![]() ![]() If you discover a glitch that provides an unfair advantage, please keep it to yourself and never use it while others are around. While they may not be ready to attempt an actual boss fight or competition against endgame players, being supportive and showing them a good gaming experience will help encourage them to keep playing the game, whereas unsupportive behaviour will cost us new players to the gaming community. If you're a high-ranked player, please consider supporting newer players if you see them playing enthusiastically in both PvE and PvP rooms. ![]() While the Morpheus is borderline acceptable, there are clearly more efficient weapon choices. Sword users are further considered freeloaders due to their ammo-conversation intent, including Windblade users who attack using the wave projectiles. Please avoid using swords or shotguns against bosses: both of these weapons are extremely ineffective due to their incredibly short range. More perceptive players will check whether you are pulling your own weight, and may choose to leave the room if you are refusing to play properly. These essays do not simply take those stories apart: each one tells new, more inclusive stories that can structure more inclusive, generous, and ethically engaged ecosystems.Please do not freeload during boss fights to conserve ammo: the payout you receive from the boss is much higher than the ammo costs you will incur. The stories we tell when we separate invaders from the ecology they supposedly invade draw on deeply ingrained discourses of nativism and colonialism. The essays expose the rhetorical stances of invasion, migration, and reproductive futurism across species boundaries, indicting the nativist and colonialist discourses that sustain the oppression and abuse of human and nonhuman animals alike. Each of these essays questions the received idea of an "invasive species" as a morally compromised destroyer of a privileged "ecosystem," a category with an inherent moral and aesthetic stamp of approval. These essays do not simply take those stories apart: each one tells new, more inclusive stories that can structure more inclusive, generous, and ethically engaged ecosystems., This collection refreshingly approaches the issue of invasion ecology from the urgently needed perspectives of ethics and rhetoric. Each of these essays questions the received idea of an "invasive species" as a morally compromised destroyer of a privileged "ecosystem," a category with an inherent moral and aesthetic stamp of approval. The essays in this volume, written by philosophers, geographers, environmental humanities scholars and others, provide a necessary intervention that will help us grapple with the complexities of ecological and social harms created by the eradication of individuals and species deemed non-native., This collection refreshingly approaches the issue of invasion ecology from the urgently needed perspectives of ethics and rhetoric. As our activities create more and more refugees, both human and nonhuman, the rhetoric of invasion has unprecedented power that calls us to ask critical questions. The essays in this volume, written by philosophers, geographers, environmental humanities scholars and others, provide a necessary intervention that will help us grapple with the complexities of ecological and social harms created by the eradication of individuals and species deemed non-native., This theoretically nuanced, scientifically informed, and historically and culturally sensitive collection delves into the logics of extermination at a crucial time. This volume introduces a broad set of valuable, insightful and critical interventions into the field of 'invasion ecology' that one hopes will be engaged with by both conservation biologists and the wider policy sphere in order to provoke debate and contest current practice, This theoretically nuanced, scientifically informed, and historically and culturally sensitive collection delves into the logics of extermination at a crucial time. ![]()
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