How do you "properly compensate" non-human species that are displaced, endangered or harmed under your morally questionable standards of conduct?
11/14/2011 3:52:21 PM
11/14/2011 4:10:52 PM
^ "The Planet" is why we have a political system. ^^ "Non-Human Species" are why we have religion and charity organizations. No point scrapping the whole of civilization to save two birds and a badger.
11/14/2011 4:29:09 PM
Why is anyone even arguing with Lonesnark? This is they guy whose global warming solution involved surrounding the continental United States with twenty-five foot high concrete walls. You know, to keep the water out. This is the guy who argued against the avalanche of evidence supporting climate change while burning 5% of his annual income trying not to melt in his own house. There is literally not a point that LS can be taken seriously.Like, look at this thread. Read the comedic gold this guy contributes to American society through his fingertips:Random TWW Poster: Look man this water has some turbo toxic shit that will probably cause you to develop super cancer and melt your innards at the same time.Lonesnark Response:"we have shockingly cheap filtration systems."That's right. Just go ahead and run that instantly flammable, plastic melting, Cancer breeding death juice through a Brita filter if you're so worried about a couple of bad parts per million. Honeybadger don't give a fuck.
11/14/2011 8:53:12 PM
Always nice to hear from you. Too bad a rational conversation remains unlikely with you. How's that $100 coming along?
11/15/2011 12:48:59 AM
I only deal in gold-pressed latinum.
11/15/2011 7:08:11 PM
11/15/2011 7:59:15 PM
^^ Fine, then all you owe me is just over 1/18th of an ounce.
11/15/2011 11:01:03 PM
lol what was the bet about again? Can't it be outweighed by the millions of times you're factually incorrect here on a daily basis?I bet it's some goofy prediction that's near impossible to policeJust laughing over here that you want to give SandSanta, Shrike, and others shit about that one time you remember them being wrong, yet I've never seen you acknowledge being wrong on here once. Not even about the inclusion of housing prices in the CPI. Heh. You just slink out of the thread, and later, I'll be lucky if you aren't posting the same exact lies.[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 9:33 AM. Reason : .]
11/16/2011 9:32:47 AM
I'm sure I make mistakes here and there. If I said house prices are in the CPI I was both right and wrong. "Rent equivalency" is in the CPI, a factor which is supposed to include house prices. But as studies showed it was a poor factor, as house prices doubled "rent equivalency" in the CPI went up only 10% because the calculation was offset by mortgage interest rates which fell during the period. SandSanta put his money where his mouth was and lost over an easy to measure but impossible to enforce bet (he refused to pay, after-all). Being wrong about the future was not a moral failing, but saying he would pay when he should have known it was a lie was a moral failing. I have never knowingly spread false information on this board. If you can ever point out factually incorrect statements I will happily own up to them. But I suspect the issue is not over facts but morals, opinion, or estimations about the future which you disagree with. I don't call you a liar when you say a worker run economy would be great. Besides, why am I singled out? When was the last time you admitted to remembering something incorrectly? As for Shrike, his errors in the "bailouts" thread were not opinion, but transcription errors. He said the bailouts paid off, when he meant to say "TARP bailouts to banks paid off, although all other bailouts lost and continue to lose taxpayers their shirts."
11/16/2011 10:05:04 AM
11/16/2011 1:55:19 PM
11/16/2011 2:47:52 PM
11/16/2011 3:21:59 PM
Ok, see, you might have me right there. Of course, I'd say it's a funny story. You see, I read a blog in my RSS feed written by Mike Munger of Duke University. Well, awhile ago he wrote a post attacking the inclusion of "owner equivalent rent" in the CPI because it tracked house prices so poorly:http://mungowitzend.blogspot.com/2011/04/you-cant-hit-what-you-cant-see.htmlWell, six months passed and it morphed into the statements I have made on this forum. I remembered it was an attempt to measure house inflation,just a poor one (hence the "right and wrong" I said). It seems my memory was faulty, as it turns out to in fact have nothing to do with home prices, as you said. It isn't as you said it would be either, as the "rent" in question falls after home prices begin falling, not rising as people lose their homes:"owner equivalent rent" is somewhat tracking house prices, just time delayed and severely dampened. It is clearly an attempt to measure home prices over time. Otherwise they could just survey renters or the owners of rental property what their rent is, rather than asking live-in homeowners which may have never rented a home in their life what they'd expect to rent the place for. So that is how that happened. Anything else you'd like cleared up?
11/16/2011 4:06:54 PM
Holy shit you can't do it, can you."I was wrong."Housing prices and rent prices are not the same fucking thing. You were flat-out wrong. In some cases (such as the one your statement applied to) they can move in opposite directions. Any questions?
11/16/2011 4:27:58 PM
11/16/2011 4:32:19 PM
^^ How do you not get "I was wrong" from "my memory was faulty"? I was wrong. I was mistaken. My understanding was in error. That said, why do you keep harping on rent? The index doesn't measure rents either. It asks people who do not participate in the rental markets to guess what the current rental price is. ^ "Deregulated" does not mean "aren't regulated." Or is it your opinion that Airlines today "aren't regulated"? In discussion people are talking about aspects of behavior. Airline pricing is deregulated, doesn't mean an airline can murder nuns and get away with it. Well, we were talking about Glass Steagal, which Canada has no version of. You call the repeal of Glass Steagal deregulation. As such, Canada not having said regulation makes this aspect of their behavior deregulated. Canada is different, as you say. Those differences had a lot to do with their stability, including Canadian bank's ability to sue those defaulting on their mortgage for any losses, which both protects banks from losses and makes borrowers weary of borrowing speculatively.Here are some other differences between Canada and American banking (also out of my RSS reader in May 2009):http://www.themoneyillusion.com/?p=1150[Edited on November 16, 2011 at 4:55 PM. Reason : .,.]
11/16/2011 4:49:59 PM
Canada doesn't have Glass Stegall because they have a totally different form of regulation. Rather than having endless numbers of rules to follow my understanding is that they have to sit down and open their books to government regulators who then determine how leveraged they are and their credit rating (government serves the role of rating agencies). They are allowed to do this because so much of the banks in Canada are explicitly backed and insured by the government. Can you imagine if we tried to do something similar in the US (if you believe we are past the point of no return on "too big to fail"). There is no doubt in my mind that bankers and many on this board would absolutely balk at the idea of having to open their books screaming OMG SOCIALISM AND JOB KILLING REGULATION all the way. I call regulation any instep that government makes into a market (this could even be in the form of subsidies or any policies handed down from government). Its not enough to just repeal glass stegall and expect our banks will perform like Canada's. You have to also institute the other measures and regulatory culture they have for insuring their banks don't go under.Would you agree with Jamie Dimon that we need to deregulate the banking industry? I assure you he doesn't agree with the Canadian banking system. When I see the word deregulation I put it in the perspective of what people like him want, not just one particular rule that doesn't happen to exist in another country.
11/16/2011 5:16:06 PM
11/16/2011 5:25:46 PM
after rereading that its a little rambling but I still think you got the gist.^and yet thats not what we seehttp://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-09-26/wall_street/30203172_1_jamie-dimon-basel-iii-s-bankersDimon explodes on the canadian delegation to the IMF on the suggested new BASEL rules. Calling them job killing (big suprise there)
11/16/2011 6:45:11 PM
11/16/2011 6:53:03 PM
11/16/2011 10:03:15 PM
11/17/2011 7:14:47 AM
11/17/2011 8:41:17 AM
11/17/2011 9:10:54 AM
I just checked the thread I think you are talking about (hyperinflation) and the conversation clearly moved on. I dunno, just didn't click on it again. And when I did, it was text bombs. That said, now that I've actually read what I posted, it wasn't even wrong. The CPI clearly does contain an entry for housing, which is all I said. And your response was wrong that rents were driven up by the foreclosures. It was you that said "inclusion of housing prices in the CPI". You said I said something, when I said no such thing. You manufactured this whole damn thing.But I was still very clearly wrong. I was wrong to assume you were right about what I said. [Edited on November 17, 2011 at 9:38 AM. Reason : ,.,]
11/17/2011 9:37:03 AM
ahahahahahahahahahahahaThe only thing I'm left wondering is whether or not somebody would have bet against me on this one.
11/17/2011 9:39:15 AM
Yes they do /thread
11/20/2011 10:39:54 PM