Wpisy: 7
Język: English
Alkanadi (Pokaż profil) 13 maja 2015, 14:17:37
"Krizo, which means “crisis” in Esperanto, has been populated for 1300 years and is deeply rooted in Melanesian culture. It has faced all kinds of disasters..."
Read more
Maybe, Evildea could check it out for us since he lives in Australia.
BeardedBloke (Pokaż profil) 16 maja 2015, 22:23:35
Red_Rat_Writer (Pokaż profil) 17 maja 2015, 06:53:26
BeardedBloke:I don't understand this. It doesn't exist so I'm not sure how it works as a disaster simulation. Is it a computer sim? Interesting Esperanto link though.It's a real island, except they pretend it's a fake country that is constantly being hit by disasters.
Like, a fire drill at school.
Alkanadi (Pokaż profil) 17 maja 2015, 07:06:47
BeardedBloke:I don't understand this. It doesn't exist so I'm not sure how it works as a disaster simulation. Is it a computer sim? Interesting Esperanto link though.As far as I know, it is a real island. I think the wording in the article is a little strange. At first, I thought it was imaginary but then at the bottom of the article it seems to indicate that it is a physical place.
Miland (Pokaż profil) 17 maja 2015, 09:15:39
Nephihaha (Pokaż profil) 17 maja 2015, 14:04:51
http://www.new-utopia.com/
BeardedBloke (Pokaż profil) 18 maja 2015, 09:53:33
http://www.principality-hutt-river.com
I believe the biggest contingent of dual 'citizens' are Norwegian although I'm not sure that citizenship actually confers any practical advantages. It started with a farmer having an argument with the government based on some archaic tax law. It's harmless enough that the government hasn't pursued it to the highest courts (perhaps they didn't want to set any precedents). Needless to say the Australian (and probably any other) government doesn't recognise it and, presumably, it's simply a farm with a lot of back-taxes owing.