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Brain Drain: Difference between revisions

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{{examples}}
 
== [[Literature]] ==
* In ''[[Atlas Shrugged]]'' this is {{spoiler|John Galt's major plan: to drain ALL OF AMERICA}}
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* ''[[Battlefleet Gothic]]'', of all things — and among the Orks of all people. Leadership (crew competence and morale) is randomly generated, but the Ork battlecruiser and battleships have a special rule: they "can opt to swap Leadership ratings with a Kill kroozer or Terror ship to represent the warlord dragooning the best crew in the fleet aboard his vessel".
 
== [[RealVideo LifeGames]] ==
* In the [[Interactive Fiction]] game ''[[The Lost Spellmaker]]'', all of the spellmakers (people who, well... make spells, for the entertainment of the masses) from the PC's town and the other villages nearby are mysteriously disappearing. It turns out they're being stolen by the nearby city of Plantasitoy. Given that Plantasitoy is {{spoiler|an anagram for [[PlayStation]]}}, one could easily read this as a metaphor.
 
* During a given countries "golden age" it has often been common for adventurous immigrants to swarm over there to find opportunities. For instance, several conquerors have had scholars and artists crowding their courts simply because the prestige attracts. This naturally causes a Brain Drain in other countries.
** By the same principle, countries going through particularly bad times experience an exodus of the talented to anywhere else, which naturally makes ending those bad times more difficult. Perhaps the most famous example of this phenomenon is the [[Berlin Wall]], which was in large part erected to prevent skilled people from leaving East Germany (and instead had the unintended effect of keeping precisely those people in East Germany who were unskilled at climbing walls).
 
== [[Web Comics]] ==
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** He actually was a hugely valuable employee for them, his wacky ideas were given a fair try and made the people he managed more productive.
 
== [[VideoReal GamesLife]] ==
* During a given countries "golden age" it has often been common for adventurous immigrants to swarm over there to find opportunities. For instance, several conquerors have had scholars and artists crowding their courts simply because the prestige attracts. This naturally causes a Brain Drain in other countries.
* In the [[Interactive Fiction]] game ''The Lost Spellmaker'', all of the spellmakers (people who, well... make spells, for the entertainment of the masses) from the PC's town and the other villages nearby are mysteriously disappearing. It turns out they're being stolen by the nearby city of Plantasitoy. Given that Plantasitoy is {{spoiler|an anagram for [[PlayStation]]}}, one could easily read this as a metaphor.
** By the same principle, countries going through particularly bad times experience an exodus of the talented to anywhere else, which naturally makes ending those bad times more difficult. Perhaps the most famous example of this phenomenon is the [[Berlin Wall]], which was in large part erected to prevent skilled people from leaving East Germany (and instead had the unintended effect of keeping precisely those people in East Germany who were unskilled at climbing walls).
 
{{reflist}}
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