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Wizards v. Muggles Megathread

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by Xiph0, Mar 7, 2016.

  1. Xiph0

    Xiph0 Yoda Admin

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    Similar to 2nd amendment thread. Only discuss it here. Includes debate about bullets v. magical shields, Avada v. bullets, army v. army, anything. Keep all that stuff in here.
     
  2. H_A_Greene

    H_A_Greene Unspeakable –§ Prestigious §– DLP Supporter

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    Just out of pure curiosity, how many muggle poachers would it take to subdue a Nundu? We apparently have two examples of wizarding forces doing the deed- the stated 100 wizards, and then if we are to take it at value, Eldon Elsrickle single-handedly stunning his own on a daily basis. I find the former rather absurd in terms of volume while the latter is perhaps underwhelming, but where would the muggles fall, assuming they stumbled onto a wild Nundu?
     
  3. MonkeyEpoxy

    MonkeyEpoxy The Cursed Child DLP Supporter

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    Man. Can't they just exhale and cause a plague? It's a struggle considering Fantastic Beasts isn't held up as fact. How much of that is just legend?
     
  4. Nauro

    Nauro Headmaster

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    Ahh, a megathread, for our "favorite topic". Good job.


    To get this started on a path to ruin, it just struck me that I remember a lot of fanfics where Harry hides behind Protego against a physical attacks, or fire. Many descriptions include the him straining or nearly getting burned by the heat.

    Even Wand and Shield (sorry for bringing it up in this context, Roarian ) has
    or
    As is, the trend, even among DLP folk is to have the shield spells become something of an extension of the caster, where impacts and damage threatening him are at least felt through some connection.

    Yet... I don't remember any case in canon Harry potter where a shield charm was used to protect against anything other than spells. And even then, I'm not sure there was any "impact" on the caster after the spells hit.

    My question for others is this - was there ever a case in canon, where a shield charm was used against a non-magical object, or where an impact of a spell does something to the shield's caster?

    Just my two coins, after seeing this new master-thread and noting the shield charm vs nuke thread getting closed.
     
  5. ihateseatbelts

    ihateseatbelts Seventh Year

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    You could consider Harry's Shield Charm knocking Snape flat on his arse, and Hermione's use of the spell in DH to stop Harry and Ron from killing each other. It acted like a physical barrier in both instances. That Cockleford lady in Wonderbook also used it in the same fashion, so I'd say that non-magical objects are fair game.
     
  6. Andrela

    Andrela Plot Bunny DLP Supporter

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    Whenever I think of muggles vs wizards stuff, I look back to this post made by Taure.

     
  7. Download

    Download Auror ~ Prestige ~ DLP Supporter

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    In a pure muggles vs wizards war, wizards win.

    In your standard fight: muggles win. Mostly through volume of fire and significantly larger engagement ranges guns have.

    When wizards fight smart: wizards win. I suspect the types of wizards that might decide to fight muggles think themselves far too above muggles to fight smart (at least initially), but if they did they have a whole bag of tricks that would make fighting them very difficult. However, Deatheaters (and the OotP as well) don't seem to use everything available to them to fight their magical enemies in the books. Something to debate I guess.

    Espionage: wizards win. There may be some avenue to countering things like invisibility cloaks (sound detectors, thermal imaging, etc) and the imperius curse (careful observation of colleagues and looking for abnormalities), and wizards may overlook muggle methods of espionage, but this is too far in the wizard's court for them to do anything meaningful.

    Defence: Wizards win big time. Muggles have nothing that can stop apparition and portkeys, and may have a very limited ability to prevent invisibility cloaks and the disillusionment charm, meanwhile muggles have no ability to break the (probably) many varied and horrible magical defences wizards can erect over a location (call them wards or charms, I don't really care in this context). I like to think muggle-reppelling charms can be "pushed through" if the muggle is aware of them (how else do muggle parents take their children to magical locations like Diagon Alley?) but it will always be there as a distraction at the back of their minds.

    Interrogation: Both do well, but wizards win. Muggles are quite capable of making a person spill every secret they have, but it takes time and care. Wizards can do it with a few drops of a potion or with the imperius curse.

    Heavy weaponry: Possibly muggles, or a stalemate. Depending on whether you think a shield charm (and its building protecting equivalent) can stop all non-magical attacks, or if you think it depends on the ability of the caster to stop an attack (magical or muggle), bombing and strafing from aircraft, artillery etc may or may not be rendered useless by magic. Wizards don't appear to have any equivalent weaponry though maybe they can conjurer meteors or spew fiendfire from a broom.

    Coercion: wizards win. Wizards are not dependent on the muggle world in any significant way so they can't be embargoed or threatened, wizards however can place the imperius curse on high-ranking muggles. The only defence would be removing them once discovered.

    All in all, wizards are heavily favoured in a muggles vs wizards. However, it's unlikely that every wizard would support whatever crackpot Ministry that started such a war. Even a small number of wizards defecting has the potential to seriously upset this balance as only a small number of wizards are needed to provide counters to some of the wizard's most powerful tools and weapons.
     
  8. zentradi

    zentradi First Year

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    I never understood that. They got Avada Kedavra, an unblockable Instagib spell, so if they wanna kill something or someone, they can do just that. The real problem would be to catch a dangerous beast.
     
  9. Joe

    Joe The Reminiscent Exile ~ Prestige ~ DLP Supporter ⭐⭐⭐

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    Yeah I think you got it. The key word here is subdue. Capture the beast without killing it.

    I imagine any muggles stumbling upon the beast would either meet the same fate as stumbling upon any other wild predator, magical or otherwise, with an increased likelihood of death given the breath/size of the nundu.
     
  10. coolname95

    coolname95 Second Year

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    Is there any canon evidence for the killing curse being capable of killing all possible living things? As far as I know, the only thing it's said to be guaranteed to kill is people. When fake-Moody gives his lesson on the unforgivables, he says that the only person to survive a killing curse is sitting in the room with him, but says nothing about the effectiveness of the killing curse on things like dragons and nundus.

    As for wizards vs muggles, wizards might win an overall war, but a muggle could definitely win the average wizard 1v1 if the muggle has a gun. I mean, quite a few wizards (purebloods especially) don't even seem to know what a gun is, so chances are they'd be full of bullet holes before they even thought of defending themselves. Naturally this only works as long as it remains a surprise.
     
  11. Alpaca Queen

    Alpaca Queen Fourth Year

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    As far as the killing curse goes, the wiki gives a fairly good answer: "When cast successfully on a living person or creature, the curse causes instantaneous death." We see Crouch Jr cast the curse on a spider in book 4, and it is cast several times on acromantulas in book 7. There's no reason to believe it wouldn't work on a dragon or nundu, even if this makes the 100 person figure seem a tad strange.

    With regards to wizards and guns, you have to remember wand vs gun is an imperfect analogy. Every wizard has a wand; not every muggle has a gun. Give the wizard some basic defensive tools, like the shield-charmed robes Fred and George sold the ministry, and they're basically invincible against firelegs.
     
  12. coolname95

    coolname95 Second Year

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    I've seen enough inaccuracies in the wiki to simply start ignoring it on any even slightly controversial issue. In any case, nowhere in canon is it said that the killing curse kills all living things.

    There are things that suggest it doesn't do so (nothing concrete, because we just don't know how the killing curse works). First is what you mention - 100 people required to take down a nundu. Surely, if a single killing curse could do the trick, 100 wouldn't be necessary. Of course it could be that it means subduing it without killing it, though.

    Then there are giants. Giants participate in the battle of Hogwarts. Apparently Voldemort had several giants, but the Hogwarts defenders only had Hagrid's half brother. Surely, then, Grawp would have been a prime target for killing curses, seeing how he was the only real defense against Voldemort's giants. He would be easy to hit, too, since giants are.. well.. giant.

    Then there's Hagrid himself. A blond death eater that fires curses (according to Ginny, including killing curses) all over the place in the Astronomy tower battle also curses Hagrid several times on the Hogwarts grounds, but Hagrid is apparently uninjured due to his giant blood. In the same battle, a death eater named Gibbon is killed by a stray killing curse - possibly or probably one of the blond death eater's curses, since he was mentioned to be causing a lot of damage with deflected curses. Seems reasonable that he would have attempted the killing curse on Hagrid, too. Also, the same partially applies to Hagrid regarding size: he would be easy to hit and even easier considering that he seemed to get physically close to his targets (physically throwing a death eater across the Great Hall for instance)

    Not necessarily suggesting Hagrid is immune to killing curses, but just pointing out that 1) nobody in canon actually says the killing curse works on everything and 2) there's circumstantial evidence to suggest it doesn't.
     
    Last edited: Mar 7, 2016
  13. zentradi

    zentradi First Year

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    Or the Killing Curse is one of the many things, that could've been awesomely gamebreaking and Rowling just decided not to use to not to break the game a.k.a. another plot hole.
     
  14. Pure Infinity

    Pure Infinity High Inquisitor

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    As long as there's a logical explanation for it, I wouldn't call it a plot hole. The Killing Curse not working on certain magical creatures - such as Basilisks, Nundus, and Dragons - seems perfectly plausible. After all, if the killing curse can easily deal with all these creatures, why would wizards treat them with such caution?

    Additionally, we do see one magical creature survive the killing curse - Fawkes, in OTP. Admittedly, it does technically kill him, before he revives, but this shows that there are methods for magical creatures to escape death by killing curse. Also, while it's never explicitly stated, it's implied that Dementors can't die, and therefore can't be killed.
     
  15. Aekiel

    Aekiel Angle of Mispeling ~ Prestige ~ DLP Supporter

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    There's also the fact that the Killing Curse is illegal to use, for the most part.
     
  16. zentradi

    zentradi First Year

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    The books only say about the curse being illegal against humans, nothing else.
     
  17. Nerdman3000

    Nerdman3000 Seventh Year

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    I'm honestly curious whether the Wizarding World could even be exposed enough to warrant a Wizarding/Muggle War from happening. Even assuming Deaths Eaters create a huge attack on the muggles, I would think the Wizarding World would make sure to remove any traces of the true source of the attack (they would doubtlessly manipulate muggle memories to make it seem like a Terrorist attack).

    The only way I could see them being exposed is if Magic was leaked somehow into the Internet (such as in the fic Hogwarts Exposed, where the existence of the Wizarding World was leaked into the internet after a series of convoluted events). And even that is assuming that the Wizarding World can't find a way to prevent that information from leaking as well.
     
  18. Steelbadger

    Steelbadger Death Eater

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    The whole concept of a war between Wizards and Muggles is, frankly, ridiculous.

    Perhaps it's because the trope is so completely pervasive in fanfiction, spurred on by the 'Battle of Hogwarts', but why on earth do people think that Wizards would fight any kind of conventional war?

    We're talking about a group with no need for lines of supply, with the ability to travel instantaneously and with absolute stealth to literally any Muggle location. Every wizard has the ability to do so much more than merely kill people, they can impersonate any man or woman, they can create golems, they can take control of any man or woman with so much ease that even a child can perform the spell.

    They can interrogate someone with near-absolute reliability, then they can force that person to forget the interrogation completely. The ability to kill in interesting and flashy ways is utterly irrelevant to the larger scale question.

    Muggles can't even perceive the major Wizarding centres of commerce in the middle of their own largest and most heavily watched cities. Hundreds of children pass through one of the busiest Muggle transport hubs in the world and all Muggles can notice is the occasional person in funny clothes.

    If Wizards chose to end Muggles the Muggles wouldn't even know that they had, they would believe that it was a spate of terrorist attacks and world-wide wars.

    Muggles don't even have the ability to make that choice. And even if they did, there is nothing they could do on the larger scale.

    It's not a case of Muggles getting into a ground war with wizards. It's not even reasonable to think that they'd fight a guerilla war. 'War' presupposes that there are two sides. In a 'war' against wizards there is no leader who is not actually under their control, there are no armies attacking the right places.

    A 'war' with wizards would be a bloodbath as Muggle fights Muggle at the behest of a few Wizards while everyone else goes about their daily lives.

    Nukes? Who cares when the people in charge of pressing the buttons are all under Imperius, and when they don't even know where to fire them anyway?

    It would be like the Witch Trials all over again, where the only people who actually burn are Muggles. There is no winning this war, there isn't even any real way to fight it.
     
    Last edited: Mar 9, 2016
  19. Alpaca Queen

    Alpaca Queen Fourth Year

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    The state of technology is mostly irrelevant. Wizards are already understaffed in this department, not to mention hilariously inept at the internet and fellytones, so it doesn't seem like they should be able to prevent information spread right now. Most likely, wizard governments are using their partnerships with muggle governments to outsource the problem, letting the muggles take down videos of giants and find disillusioned muggles instead. Thus, the question isn't "Will technology spread the information faster than magic can suppress it?" It's: "Will technology spread the information faster than technology can suppress it?"

    On another level, one could ask the question: "Will governments afford their citizens enough privacy, and refrain from monitoring them enough, that the citizens could reasonably tell a sizeable fraction of the muggle population before being caught?" And, well, I don't know how confident I am about that one.
     
  20. Skeletaure

    Skeletaure Magical Core Enthusiast ~ Prestige ~ DLP Supporter

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    And yet Kingsley was able to work in the Prime Minister's office without anyone being the wiser. Meaning:

    - It doesn't matter that wizards are ignorant of Muggles because they can use magic to cover it up.

    - Specific wizards whose role it is to interact with Muggles aren't ignorant of them.

    - A mixture of the two.

    Whatever the case, I don't think you need to understand something to be able to cast magic on it. Arthur Weasley fixed the Dursleys' electric fire in GoF without having a clue about how it worked.
     
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