Growing rather sick of this... GENOCIDE IS NOT A MATTER OF SCALE. Yes, Teldrassil is a tragedy of insane magnitude, with far reaching consequences and arguably irrepairable damage nobody ever disputed that, but it does not fit the criteria of Genocide just like Hiroshima never did, just like Nagasaki never did. Just like countless other cities starved, bombarded, etc during wartime never were. It's not a denominator or measure of the scale of an event and it never was.
What sets Genocide apart, from an ordinary tragedy is that it's efforts specifically intended to wipe out specifically singled out people group. (Orcs seeking to wipe out the Dreanei, Jaina purging Blood Elves from Dalaran, Greymane sterilising the Forsaken are things that could legitimately be labeled as Genocide within WoW)
Alleria is best waifu in game she wont do no such things.. besides if sylvanas ends up dying ill need a new waifu
You can't take what ya can't see... *rolls d20* You rolled a natural 20* The skill of stealth is successful.
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The Void. A force of infinite hunger. Its whispers have broken the will of dragons... and lured even the titans' own children into madness. Sages and scholars fear the Void. But we understand a truth they do not. That the Void is a power to be harnessed... to be bent by a will strong enough to command it. The Void has shaped us... changed us. But you will become its master. Wield the shadows as a weapon to save our world... and defend the Alliance!
You are literally doing the "uhm well technically genocide is..." BS. My point is literally about the magnitude of difference between both events and you are exactly doing the thing of trying to say which one is more of a genocide. Come on man. My point is that discusing what is a genocide or not is irrelevant when the magnitude of impact between Teldrassil and Dalaran are far different and is disingenuous to compare them on any scale.
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But the problem is that not even by the purge of Dalaran was a genocide! The point is that people keep getting bogged down on what is the "technical" definition of a genocide and keep missing the point of the difference in magnitudes. It's just disingenuous to bring one event in relation to the other.
The whole point is that people keep playing the "But this is actually a genocide" card when the whole issue is about what had a biggest impact in terms of magnitude. The problem is the constant "This is worse because it is a genocide" BS.
And again, not even the Purge of Dalaran was a genocide. The goal was to expel political opposition, not eradicate a group of people. Teldrassil is considered a genocide because the magnitud of the attack to the center of NE culture, not because Sylvanas just wanted to eradicate them. Regardless of any of that, the whole issue is forcing the comparison when Teldrassil is just plainly a worse lost of life than the Purge.
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The whole "It's not technically a genocide because she didn't have the intention!" Is the whole problem of this take. It's a whole obfuscation of the issue of what is a worse event, plain and simple.
They were only attacking them on sight and hanging them over shark pools... Where Jaina's orders end and Vereesa's begin is never made clear during the scenario.
(I know this is one of those Blizzard telling something and showing something else situations)
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Then why are you bringing up Teldrassil, in a thread, which has nothing to do with it?
Genocide is not a matter of scale or even physical harm, but actions taken under the intent of eliminating a people. Using Genocide as a denominator of scale or overall impact is tone deaf and disingenuous.The whole point is that people keep playing the "But this is actually a genocide" card when the whole issue is about what had a biggest impact in terms of magnitude. The problem is the constant "This is worse because it is a genocide" BS.
This is fishy, because it doesn't really translate well. The political divisions of Warcraft are, in a majority of cases represented by different races/species. So the elimination of all blood elves, from Dalaran is something that can be counted as a genocide. (There is a grey area, with some of the devs later coming out saying that it's come off way worse than they intended, in game so there is ground to argue that they meant to make it more of a dispersion than a killing spree)And again, not even the Purge of Dalaran was a genocide. The goal was to expel political opposition, not eradicate a group of people. Teldrassil is considered a genocide because the magnitud of the attack to the center of NE culture, not because Sylvanas just wanted to eradicate them. Regardless of any of that, the whole issue is forcing the comparison when Teldrassil is just plainly a worse lost of life than the Purge.
Attack on a culture is not genocide. Scale of destruction doesn't constitute genocide. You're the one that made the comparison and you're the one that brought it up, as Aliance whataboutists tend to, in a thread that has nothing to do with it.
Last edited by sighy; 2021-11-21 at 12:13 AM.
She went there to kill all the night elves. That's the definition of genocide.
Because people were bringing it up.
Which is why the conversation about what is or not genocide is pointless. The Problem is that everytime people call Tedrassil a genocide as shorthand to get across its impact -innacurate but understandable- we get the derail of "Well it's not technically a genocide" -even when the game itself refers as such, because the game IS working with the more simplistic "a WHOLE lot of people were killed" definition- which is just a derailing of the actual devastation of Teldrassil.Genocide is not a matter of scale or even physical harm, but actions taken under the intent of eliminating a people. Using Genocide as a denominator of scale or overall impact is tone deaf and disingenuous.
That's the problem, fixating on the technicality of what is a genocide when it's more semantics than anything.
Given that the major enforcers of the Purge were the same race than blood elves, only with political differences, would make clear that it wasn't genocide, but expulsion of a political party. Yet again, it's the constant fixation on what is and what is not a genocide is disingenuous, because the constant "well Teldrassil isn't technically genocide" comes across as nothing but derailment of the actual point being made.This is fishy, because it doesn't really translate well. The political divisions of Warcraft are, in a majority of cases represented by different races/species. So the elimination of all blood elves, from Dalaran is something that can be counted as a genocide. (There is a grey area, with some of the devs later coming out saying that it's come off way worse than they intended, in game so there is ground to argue that they meant to make it more of a dispersion than a killing spree)
Attack on a culture is not genocide. Scale of destruction doesn't constitute genocide. You're the one that made the comparison and you're the one that brought it up, as Aliance whataboutists tend to, in a thread that has nothing to do with it.
Your post is just evident of that, all you do is keep harping on the definition and technicality, on semantics, instead of any quantitative approach of harm. And it's just very tiring that everytime people use the word "genocide" to say "a lot of people of a race died" rather than focus on the technicality of definition, people like you go all "uhm actually" when it matters literally nothing to the conversation.
By that definition, Dalaran doesn't count. Sunreavers are still considered Thalassians and Blood Elves both by race and ethnicity, and religion did not play a relevant role.
On the other hand, Teldrassil very much does, since Sylvanas set it on fire to kill the Night Elves. Not to burn the tree, that was just a means.
It's not a technicality. Teldrassil objectively is not something that can be classed, as a genocide. It's not a matter of feelings, opinions or other subjective nonsense. It'S not a denominator of how violent something was nor of the scale. Terms like these should not be thrown about arbitrarily, because it's one of the most monstrous things that someone can commit. I'm not going to pretend to know why Blizzard elected to use the term, because the possibilities range from them being tone deaf to them using connotations of real tragedies to make the events, in order to market their videogame.
There is no point bringing up Teldrasil in 90% of the threads it appears in outside of hollow whataboutism attempting to derail the debate. It's a huge blow to the Darnassians, which they might never recover from spare some magical mumbo jumbo, but to put it bluntly bombarding a settlement into submission or ruin is a tactic as old as human ability to throw big rocks long distances, in fact that's how actual sieges work.
Depends on perspective, as far as Alleria and Vereesa are concerned, their people betrayed them when they sided with the "monsters" (the Orcs) that destroyed their home.
As for Valeera, she never really had a home among the High Elves, her parents were killed by bandits when she was very young and she has no family left, and the scourge invaded around the same time - she never got to know her homeland. Just because they are the same race doesn't make them "her people"... She's seen more kindness from the Alliance than the Blood Elves and the Horde, and she rightly views that as being more important than racial ties to a people she never knew and have never lifted a finger to help her.
Last edited by Schattenlied; 2021-11-21 at 02:04 AM.
A gun is like a parachute. If you need one, and don’t have one, you’ll probably never need one again.
"Genocide is the intentional action to destroy a people—usually defined as an ethnic, national, racial, or religious group—in whole or in part." The purging of Blood Elves from Dalaran absolutely was a genocide, even if they share the same blood as the traitorous elves that eradicated them.
If Sylvanas' intent was to specifically annhilate Night Elves, and/or their Worgen cohabitants, then it counts as well. As I understand it though, she was just aiming to maximise casualties on all sides.
Teldrassil was motivated by some nonsense about crushing hope.
And the specific groups counted as targets of genocide are national, ethnical, racial or religious. The Sunweavers clearly fit the national classification the best here. Leading us neatly back to the OT if you argue they're still Thalassians then they owe Quel'thalas alegience, in which case they're all guilty of high treason.
Last edited by sighy; 2021-11-21 at 02:06 AM.
No, they're not traitors. The high elf/blood elf thing is a political rift. I'm sure they're traitors in each others' eyes though.
One teeny tiny itty bitty problem with your "Dalaran absolutely was a genocide."
THE PURGE WAS NOT TO DESTROY THE SUNREAVERS BUT TO IMPRISON THEM AS (collective) PUNISHMENT FOR BREAKING DALARAN NEUTRALITY POLICY!
For fuck sake, why is it that so many haven't played both sides of this bloody scenario? Alliance side show that the entire thing is to capture the Sunreavers so they can get to the bottom of who worked for Garrosh, and killing them should only be a last resort.
Of course, there were some gungho racist alliance adventurers that just wanted to kill elves for funsies as the Horde version shows, but they were outliers.
Heck, Isle of Thunder even confirms that the Alliance side depiction (in which jaina just freeze and tp's belves away) is the canon depiction because Lorthemar demands of Jaina to release the Sunreaver prisoners.
If the horde depiction was the entire truth and it was your lovely definitional genoside, then there wouldn't be any freaking prisoners.
They captured some, slaughtered others in the street, chased them throughout Pandaria and wherever else with the clear intent to remove them all from their Dalaran home for good. Thanks to Lorthemar all those who wound up in the Violet Hold still breathing were eventually set free to go anywhere except back to their home in the Sunreaver's Sanctuary. Anyone who fought back against that insane, vindictive frost mage either succesfully fled the city or else was murdered. Those that got locked up were spared for the moment because they complied and surrendered, but would have surely still been murdered had Lorthemar not managed to miraculously talk sense into Jaina. During the Purge, the Silver Covenant also robbed and slaughtered Sunreaver/Blood Elven civilians serving as shopkeepers and whatnot. Many more would've died on the spot, or been incarcerated and dealt with later, had it not been for the righteous fury of Rommath, Lorthemar, and their comrades among the ranks of the Farstriders and Magisters. Elements of both scenarios are canon by the way, and contrary to your assumption, I did do the Alliance version while Mists was live. Furthermore, if you think targeting solely a specific group to lock them away either indefinitely or to await an unjust execution, does not negate it constituting genocide. If you honestly believe your bit about there not being "any freaking prisoners", then you might want to brush up on some history and the definition of "genocide." The marginalised group doesn't have to be readily exterminated. Since removal is the goal, they can simply be forced into undesirable living conditions such as in prisons or labour camps.
Still stings that Jaina never acknowledged how unjustified her actions were, given that no Sunreavers ever betrayed Dalaran before being targeted during the Purge and acting out in self-defense, nor did she ever apologize. This bit ain't relevant to the thread, but her being ousted from the council just isn't good enough for my mage.
Last edited by saintminya; 2021-11-21 at 04:53 AM.
the Alliance abandoned Quel'thalas and left them at the mercy of the Amani, Scourge, and the Wretched for 6 years; if anything the Alliance are the traitors
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nvm this is a necropost
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eh, I'm still adamant that the Fourth War started when Varian declared war in the Undercity and what happened after Garrosh was deposed was just a simple truce
The Alliance gets the Horde's most popular race. The Horde should get the Alliance's most popular race in return. Alteraci Humans for the Horde!
I make Warcraft 3 Reforged HD custom models and I'm also an HD model reviewer.
All elves are traitors
This world don't give us nothing. It be our lot to suffer... and our duty to fight back.
They were exiled for disobeying orders to not turn themselves into literal monsters and thereby endangering all of Quel'thalas by recklessly going ahead and doing that anyway. Exile was an undeserved mercy.
That the Alliance is too stupid to realize that they have permitted an existential threat to life to live is irrelevant to whether or not they are traitors.
Absolute nonsense. The Warchief is the leader of a joint coalition; in order to remain a member of the Horde, it would be prudent to obey the Warchief, but the Warchief absolutely does not rule Quel'Thalas, dictate its laws, or even particularly interfere in its daily operations. Quel'Thalas is not a "member state", they just happen to be willing to work with a larger entity than themselves and in so doing share common goals and alliances, including an oath of allegiance. However, it is not in the Warchief's power to just compel them to do anything they might dictate.
The edgy elves disobeyed strict orders given by Quel'Thalas, and by so doing made themselves traitors. They then proceeded to go off and be totally cool with murdering their own kin, which is a separate issue but which doesn't exactly reflect well on their already-monstrous lack of morality.
But we both know that there is no limit to the lengths you will go to in order to twist facts to whitewash your waifu, which is pathetic. More importantly, everyone here is sick and tired of hearing from you. Please go away.