I don't like that last part too much. It seems a bit too similar to "traveling magic salesman" to me. And a bit too close to the kind of temptation I would expect a less subtle Devil to attempt on a potential mark.
Maybe instead we could pose a hypothetical problem, such as one having a secret lover who would be frowned upon by others; not only could magic discover such, but it can also be used to hide this from the world at large, perhaps even make it possible to continue the relationship more easily?
Might as well throw an envelope full of compromising photos on the table.Maybe instead we could pose a hypothetical problem, such as one having a secret lover who would be frowned upon by others; not only could magic discover such, but it can also be used to hide this from the world at large, perhaps even make it possible to continue the relationship more easily?
That isn't something she likes or respects though.
To be clear : I am against planned obsolescence IRL.
And glad to hear that increasing market magnitude will be negating this issue in the short term !
In the long term we can just shift our economy, and voilà !
Also granaries? Please. This is westeros. You give the lords FAR too much credit.
That isn't something she likes or respects though.
To a Westerosi nobles, markets and merchants are secondary : in the end, the people with military power win and the merchants follow.
It's just a symptom of thinking westerosi are too stupid to put their pants on in the morning.If Westeros does anything it's stockpile grain for the coming Winter, it's the catchphrase of half the bloody continent.
Where did you even get this idea?
Actually, from my read she's actually stupid enough to think her father's oath to Robert matters, never mind the fact her father also had an oath to Aerys he ignored. So she's not playing hard to get, she's legitimately unsure what's going on and probably doesn't even understand enough about magic or war to be able to tell we have more of it than the other guys.If that was actually that important to her, everyone could see it as blindingly obvious that we are more powerful than any seven Great Houses put together.
Stormlander pride dictates that she ask after other things before bending the knee. She wants someone to pitch to her!
Dealing with magitech : masterpost
I'll try to keep this updated with ideas, policies, etc. Please suggest and criticize as needed !
- Wide-scale magitech risks causing an enormous economic crisis. IRL, such enormous changes in the structure of production were either helped and guided along by government efforts (left-wing or right-wing governments both intervened in their own way in such situations), or they caused riots, destitution and/or wars. Therefore, either we do nothing and fight to preserve the status quo (tariffs, bans, price controls...) or we go full magitech and try to help the economy transition into its new paradigm as seamlessly as possible. I personally prefer going full magitech.
- I will be trying to keep this "nonpolitical" (ie, centrist and easily agreed upon).
- DP has vetoed any and all "magic post-scarcity utopia" scenarios. No infinite spell traps for everything, no Heart Tree supermarkets... So we need a functioning economy (and a capitalist one, because communism feels OOC and feudalism or top-down "palace systems" scale poorly and handle industrialisation quite badly). Agreed ?
Proposals :
- In this post, I will be adopting an institutionalist framework. The idea is to provide a blueprint that can be easily adapted to each individual sector, and that doesn't depend on Companions to work. Basically I want a solution that Viserys can add as official policy, and then offscreen all this as "something our institutions are doing" so that we can have fun with magitech as needed.
- We want an economy where mass-produced, cheap and long lasting goods are available (magitech production, yay!), but where people still want custom-made things, where a local service economy is a thing, and where arts and tech are a thing (not just agriculture and industry). This is inspired by IRL : we produce more than we need, but instead of everyone just getting the same super cheap stuff and living comfortably we have varied and artificially stimulated demand.
- Advertising and constantly renewed demand (see the fashion industry) helps such a system to work. I personally hate this for IRL ethical reasons, but promoting this seems totally IC for Viserys...
- Furthermore, our existing anti-monopoly position should help stimulate constant competition, which will help with this. Competition spurs new product creation or improvement, after all (assuming worker's rights have a rock bottom of some sort).
- Make sure people don't starve to death if they're too poor to afford food
- Make sure that people attempting to start a new business can theoretically access capital loans and/or investment, assuming their credit is reasonable enough. Iron Bank microcredit, backed by Divination ? Is this already being handled ?
- Nudge people in threatened sectors into reconverting into sectors we think will develop, and not into other threatened sectors.
- Provide access to education and/or job training if they need to make an intense career change and are too poor to afford it themselves. Basically, give appropriate (not in a dying sector) job training to the jobless and destitute who want it.
- Have our education and prison system focus on training people in skills that our growing industries will find useful. Skilled artisans, service workers, etc.
We've got one more Stormlander House to get for Stannis, IIRC. Hopefully that doesn't take too long.'Night guys, see you tomorrow with more politics but also heading down south at last
Can we not assume people are too stupid to possess their position right off the bat without having it demonstrated first? She made an indication near the end of last chapter of wanting to be sweet talked.Actually, from my read she's actually stupid enough to think her father's oath to Robert matters, never mind the fact her father also had an oath to Aerys he ignored. So she's not playing hard to get, she's legitimately unsure what's going on and probably doesn't even understand enough about magic or war to be able to tell we have more of it than the other guys.
I'm starting to think we should be blunt, tell her we know her secret, and then explain why we know this but others don't: Targaryen ancestral magic bloodline that makes us the powerful Sorcerer King. We can just skip the part about how it works by spying on people's dreams which is the really creepy one.
If Westeros does anything it's stockpile grain for the coming Winter, it's the catchphrase of half the bloody continent.
Where did you even get this idea?
Question, awnsers.It's just a symptom of thinking westerosi are too stupid to put their pants on in the morning.
@Duesal, @DakkaMania is correct. Making Hardened Steel more easily available will be a problem.
Furthermore, I would tax the cheap steel arriving from the PoE to protect our internal markets.
I personally like the idea of going full magitech, but we don't have a way to deal with the unemployment issues yet.
Edit : IMO, we should make it clear IC that our education system and economic policy should aim to shift things towards magitech-compatibility (more services, arts, social security, tech sectors, skilled and customised products...). But let's not try to push it through this year. Poor Uraka would have a heart attack
By contrast the knight she had brought with her, Haystack Hall's master-at-arms as he is introduced, takes one look at Ser Richard and blanches even with the glamour hiding the arcane arms and armor. A wise man, you think and mark his name and face more closely—Ser Criston Swygert. You wonder what relation he is to the idiot Ser Richard had almost skewered during the exchange of Stannis' ransom money.