of people donât want to address the slow senescence of the vulnerable human form in their fun games. That being said, narratively, I do think that levels should probably fluctuate over the course of a lifetime. The level twenty world-saver is going not going to stay level twenty into their old ageâthatâs not how athletes and retirement work! Wisdom and Charisma casters maybe, but your STR/CON/DEX builds are going to soften with age. They might still be the spryest bastards in the old people tai chi group, but âterrifyingly in shape 70 year oldâ is not the same as âdeadliest man on the planetâ. Drop those old folks a few levels, give them some creaky bones and presbyopia. Itâs good for them, promise.
#slamming a stick into the ground like the pope âMORE WIZARDS WITH MINOR COGNITIVE DECLINEâ#old washed up bards and barbarians who had to get a hip replaced#the only classes that are probably immune to it are druids and clerics#based solely on the power of very old gardeners and priests#theyâre probably good until they start losing 3x oriented#but even monks I I think have the right to take an arrow to the knee#the other aspect of this is differing lifespans which mean that when parties do get back together for a reunion tour#there are incentives to keep them apace with their peers#and the format of dnd means that the only other time most people see their old characters is in little cameos when friends gm#and no one wants to nerf their friendâs baby#but with in the era of more experimental actual play and game design#I think we can move past these hang ups and give the people what they deserve#old rogues with arthritis who are still really good but wonât stop complaining about their glory days
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My first job was selling guns at Walmart. I was a clerk in the sporting-goods department at our local store in Georgetown, Ky. Georgetown was a much smaller place then. This was years before Toyota came to town, put an immense car plant in a field not far from my house, and started producing Camrys by the tens of thousands. The population was less than 10,000, tobacco farms dotted the countryside, and Future Farmers of America was one of the largest clubs in my high school.This was also the era when students would roll into class in the morning still wearing hunting camouflage, with their rifles in the trunks of their cars or mounted in their pickups. So when I started my work life selling guns, the only thing that was notable about my job was the wage â $3.70 per hour, a full 35 cents more than minimum wage.I canât tell you how many rifles, pistols, and handguns I sold during my brief Walmart career. It was the same procedure every time. The customer would fill out a form, Iâd take their money, and either hand them the firearm at the counter, or â if they bought ammunition at the same time â walk them to the front of the store before I gave them their new gun. It was a fun job for a teenager, and I learned a great deal about guns.So I was more interested than most to read about Walmartâs latest retreat from the firearms business. Responding to the recent string of mass shootings â including one in a Walmart store in El Paso â the company announced that it was ending sales of handgun ammunition and ammunition for AR-style rifles. The companyâs CEO also called for a debate on renewing an assault weapons ban and for strengthened background checks. Walmart had already largely stopped selling handguns and so-called âassault weapons,â and now a company born and bred in deep-red America was decisively breaking with the culture that was indispensable in making Walmart the mightiest retailer in the land.Woke capital is here to stay, and Walmart proves it. At first glance, Walmartâs decision is mystifying. Whatâs next? NASCAR going all-Prius to save the planet? Even if you grant the reality that Walmart has grown far beyond its original red-state base, why would the company want to alienate half their customer base?But thatâs old America-style thinking. This is new America, and new America is in the grips of profound negative polarization. âNegative polarizationâ means, simply, that Americans who participate in politics are motivated more by distaste (more like disgust) for the other side than they are by any particular affection for their own. Indeed, affection for politicians on your own side is often dependent on the level of disgust they can display for your opposition.In this new America, the calculus has changed. It used to be that if you spoke as a corporation you risked alienating customers. Now, you also risk alienating customers if you donât speak. Silence has costs. In an article last year about Walmartâs corporate turn to the left, Walmart officials cited marketing data indicating that the overwhelming majority of Walmart customers wanted it to âtake a stand on important social issues.âNow, in a closely divided nation, whose values will the corporation champion? All other things being equal, the answer is obvious â the company will stand for the values of the people making the decision. This is the most human thing in the world. Once the decision is forced on a corporation, how many people of conviction will choose to advance ideas they loathe? At best, theyâll stay silent and ride out the backlash from failing to take a stand. A corporate ethos that used to say to leaders, âKeep your head down and do your work,â is being replaced by an ethos that declares, âYou have power and a platform. Use them.âAnd the values at issue become self-reinforcing. Corporate executives compete for top talent, and the biographies of these people tend to look a lot like the executivesâ own â often from elite institutions, frequently from Americaâs economically dynamic urban centers, and, failing that, still highly educated.Thatâs the American demographic thatâs blue -- and getting bluer every year.Moreover, aside from a few exceptional moments, companies donât truly face meaningful market penalties for taking controversial stands. Sure, some consumers may boycott, but others will seek them out. The vast bulk of the dissenters may grumble, but theyâll still shop. After all, if they truly like a Nike shoe, or if they have piles of frequent-flyer points at American Airlines, or if Walmart is far closer and more convenient than any other comparable store, the vast majority of consumers wonât sacrifice convenience, price, or perks for their politics.In the final analysis, the incentives are clear. Corporate executives are motivated by their own values (and the peer pressure of like-minded colleagues) to take progressive political stands, and the market doesnât materially punish their choice. As for consumers? They still shop, but their polarization proceeds apace â theyâre embittered (or thrilled) by decisions that have nothing at all to do with the products they seek.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines https://ift.tt/2PH7yL7
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My first job was selling guns at Walmart. I was a clerk in the sporting-goods department at our local store in Georgetown, Ky. Georgetown was a much smaller place then. This was years before Toyota came to town, put an immense car plant in a field not far from my house, and started producing Camrys by the tens of thousands. The population was less than 10,000, tobacco farms dotted the countryside, and Future Farmers of America was one of the largest clubs in my high school.This was also the era when students would roll into class in the morning still wearing hunting camouflage, with their rifles in the trunks of their cars or mounted in their pickups. So when I started my work life selling guns, the only thing that was notable about my job was the wage â $3.70 per hour, a full 35 cents more than minimum wage.I canât tell you how many rifles, pistols, and handguns I sold during my brief Walmart career. It was the same procedure every time. The customer would fill out a form, Iâd take their money, and either hand them the firearm at the counter, or â if they bought ammunition at the same time â walk them to the front of the store before I gave them their new gun. It was a fun job for a teenager, and I learned a great deal about guns.So I was more interested than most to read about Walmartâs latest retreat from the firearms business. Responding to the recent string of mass shootings â including one in a Walmart store in El Paso â the company announced that it was ending sales of handgun ammunition and ammunition for AR-style rifles. The companyâs CEO also called for a debate on renewing an assault weapons ban and for strengthened background checks. Walmart had already largely stopped selling handguns and so-called âassault weapons,â and now a company born and bred in deep-red America was decisively breaking with the culture that was indispensable in making Walmart the mightiest retailer in the land.Woke capital is here to stay, and Walmart proves it. At first glance, Walmartâs decision is mystifying. Whatâs next? NASCAR going all-Prius to save the planet? Even if you grant the reality that Walmart has grown far beyond its original red-state base, why would the company want to alienate half their customer base?But thatâs old America-style thinking. This is new America, and new America is in the grips of profound negative polarization. âNegative polarizationâ means, simply, that Americans who participate in politics are motivated more by distaste (more like disgust) for the other side than they are by any particular affection for their own. Indeed, affection for politicians on your own side is often dependent on the level of disgust they can display for your opposition.In this new America, the calculus has changed. It used to be that if you spoke as a corporation you risked alienating customers. Now, you also risk alienating customers if you donât speak. Silence has costs. In an article last year about Walmartâs corporate turn to the left, Walmart officials cited marketing data indicating that the overwhelming majority of Walmart customers wanted it to âtake a stand on important social issues.âNow, in a closely divided nation, whose values will the corporation champion? All other things being equal, the answer is obvious â the company will stand for the values of the people making the decision. This is the most human thing in the world. Once the decision is forced on a corporation, how many people of conviction will choose to advance ideas they loathe? At best, theyâll stay silent and ride out the backlash from failing to take a stand. A corporate ethos that used to say to leaders, âKeep your head down and do your work,â is being replaced by an ethos that declares, âYou have power and a platform. Use them.âAnd the values at issue become self-reinforcing. Corporate executives compete for top talent, and the biographies of these people tend to look a lot like the executivesâ own â often from elite institutions, frequently from Americaâs economically dynamic urban centers, and, failing that, still highly educated.Thatâs the American demographic thatâs blue -- and getting bluer every year.Moreover, aside from a few exceptional moments, companies donât truly face meaningful market penalties for taking controversial stands. Sure, some consumers may boycott, but others will seek them out. The vast bulk of the dissenters may grumble, but theyâll still shop. After all, if they truly like a Nike shoe, or if they have piles of frequent-flyer points at American Airlines, or if Walmart is far closer and more convenient than any other comparable store, the vast majority of consumers wonât sacrifice convenience, price, or perks for their politics.In the final analysis, the incentives are clear. Corporate executives are motivated by their own values (and the peer pressure of like-minded colleagues) to take progressive political stands, and the market doesnât materially punish their choice. As for consumers? They still shop, but their polarization proceeds apace â theyâre embittered (or thrilled) by decisions that have nothing at all to do with the products they seek.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines
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My first job was selling guns at Walmart. I was a clerk in the sporting-goods department at our local store in Georgetown, Ky. Georgetown was a much smaller place then. This was years before Toyota came to town, put an immense car plant in a field not far from my house, and started producing Camrys by the tens of thousands. The population was less than 10,000, tobacco farms dotted the countryside, and Future Farmers of America was one of the largest clubs in my high school.This was also the era when students would roll into class in the morning still wearing hunting camouflage, with their rifles in the trunks of their cars or mounted in their pickups. So when I started my work life selling guns, the only thing that was notable about my job was the wage â $3.70 per hour, a full 35 cents more than minimum wage.I canât tell you how many rifles, pistols, and handguns I sold during my brief Walmart career. It was the same procedure every time. The customer would fill out a form, Iâd take their money, and either hand them the firearm at the counter, or â if they bought ammunition at the same time â walk them to the front of the store before I gave them their new gun. It was a fun job for a teenager, and I learned a great deal about guns.So I was more interested than most to read about Walmartâs latest retreat from the firearms business. Responding to the recent string of mass shootings â including one in a Walmart store in El Paso â the company announced that it was ending sales of handgun ammunition and ammunition for AR-style rifles. The companyâs CEO also called for a debate on renewing an assault weapons ban and for strengthened background checks. Walmart had already largely stopped selling handguns and so-called âassault weapons,â and now a company born and bred in deep-red America was decisively breaking with the culture that was indispensable in making Walmart the mightiest retailer in the land.Woke capital is here to stay, and Walmart proves it. At first glance, Walmartâs decision is mystifying. Whatâs next? NASCAR going all-Prius to save the planet? Even if you grant the reality that Walmart has grown far beyond its original red-state base, why would the company want to alienate half their customer base?But thatâs old America-style thinking. This is new America, and new America is in the grips of profound negative polarization. âNegative polarizationâ means, simply, that Americans who participate in politics are motivated more by distaste (more like disgust) for the other side than they are by any particular affection for their own. Indeed, affection for politicians on your own side is often dependent on the level of disgust they can display for your opposition.In this new America, the calculus has changed. It used to be that if you spoke as a corporation you risked alienating customers. Now, you also risk alienating customers if you donât speak. Silence has costs. In an article last year about Walmartâs corporate turn to the left, Walmart officials cited marketing data indicating that the overwhelming majority of Walmart customers wanted it to âtake a stand on important social issues.âNow, in a closely divided nation, whose values will the corporation champion? All other things being equal, the answer is obvious â the company will stand for the values of the people making the decision. This is the most human thing in the world. Once the decision is forced on a corporation, how many people of conviction will choose to advance ideas they loathe? At best, theyâll stay silent and ride out the backlash from failing to take a stand. A corporate ethos that used to say to leaders, âKeep your head down and do your work,â is being replaced by an ethos that declares, âYou have power and a platform. Use them.âAnd the values at issue become self-reinforcing. Corporate executives compete for top talent, and the biographies of these people tend to look a lot like the executivesâ own â often from elite institutions, frequently from Americaâs economically dynamic urban centers, and, failing that, still highly educated.Thatâs the American demographic thatâs blue -- and getting bluer every year.Moreover, aside from a few exceptional moments, companies donât truly face meaningful market penalties for taking controversial stands. Sure, some consumers may boycott, but others will seek them out. The vast bulk of the dissenters may grumble, but theyâll still shop. After all, if they truly like a Nike shoe, or if they have piles of frequent-flyer points at American Airlines, or if Walmart is far closer and more convenient than any other comparable store, the vast majority of consumers wonât sacrifice convenience, price, or perks for their politics.In the final analysis, the incentives are clear. Corporate executives are motivated by their own values (and the peer pressure of like-minded colleagues) to take progressive political stands, and the market doesnât materially punish their choice. As for consumers? They still shop, but their polarization proceeds apace â theyâre embittered (or thrilled) by decisions that have nothing at all to do with the products they seek.
from Yahoo News - Latest News & Headlines https://ift.tt/2PH7yL7
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