Skip to content

More Ideologies #71

New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Open
wants to merge 1 commit into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from
Open
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Changes from all commits
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
12 changes: 6 additions & 6 deletions index.html
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -27,12 +27,12 @@ <h2>What are the eight values?</h2>
<p>There are four indendent axes - Economic, Diplomatic, State, and Society - and each has two opposing values assigned to them. They are:</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#d32f2f;">Equality</b> (Economic)<br/>
Those with higher Equality scores believe the economy should distribute value evenly among the populace. They tend to support progressive tax codes, social programs, and at high values, socialism.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#00796b;">Wealth</b> (Economic)<br/>
Those with higher Wealth scores believe the economy should be focused on rapid growth. They tend to support lower taxes, privatization, deregulation, and at high values, laissez-faire capitalism.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#f57c00;">Might</b> (Diplomatic)<br/>
Those with higher Might scores believe in an aggressive, or hawkish, foreign policy. They tend to support high military spending, nationalism, rivalry with other countries, and at high values, rapid military expansion.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#0288d1;">Peace</b> (Diplomatic)<br/>
Those with higher Peace scores believe in an peaceful, or dovish, foreign policy. They tend to support low military spending, international aid, cooperation with other countries, and at high values, pacifism.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#00796b;">Markets</b> (Economic)<br/>
Those with higher Market scores believe the economy should be focused on rapid growth. They tend to support lower taxes, privatization, deregulation, and at high values, laissez-faire capitalism.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#f57c00;">Nation</b> (Diplomatic)<br/>
Those with higher Nation scores are patriotic and nationalist. They often believe in an aggressive foreign policy, valuing the military, strength, sovereignty, and at high values, territorial expansion.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#0288d1;">Globe</b> (Diplomatic)<br/>
Those with higher Globe scores are cosmopolitan and globalist. They often believe in a peaceful foreign policy, emphasizing diplomacy, cooperation, integration, and at high values, a world government.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#fbc02d;">Liberty</b> (State)<br/>
Those with higher Liberty scores believe in strong civil liberties. They tend to support democracy and oppose state intervention in personal lives. Note that this refers to civil liberties, not economic liberties.</p>
<p class="value-description"><b style="color:#303f9f;">Authority</b> (State)<br/>
Expand Down
Loading