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Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 05:01:34 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950421489972629863
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Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 05:01:34 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950421489972629863
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 05:01:18 UTC
Original post: https://x.com/i/articles/1950421420967706977
a lesson in sophistry that confuses policy with science. 😉
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:57:40 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950420504642502877
I do not. I construct from first principles.
(And frankly I’m working beyond the scope of your knowledge and ability)
You’re conflating the empirical determinants of market interest rates (which are institutionally manipulated) with the causal logic of time preference as a biological constant—the necessary precondition for all economic behavior.
Time preference is not an “Austrian myth”; it is an evolved constraint. All organisms—humans included—face tradeoffs between present and future consumption, and these tradeoffs are determined by biological risk, environmental scarcity, capital availability, and lifespan projection. To act is to prefer the present over the absent; to defer is to store and transfer the cost of that action over time.
That’s why interest exists at all: it’s a price on deferral. Yes, institutions (central banks, credit markets, fiat regimes) distort that price—but they do not abolish the underlying function. If anything, the manipulation of interest rates without respect for underlying time preferences creates malinvestment and capital consumption—the very problems that neoclassicals and Keynesians continually fail to predict.
As for investment: of course it’s a function of expectations. But expectations are projections of intertemporal gain, weighted by risk, time, and return. You cannot even define investment coherently without a theory of time valuation.
So no—there’s no contradiction here. I treat subjectivity in value, expectation in investment, and time preference in discounting as different operational expressions of the same principle:
1. Behavior is the allocation of time under constraint.
2. Money is the unit of its exchange.
3. Investment is the deferral of time in expectation of return.
5. Interest is the price of deferral.
That’s not Austrian metaphysics or neoclassical equilibrium modeling. That’s operational physics applied to cooperative behavior.
You’re welcome.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:55:46 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950420029142683656
None of those are wrong or partly wrong. they are, as stated, positiva and negativa first principles.
You can keep trying but in the end all you will do is provide me with increasing examples of evidence of the criticism I have correctly levied against you. You are an exceptional student of saltwater school’s pragmatism. That’s not science or law or even economics. It’s policy.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:51:44 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950419015215829049
correct. Tho that was not the question I was answering. It was how to kill them. The point being that hollywood showing nitwits with current carbines or even battle rifles would have a hard time with some of these animals.
In other words, if you were to show hunting dinosaurs how would you equip a team. Especially when the problem is the weapons are at the limit of human carrying capacity, and the ammunition is heavy and they’d need a lot of it.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:49:37 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950418480945385889
There are no errors. The list is of pathologies. That means that they can be either tolerated or accumulated to catastrophic consequences.
I have known you a long time, and while you’re competent, you are also happy making excuses for aggregate outcomes whereas my job is juridical – I don’t have the license to make the excuses you do. It’s called ‘full accounting’. As such what is the compensation for the transfers you involuntarily upon the population? This is the difference between science, law, and utilitarianism. I do science and law, with economics both behavioral and material. I don’t do political excuse making. That’s for politicians.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:46:27 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950417683909927052
How Would You Hunt a Dinosaur?
You’d need:
1. A team, with synchronized fire, ideally hitting vital zones.
2. Heavy weaponry, potentially including:
– .50 cal rifles
– Autocannons (e.g., 20mm)
– Grenade launchers
– Anti-tank weapons (for sauropods or armored species)
– A means of carrying the necessary ammunition and supplies.
3. Other Variables
– Behavior: Predators can be stopped more easily than herbivores in a panic or stampede.
– Skin and Bone Density: Some dinosaurs had keratinous layers or air-sacs that reduced damage.
– Vital Targeting: If you can’t reach brain/heart/lungs due to scale or armor, lethality drops significantly.
Conclusion
Most standard military rifles would not be sufficient to reliably kill the largest dinosaurs. They could be effective against smaller or medium theropods with well-placed shots.
For the truly gargantuan or armored ones, you’d need anti-materiel weapons or heavier, up to and including 20mm+ autocannons, missiles, or explosives.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:41:51 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950416526869451253
Economics is the operational logic of cooperative arbitrage under constraint. It consists in:
– 1. Accounting for all costs.
– 2. Acknowledging the subjectivity of value.
– 3. Understanding markets as evolutionary systems tending toward exhaustion of profit (equilibrium).
– 4. Recognizing time preference as a causal factor in capital formation.
– 5. Treating prices as distributed cognition and incentives as behavioral constraints.
– 6. Insisting on reciprocity as the ethical boundary of cooperation.
– 7. Using money as a commensurable measurement of preference across domains.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:16:51 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950410236462060018
Economics in practice fails where it refuses to measure what is unwanted: externalities, dependencies, moral hazards, and suppressed reciprocity. These failures originate in:
– 1. The instit utionalization of irreciprocity,
– 2. The concealment of time and capital consumption,
– 3. The devaluation of human and social capital,
– 4. And the aggregation of harm beyond visibility, consent, or repair.
An economics without negative principles is merely a system of accounting for profitable deceit.
Source date (UTC): 2025-07-30 04:08:10 UTC
Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/1950408051489730832