Into the Night
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RQAA. Argument of the Stone fallacy. Assumption of victory fallacy.I'm not assuming anything. You chose to not provide support for your claims, despite multiple chances to do so, therefore your claims are meaningless.
RQAA. Argument of the Stone fallacy. Assumption of victory fallacy.I'm not assuming anything. You chose to not provide support for your claims, despite multiple chances to do so, therefore your claims are meaningless.
I'm not assuming. Again, YOU chose to not support your claims.RQAA. Argument of the Stone fallacy. Assumption of victory fallacy.
RQAA. Argument of the Stone fallacy. Assumption of victory fallacy.I'm not assuming. Again, YOU chose to not support your claims.
Not my issue.
Bring something relevant or stop wasting my time.
Are you really trying to say that the environmental Left, aka "tree huggers," want to chop down forests?In 2025 nuclear power should be our major power source
In 1925 oil was our major power source
In 1825 coal was our major power source
In 1725 we cut down forests and burned the wood as our major power source.
The environmental Left wants to do away with 300 years + of progress on energy and go back to chopping down forests and using wood in pellet stoves "carbon neutral" they claim while flailing around with useless diversions into solar and wind--unless you like nationwide blackouts for days like Spain just suffered...

Your chart only backs what I was getting at. The Left hates energy sources that are cheap, clean, and work. They want insane, unworkable ones that are an environmental disaster.Are you really trying to say that the environmental Left, aka "tree huggers," want to chop down forests?
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The Right doesn't care about people or the environment, it's only about money to them.Your chart only backs what I was getting at. The Left hates energy sources that are cheap, clean, and work. They want insane, unworkable ones that are an environmental disaster.
Sure, they do, the difference is they want what works and is reasonable and affordable. The Left gloms onto an idea, no matter how idiotic, unworkable, expensive, and unrealistic it is, like some 2nd grade classroom full of six-year-olds, and fixates on it throwing a tantrum when the adults in the room tell them "No."The Right doesn't care about people or the environment, it's only about money to them.
I wonder how much the government's paid out in black lung benefits over the decades.Sure, they do, the difference is they want what works and is reasonable and affordable. The Left gloms onto an idea, no matter how idiotic, unworkable, expensive, and unrealistic it is, like some 2nd grade classroom full of six-year-olds, and fixates on it throwing a tantrum when the adults in the room tell them "No."
I wonder how stupid you can be to think that safety and health regulations and laws have always been what they are today in what is usually called an historian's fallacy.I wonder how much the government's paid out in black lung benefits over the decades.
There's too much temptation for people to choose profit over the safety and welfare of other people, absent an enforceable system of regulation.The Right doesn't care about people or the environment, it's only about money to them.
No, but it is clear they are not economically worth as much as Blue States. Who is to say what people are worth beyond economics.Do you really believe all Red States are worthless?
Blue states like California actually produce a lot of food.
Exactly, Blue States produce a lot of food, but also a lot of everything else. Farming is 2% of California's economy. If they have a severe famine, and lose half of that, they will not even have a recession. They will outgrow that minor loss. Meanwhile, if Kansas lost half its agriculture, it would be in a deep depression.When you total the cash receipts for all ag commodities, California is the leader, raking first with a total of more than $58 billion, according to USDA data. Rounding out the top 10 are:
- California, $58 billion
An acre of land is about the amount of land that a plow and horse team can plow in a day. 6 days a week for 5 weeks gets you 30 acres. Throw in a few extra acres that are either fallow that year, or used for other things, and you get 40 acres.Balance food production against population centers and see what happens if the trains and trucks stop running.
Soooo...do you support unity or division?With the industrial revolution, almost all famines have happened to farmers and rural people. Urban industrial people almost never have famines. The one exception is when there is a war, or some other sort of violent government action to cut off food from the cities. So if trump has the army surround NYC and cutoff food, there will be starvation. Other than that, NYC will find the food somewhere.
The reason for this is that when farmers do not produce enough food to even feed themselves, they also do not produce enough food to sell, and buy food for themselves. Meanwhile, only a small part of the money that urban dwellers have goes to food. If that doubles, or even triples, it is painful, but they can still do it. Even if they lose their economic production, they have decades worth of food buying assets stored up.
If red states are no longer able to produce food, blue states will just buy the food from other sources. Transportation is cheap and efficient, so blue states can buy from anywhere in the world. The Chinese are also doing this. They are buying from other countries.
There is a new saying among economists that "a bean is a bean is a bean." It is much easier to replace agricultural products than intellectual property products. Beans from Brazil are basically the same as beans from Kansas. Silicon Valley, Hollywood, Wall Street, etc. would be much harder for Brazil to replace.
So without red states, blue states would not starve. In fact, given that almost all the technologies that allow increased farming production come from educated liberals, I wonder whether red states would starve without us.
No, but it is clear they are not economically worth as much as Blue States. Who is to say what people are worth beyond economics.
But I do disagree with this claim that Republicans are all farmers. About 2% of the labor market is in farming. Many of those are illegal aliens, legal aliens, temporary aliens, poor farm laborers, etc. Let's say 1% of them are your Republican farm owners, that would be a high number, and let's say 40% of Americans are Republicans, that would mean 97.5% of Republicans are NOT farmers.
The vast majority of rural Republicans are not farmers. Even beyond that, most do not even have neighbors who are farmers. They live on marginal land that could not support agriculture.
They are people who want to live somewhere cheap. I can not begrudge them that, but I certainly am not dependent on them for food. Those that live off government checks should be thanking me for paying taxes to support them. Those that live off investments should be thanking me for keeping the financial system going. Those that live off jobs should be thanking me for keeping money flowing into the economy.
And even those that are farmers should be thanking me for being a customer willing to (or forced by the government to) pay a lot more for the food that they sell than would be required by the international market, and also willing to pay taxes to subsidize them.
Exactly, Blue States produce a lot of food, but also a lot of everything else. Farming is 2% of California's economy. If they have a severe famine, and lose half of that, they will not even have a recession. They will outgrow that minor loss. Meanwhile, if Kansas lost half its agriculture, it would be in a deep depression.
But people need food, right? Californians can use all their money to buy food from anywhere on Earth, while Kansas would have to beg other states for money to buy food.
An acre of land is about the amount of land that a plow and horse team can plow in a day. 6 days a week for 5 weeks gets you 30 acres. Throw in a few extra acres that are either fallow that year, or used for other things, and you get 40 acres.
You will keep hearing 40 acres given as the size for a pre-industrial one family farm. The Amish speak of needing 40 acres to survive in a purely Amish farming way. Freed slaves were given 40 acres. English peasants wanted 40 acres each.
When you go above 40 acres, it is always many families having to work the land. Most of those families are usually slaves, peasants, or sharecroppers.
The point is the trucks stop running, there is no way to produce on a full modern farm, and very quickly farmers are in real trouble. They can no longer produce soybeans on 4,000 acres, and do not eat much soybeans anyway. That means they have to try to produce food they can eat on more like 40 acres. And somehow pay the mortgage on 4,000 acres when they have no income.
And that is when the starving starts.
I support unity, even if I believe I am contributing more than average. I am grateful to the USA for giving me the opportunity to have more to contribute.Soooo...do you support unity or division?
Japan's debt is 255% of GDP, while our's is 122%. I guess "enormous" is subjective.Every state in the union benefits from the central bank being allowed to debase our enormous debt
Japan's debt is 255% of GDP, while our's is 122%. I guess "enormous" is subjective.
Anyway, the problem with debasing our debt is that it means our debt service payments go up. Economics works like that.
See the current electrical collapse in France and Spain, caused by 'green energy'.The Right doesn't care about people or the environment, it's only about money to them.
Irrelevant.I wonder how much the government's paid out in black lung benefits over the decades.
You're getting quite good at identifying the correct fallacies here and calling these losers on it. You are exactly right.I wonder how stupid you can be to think that safety and health regulations and laws have always been what they are today in what is usually called an historian's fallacy.
You hate capitalism. Companies that want to stay in business will do the right thing.There's too much temptation for people to choose profit over the safety and welfare of other people, absent an enforceable system of regulation.
The default conservative position seems to be to gut regulation and trust companies to just do the right thing.