| ▲ | ffsm8 2 hours ago | |
I understood the argument like this: If there is a bet going that a war doesn't start, and you're able to start said war... Then everyone betting on the war not starting is effectively providing venture capital funds for you to start that war. So if eg. 20 mil is bet on it not starting, the actor holding the proverbial trigger only needs to "invest" sufficient funds to drain the bet and then capitalize on it by pulling the trigger, everyone being against it would've effectively invested into the war The analogy breaks apart at VC, because they're expecting payout after successful funding, which this doesn't provide. I think it's more like Kickstarter/crowdfunding for wars. Just as fucked up though (The "start a war" setting I'm using here is just to illustrate the point. There are a lot more granular bets going on like (place) will be contested etc, effectively creating money pools for offensives) | ||