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Re: Obama's win - good or bad for the US/the world?
Posted:
Nov 9, 2012 7:27 PM
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Yet again, you prove me right: You have nothing useful to offer. Your "philosophical musings" are utterly useless and meaningless to, for instance, homeless people who are suffering *right now* because of lack of government that is paid for: Lack of proper food, proper shelter, proper health care provided by government to those who need it, which has to be paid for. Only that which you condemn - government action that is paid for, where this mathematical economics you condemn provides the road map for its financing - can save those who need saving in this regard. (You think private charity can do it? Fact: It never has met more than a few percentage points of this need, and this is because it cannot meet any more than a few percentage points of this need. You do not believe this? Then try to prove otherwise - and I will destroy your attempted proof with the mathematical facts that you don't know because of your choice to deny the science of mathematical economics.)
On Fri, Nov 9, 2012 at 5:32 PM, kirby urner <kirby.urner@gmail.com> wrote: > On Fri, Nov 9, 2012 at 1:08 PM, Paul Tanner <upprho@gmail.com> wrote: >> You proved me right. You did not actually answer a single question I >> actually put to you in any useful way. That is, all your answers were >> just a beating around the bush. >> > > Who said it's your job to interrogate me and that my job is to answer > ill-conceived yes/no questions of ignoramus vintage? I'm not a > president and you're not a journalist at my press conference. I don't > have to answer any of your questions if they don't interest me. > > All I'm saying is your sanguine faith / superstition in "mathematical > economics" is not allowing you to think clearly and intelligently > about providing health services to a needy world. > > In contrast to what I'm doing, which is actually quite substantive > compared to anything you've written in this thread so far. > > I'm sketching real future prospects whereas you're talking about > numbers and money, like some DC-based cube farm policy wonk. > > Between the two of us, I think I'm doing the useful work of > brainstorming a future, whereas you're parroting the way most USAers > think and talk: weak in STEM, close to incoherent about the future. > > Kirby
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