Angst
Rambling and inconsistent
Ok. It was a joke in regards to Radcliffe from Pocahontas. Gold and all.
You can't have trade without supply. Supply isn't the same as surplus.
It was so obvious, you denied it mattered!JEELEN said:And, equally obvious, demand (meaning shortage).
JEELEN said:I haven't changed positions, my friend.
JEELEN said:I have no idea why one would argue against there being iron trade.
Please link to that quote.JEELEN said:(Your quote actually confirms I haven't changed any positions, whereas your objection to there being iron trade defies both logic, economy and fact.)
Please link to that quote.
Where'd I say this again? Hint: I never have.JEELEN said:whereas your objection to there being iron trade defies both logic, economy and fact
(Hint: Because if there is, I don't see it, so I'd appreciate some help.)
JEELEN said:You claimed that doesn't necessarily follow.
What do base this claim on? Because it's dumb as hell.JEELEN said:Theoretically correct maybe, but practically nonsensical.
JEELEN said:whereas your objection to there being iron trade defies both logic, economy and fact
JEELEN said:There was (and is) iron trade. The mere existence of trade proves surplus/shortage (supply/demand) and eliminates your theoretical objection.
Graffito said:hint, it could be the comparative economic advantage that led to trade, not supply and demand
like we have too many oranges here that we dump them but still, import orange juice(and marmalade)
I see you still have yet to make a point with your repeated postings. (Your quote actually confirms I haven't changed any positions, whereas your objection to there being iron trade defies both logic, economy and fact.)
Now if you do actually have a point - besides posting for the sake of posting - I would be most interested to know what it is.
The question is whether you're just stupid or a troll, not whether or not you've changed positions.
Please link to that quote.
There's nothing in that link suggesting any change of positions. Nore is there any hint of a position on your side, except what you just suggested (and I suspected), to wit that you are merely posting for the sake of posting without having any actual argument.
So you've changed position again from: "Masada said there was no iron ore trade" to "You're just being difficult".![]()
I see you still have no point other than trying - and failing to - being insultive. How is pointing out you have no actual argument tantamount to 'changing positions'?
Where'd I say this again? Hint: I never have.
Moderator Action: This is not the type of discussion we want in the Chamber. Please stop.This is where JEELEN get's creative folks!
No, what I said is that trade can develop because of factors other than shortage e.g. competitive advantage.
What do base this claim on? Because it's dumb as hell.
Furthermore, how the hell does this reconcile with this?
So is it, or is it not, theoretically sound?
As an aside, I'm curious as to how economics disagrees with me.
Do you even understand what my theoretical objection is? How about you explain to us all what it was?
Awwww, don't help him.![]()
Inonatu claimed there was iron everywhere, ruling out the necessity for trade. Since there was (and is) trade, (usable) iron was (and is) obviously not everywhere.
You claimed that doesn't necessarily follow. Theoretically correct maybe, but practically nonsensical.
There was (and is) iron trade. The mere existence of trade proves surplus/shortage (supply/demand) and eliminates your theoretical objection.
I should try to clear this out. I claimed that there was iron as in iron ore, a resource. There may well be trade in worked iron. Certainly there must have been. That is, as Masada and others pointed out, due to different local economics or technology, not due to a lack of the base resource.
So completely backing out now on what you claimed was obvious just a few posts ago, that Iron trade could be perfectly viable without any shortages whatsoever, because that's the way the early Atlantic Iron Trade looked.And, equally obvious, demand (meaning shortage).
So completely backing out now on what you claimed was obvious just a few posts ago, that Iron trade could be perfectly viable without any shortages whatsoever, because that's the way the early Atlantic Iron Trade looked.
hint, it could be the comparative economic advantage that led to trade, not supply and demand
like we have too many oranges here that we dump them but still, import orange juice(and marmalade)
I should try to clear this out. I claimed that there was iron as in iron ore, a resource. There may well be trade in worked iron. Certainly there must have been. That is, as Masada and others pointed out, due to different local economics or technology, not due to a lack of the base resource.
Yeah, I'm really not getting this conflation of "supply" with "surplus" and "demand" with "shortage". Surplus and shortage may certainly be causes for supply and demand, but they're not the only causes. For example, nobody would ever say that Europe has a surplus of beer, or that the United States has a shortage, but none the less there exists a trade in beer from one to the other.