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Topic: Chinese Prisoners Forced to Farm World of Warcraft Gold

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Chinese Prisoners Forced to Farm World of Warcraft Gold
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Manual labor is as old as prisons themselves, but as it turns out, it might not be the most profitable use for a locked up inmate.To get more news about Buy WoW WLK Gold, you can visit lootwowgold.com official website.

It's been discovered that in an unknown number of Chinese prisons across the country, inmates have been forced not only to do physical labor, but electronic work as well, acting as World of Warcraft gold farmers by night.Gold farming has always been a problem for the game, particularly from China, but this is a whole new level of insanity. In my opinion, Blizzard hasn't done enough to combat this, as they're content with their title just making tons of money, ignoring the fact that it's 100,000 people's full time job in China to help corrupt their system.

Inflation in Venezuela’s crisis-wracked economy has become so bad that the country’s official currency, the Bolívar, is now worth less than the fake gold used in Azeroth, the setting of the popular online role-playing game “World of Warcraft.”

Dolar Today, a website that tracks the black market rate of the Venezuelan currency, puts the exchange rate at about 10,987 Bolívars per dollar as of Friday morning. In comparison, the current gold price of a “World of Warcraft” token is about 7,288 gold pieces per dollar.

While in reality nobody actually trades in “World of Warcraft” gold, the comparison highlights the abysmal status of the Bolívar as the country’s socialist government struggles with a crumbling economy and a drastic rise in violent crime.Venezuela’s opposition-led congress announced on Wednesday that inflation in the country’s economy quickened to 248.6 percent in the first seven months of the year and is expected to jump to almost 700 percent by December.

The country’s official exchange rate is about 10 Bolívars on the dollar, but the majority of Venezuelans avoid using that and instead stick with the black market rate. To help readers understand how bad Venezuela’s monetary mishandling has gotten, Fox News has compiled a list of ten things that 10,397 Bolívars (or $1 in the U.S.) will buy – assuming, of course, there are no shipping and handling payments.Venezuelan Flag: One 3’ x5’ polyester flag featuring the yellow, blue and red stripes, stars and Venezuelan crest runs 99 cents on Amazon. The flag has been hoisted by both the Nicolas Maduro regime and the country’s growing protest movement to rally supporters. Maduro has used it to rally the military and his dwindling group of supporters, while protestors have carried it on sticks and in their hands while government forces shoot tear gas at them and have even used it as a makeshift gasmask amid the chaos.



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