Is deleting history is unhelpful?

12,404 Views | 166 Replies | Last: 4 mo ago by Beer Baron
BusterAg
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AG
For example, so many people claiming the slippery slope argument was illegitimate as early as 5 years ago. All those threads were memory holed.

I see that as very unhelpful.

Rhose are part of the legitimate history of debate on this website. That history is instructive to further debate.

For instance, there was a similar debate on the politics board about whether modern monetary policy was going to be harmful to consumers. Since the experts said no, a few people argued that printing more and more money would be harmless. Now a meal at McDs costs $12.

The only benefit of deleting the past that I can see is to prevent "I told you so posts".

What say you R&P? Do the benefits of deleting the past outweigh the costs? Are we sacrificing the legitimacy of the arguments of this board by memory holing threads that contain powerful but inconvenient truths?
ramblin_ag02
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AG
I have no idea about any specific instances, but I think people should be able to bring up old threads. It's not like religion or philosphy is time sensitive
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Rocag
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AG
To my knowledge, Texags doesn't delete old threads or even have a policy against posting to older threads. So I guess I'm not sure what exactly this thread is supposed to be about. If you want to revive older threads it would seem you're free to do so.

If the question is whether it's better to continue an existing thread about a topic or start a new one on that same topic I suppose I can see pro's and con's for both. A new thread is kind of like a fresh start and lets some new people put forward ideas without having to deal with the baggage of past arguments. But you end up rehashing the same material over and over again.

And I'd point out that even with the Fed's ideal 2% inflation rate your $12 meal is going to cost another $1.25 in five years. That's the way they want the system to work.
BusterAg
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AG
Can you please find me a thread started by Seamaster where he said that legitimizing gay marriage was going to lead to people teaching homosexually is appropriate to grade schoolers, and many posters said that this is a ridiculous slippery slope argument that would never happen.

Trust me when I say dozens of these existed at one time.
BusterAg
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AG
A hamburger meal cost $6 ONE YEAR AGO.

This recent inflation is not OK. Wholesale cows went up from about $600 a head to $1,400 a head y / y in March. The same meal will likely be $18 by football season. $50 in Kyle Field.
Rocag
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I've got no interest in looking through his entire search history, but in general it is pretty easy to figure out what threads a person has started. It's easily found in their profile. For example, this link will take you to a list of every thread Seamaster has started. I see plenty of topics from the R&P board regarding homosexuality and marriage or similar topics.

And there's no way your $12 McDonald's meal was $6 last year. I call BS. Unless you changed your order.
BusterAg
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AG
I'll just leave this right here.

The Banned
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BusterAg said:

Can you please find me a thread started by Seamaster where he said that legitimizing gay marriage was going to lead to people teaching homosexually is appropriate to grade schoolers, and many posters said that this is a ridiculous slippery slope argument that would never happen.

Trust me when I say dozens of these existed at one time.


I think it's a liability thing, primarily. The thread itself may be ok but some posters get out of hand and they choose to just nuke the thread out of an abundance of caution vs parsing through what should and shouldn't stay. Especially with all of the potential "publishing" concerns a few years back. I don't think they have some sort of agenda other than self-preservation.

ETA: and that self-preservation took priority over a careful culling of inappropriate posts.
Rocag
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AG
Gee, I wonder why their starting point was the end of 2019. What could have possibly happened around the end of 2019 or beginning of 2020 that could have affected prices? I guess we'll never know.

Also, those prices seemed a bit suspect to me so I decided to do a quick check on the McDonalds app. However, prices differ by location so those could be right for some places. But for a typical one in Collin County I got:

Medium Fries = $2.89 (not $4.19)
McChicken = $1.99 (not $3.89)
Big Mac = $4.99 (not $7.49)
10 McNuggets = $4.99 (not $7.58)
Cheeseburger = $1.59 (not $3.15)

To be fair, their Taco Bell prices look closer to what I'd expect. No clue on Chick-fil-A. Not a fan.
canadiaggie
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AG
Rocag said:

Gee, I wonder why their starting point was the end of 2019. What could have possibly happened around the end of 2019 or beginning of 2020 that could have affected prices? I guess we'll never know.

Also, those prices seemed a bit suspect to me so I decided to do a quick check on the McDonalds app. However, prices differ by location so those could be right for some places. But for a typical one in Collin County I got:

Medium Fries = $2.89 (not $4.19)
McChicken = $1.99 (not $3.89)
Big Mac = $4.99 (not $7.49)
10 McNuggets = $4.99 (not $7.58)
Cheeseburger = $1.59 (not $3.15)

To be fair, their Taco Bell prices look closer to what I'd expect. No clue on Chick-fil-A. Not a fan.
Yep. Though I'm sure they've risen since then too, I wonder what they were on January 19, 2021.

People are so ****ing selective. Rah rah my political party better than yours - nobody actually gives a **** about fixing the actual issue.
BusterAg
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AG
If you guys are really arguing that inflation hasn't really been all that bad over the last 4 years, I have nothing else to say.
Rocag
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AG
No one's arguing it doesn't exist. The argument is mainly about the causes and how we should respond. And anyone who posts economic data starting in 2019 and fails to mention COVID is doing a poor job of hiding their intentions.
Zobel
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AG
Covid and $5T in stimulus. Who could have imagined that was inflationary?!
Beer Baron
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BusterAg said:

Can you please find me a thread started by Seamaster where he said that legitimizing gay marriage was going to lead to people teaching homosexually is appropriate to grade schoolers, and many posters said that this is a ridiculous slippery slope argument that would never happen.

Trust me when I say dozens of these existed at one time.
I think you're misremembering. The arguments were always about whether it was going to lead to pedophilia being normalized, or lobbied for as something on equal footing with hetero/homosexuality in terms of rights and recognition.

I found these by looking for posts I made here involving the word "steak," because it usually resulted in me betting a steak dinner for my husband and I that this wouldn't happen. Maybe you're one of those people who equates lessons about some kids having two moms or two dads, or lessons about how gay people exist with normalizing pedophilia, in which case these are the threads you're looking for.


No history erased, and giant conspiracy avoided.

https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/3067115/replies/55174640
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2966821/replies/52300905
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2962124/replies/52152016
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2590392/replies/42011895

Usually, the claim looks something like this:

Quote:

2) pedophilia/pedestry will be normalized and some of you, within a decade, if we're still on TexAgs, will be defending it. Because "equality" and "love wins." Also polygamy.


If you recognize this argument as being different from the way you framed things initially, I don't think you're going to find those. I've fought with seamaster on many, many threads and pedophilia is always where the arguments went, often from the get-go, as you can see by the thread titles of some of these.
Sapper Redux
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Zobel said:

Covid and $5T in stimulus. Who could have imagined that was inflationary?!


I'm not a Trump fan by any stretch of the imagination, but I don't blame him or Biden for inflation. It was going to happen given the utterly unique supply-side shock the global economy received plus the interventions needed to stabilize everything at the time. How we approach from late 22 or so and the coming years is certainly up for debate.
Zobel
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AG
I think it's been baked in for a long time but some of it is self inflicted. Some of it is also demographic, like the retirement of the boomers, and some geopolitical, like the industrial build out from the shale revolution and the reshoring of industry that is following now. All of those create demand for people and stuff, which increase prices. But! increasing the money supply by massive stimulus is fundamentally inflationary.
Rongagin71
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Hyper inflation is bad because it makes contracting difficult
which upsets the supply chain resulting in more inflation.
But a moderate amount of inflation, like a moderate amount
of unemployment, is actually good for the economy.
I do think we have been well beyond moderate inflation
and that the Biden Admin's energy policies bear blame.
Giving away vast amounts of taxpayer money has not
been limited to just the Covid response, though that was big.
ramblin_ag02
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Quote:

But! increasing the money supply by massive stimulus is fundamentally inflationary.
Random musings alert! This is what makes me cynical and pessimistic about our economic system. Capitalism and the US more specifically has been amazing at creating wealth. Our system has created more wealth than any other in history, and it's not even close. However, all of that wealth is very concentrated. The rich are much richer than they have ever been compared to the general public.

That seems like a big problem, but I'm beginning to think that is the only way capitalism works. If you start sharing the wealth created more evenly, then you start to see crazy amounts of inflation. For instance, if your economy generates a trillion dollars and that money is put into long term investments by rich people, then the liquid money supply doesn't change much. Wealth is created, some people get very rich on paper, and inflation doesn't move much. However, if you create a trillion dollars and give an equal share to a million people, then every single person is going to spend a million dollars all at once. Inflation will go through the roof, and that money will become worthless. It seems to me the only way to generate large amounts of wealth and keep inflation down is to concentrate that wealth in as few hands as possible. Which is great for the ones with the wealth, but it seems like a bad deal for everyone else.

Running with that thought, it seems that most if not all civilizations are only stable when land, wealth, power, etc are all very concentrated. When someone outside the upper class gets enough of these things, you tend to see instability. See France 1790 or Russia 1917. A powerful middle class is a historically destabilizing influence. It's a sad commentary on humanity if true and if you believe in the notion of fairness and equality, but I can't get around the apparent historical trend.
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Zobel
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AG
I'm not sure I agree that reduction in concentration produces inflation.

Even your example of long term investments … those drive down interest rates by increasing the pool of available capital. That in turn triggers more investment, as capital is less costly, which is a demand increase and is itself inflationary.

I don't think there's anything there to grab. The real "trick" isn't so much who has the money but the balance of goods and capital, supply and demand.

We didn't get inflation from the stimulus because it went to poor people. We got inflation from stimulus because we diluted the value of money.
ramblin_ag02
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Quote:

We got inflation from stimulus because we diluted the value of money.
This sounds like a tautology to me.

If you give a billionaire a million dollars, that money will get invested or maybe spent on a very limited exclusive good like a Bentley. Neither of those are going to move the needle on the consumer price index. However, you give a thousand dollars to a thousand poor people, that money will be spent on food, clothes, phones, rent, down payments on vehicles, and the prices for all those things will increase. Poor people need the money and will spend it right now. Since more people are spending money, the price of those goods will increase. Since poor people will mostly be buying essentials, the price of essentials will increase which is where inflation hurts the most. That's the way I see it anyway
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Zobel
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AG
It's not a tautology. Inflation is a relative measure of value of currency over time benchmarked into something or other. By definition if you add more money, the relative value versus everything (all thing being equal) goes down.

Youre missing that money has velocity. That rich guy bought a Bentley, and Bentley gave some of that money to their vendors and workers and shareholders, who gave it to their workers and bought stuff at grocery stores and fixed their cars and bought ice cream and clothes and went to restaurants or amusement parts and so on and so on.

direct stimulus benefits the first person who gets the money the most because their purchasing power is increased relative to everyone else's but prices remain the same. Each time the new dollar changes hands, the next person has less and less benefit as prices reflect the new demand. The hypothetical last person actually loses money because they have been paying higher prices all along without the benefit of the new money. This is why subsidizing industries actually costs everyone, the principle is the same.

Sure, you may say a poor person has a different propensity to spend, but even if the rich guy doesn't spend it, the capital *exists*. So unless he buries it as cash it is influencing the money supply. If he puts it into the market in any form at all - eg into a bank for loaning or available for capital investment - it changes the balance between the supply of capital and the demand for it.
Pro Sandy
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AG
Where I live

Medium Fries = $4.39 (not $2.89 nor $4.19)
McChicken = $3.49 (not $1.99 nor $3.89)
Big Mac = $6.49 (not $4.99 nor $7.49)
10 McNuggets = $6.59 (not $4.99 nor $7.58)
Cheeseburger = $3.19 (not $1.59 nor $3.15)

But the high schoolers are making $20/hr
ramblin_ag02
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AG
The point about the people building the Bentley is a good one. I guess my thought would be that there is a layer between the person getting the money and buying common goods and services. Same with someone putting the money in the bank or into the stock market. That money isn't liquid, so it has less effect on the indicators we track for inflation. Along those same lines, that's why the S&P 500 isn't included in the inflation calculation. It can average 10% per year gain for 50 years and yet it doesn't drive anywhere near that level of inflation.
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
Zobel
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AG
Absolutely the S&P is an indicator of inflation, though. Inflation calculation is just a benchmark, it's all relative.

Money in the bank is liquid - for the bank! It enables loans, and lowers the cost of capital for borrowers. Money in stocks is liquid - for the company! It is capital, equity for cash, and functions exactly like a loan with an expected return, either in equity value increase or a dividend, which are really the same thing related by net present value and interest rates.

Part of what we're experiencing now is a capital crunch caused by baby boomers removing their capital from the markets en masse. Less capital means higher borrowing costs, more people competing for fewer dollars - higher interest rates.
Sapper Redux
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Pro Sandy said:

Where I live

Medium Fries = $4.39 (not $2.89 nor $4.19)
McChicken = $3.49 (not $1.99 nor $3.89)
Big Mac = $6.49 (not $4.99 nor $7.49)
10 McNuggets = $6.59 (not $4.99 nor $7.58)
Cheeseburger = $3.19 (not $1.59 nor $3.15)

But the high schoolers are making $20/hr
About 30% of fast food workers are teens. That kind of salary can help a lot people move from truly dire poverty.
Pro Sandy
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AG
Sapper Redux said:

Pro Sandy said:

Where I live

Medium Fries = $4.39 (not $2.89 nor $4.19)
McChicken = $3.49 (not $1.99 nor $3.89)
Big Mac = $6.49 (not $4.99 nor $7.49)
10 McNuggets = $6.59 (not $4.99 nor $7.58)
Cheeseburger = $3.19 (not $1.59 nor $3.15)

But the high schoolers are making $20/hr
About 30% of fast food workers are teens. That kind of salary can help a lot people move from truly dire poverty.
Not surprising, many fast food restaurants are finding traffic is decreasing. Labor costs force higher prices which reduces spending.

Look at McDonald's replacing workers with kiosks or overseas folks.

The free market doesn't support $20/hr minimum wage for fast food.
Sapper Redux
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The kiosks were being placed before there was any movement on minimum wages and many places are actually removing self-checkout machines because they aren't cost effective and upset customers.
Macarthur
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BusterAg said:

If you guys are really arguing that inflation hasn't really been all that bad over the last 4 years, I have nothing else to say.
Couple of things:


Yes, inflation has been an issue, but US businesses have recorded record profits quarter after quarter since the pandemic. There has to be a conversation about some level of price gouging going on.

Inflation has been better in the US than many other parts of the world.

https://www.investopedia.com/inflation-rates-us-and-the-world-7369986

88Warrior
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Macarthur said:

BusterAg said:

If you guys are really arguing that inflation hasn't really been all that bad over the last 4 years, I have nothing else to say.
Couple of things:


Yes, inflation has been an issue, but US businesses have recorded record profits quarter after quarter since the pandemic. There has to be a conversation about some level of price gouging going on.

Inflation has been better in the US than many other parts of the world.

https://www.investopedia.com/inflation-rates-us-and-the-world-7369986




I don't believe its price gouging but a consequence of locking everything down during Covid…Goods stopped being produced so when the lockdowns were lifted everyone went crazy buying "things" and there was no to little inventory to replace what was bought…manufacturers are playing catch up now…goes back to supply and demand…The lockdowns were a disaster for businesses, schools, children, families….everything and everybody..
BusterAg
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AG
Beer Baron said:

BusterAg said:

Can you please find me a thread started by Seamaster where he said that legitimizing gay marriage was going to lead to people teaching homosexually is appropriate to grade schoolers, and many posters said that this is a ridiculous slippery slope argument that would never happen.

Trust me when I say dozens of these existed at one time.
I think you're misremembering. The arguments were always about whether it was going to lead to pedophilia being normalized, or lobbied for as something on equal footing with hetero/homosexuality in terms of rights and recognition.

I found these by looking for posts I made here involving the word "steak," because it usually resulted in me betting a steak dinner for my husband and I that this wouldn't happen. Maybe you're one of those people who equates lessons about some kids having two moms or two dads, or lessons about how gay people exist with normalizing pedophilia, in which case these are the threads you're looking for.


No history erased, and giant conspiracy avoided.

https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/3067115/replies/55174640
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2966821/replies/52300905
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2962124/replies/52152016
https://texags.com/forums/15/topics/2590392/replies/42011895

Usually, the claim looks something like this:

Quote:

2) pedophilia/pedestry will be normalized and some of you, within a decade, if we're still on TexAgs, will be defending it. Because "equality" and "love wins." Also polygamy.


If you recognize this argument as being different from the way you framed things initially, I don't think you're going to find those. I've fought with seamaster on many, many threads and pedophilia is always where the arguments went, often from the get-go, as you can see by the thread titles of some of these.
I will eat enough crow here that I might actually be misremembering. I take back my claim that I am pretty sure threads were deleted. I will posit three things, however:

1) I am pretty sure that there were discussions about normalizing teaching of homosexuality in public schools pre-2019, but you have done enough research here, and I appreciate your long memory and contribution.
2) I still have a problem with rainbow dildo butt monkey at the San Francisco library talking to grade schoolers. Simple google will find the article.
3) Germany just decriminalized child porn this week.
94chem
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BusterAg said:

I'll just leave this right here.


Maybe those are the prices at the airport in Guam?
94chem,
That, sir, was the greatest post in the history of TexAgs. I salute you. -- Dough
Macarthur
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No doubt there are multiple contributing factors, but I've read numerous articles that claim that the issues w supply chains, transportation, etc from the pandemic are not really a factor anymore.
BusterAg
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AG
ramblin_ag02 said:

Quote:

Running with that thought, it seems that most if not all civilizations are only stable when land, wealth, power, etc are all very concentrated. When someone outside the upper class gets enough of these things, you tend to see instability. See France 1790 or Russia 1917. A powerful middle class is a historically destabilizing influence. It's a sad commentary on humanity if true and if you believe in the notion of fairness and equality, but I can't get around the apparent historical trend.

How do you explain the economic miracle of the U.S. between 1945 and 2008? Super-strong middle class during that time period, especially around the meat of the good years, between 1960 and 2000.
BusterAg
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AG
Zobel said:


We didn't get inflation from the stimulus because it went to poor people. We got inflation from stimulus because we diluted the value of money.
In my opinion, we got inflation from the stimulus because it was given away to people that were not working, as opposed to being invested in capital projects that would have helped the economy. But, I guess I am just restating what you said.

If all of that stimulus money had gone towards investment in projects that made the economy more efficient, it would not have been nearly so inflationary. The money would have gone into the economy, and then into the "balance sheets" of the capital projects that were invested in.

But, it wasn't. It was a complete give-away.
BusterAg
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AG
ramblin_ag02 said:

Quote:

We got inflation from stimulus because we diluted the value of money.
This sounds like a tautology to me.

If you give a billionaire a million dollars, that money will get invested or maybe spent on a very limited exclusive good like a Bentley. Neither of those are going to move the needle on the consumer price index. However, you give a thousand dollars to a thousand poor people, that money will be spent on food, clothes, phones, rent, down payments on vehicles, and the prices for all those things will increase. Poor people need the money and will spend it right now. Since more people are spending money, the price of those goods will increase. Since poor people will mostly be buying essentials, the price of essentials will increase which is where inflation hurts the most. That's the way I see it anyway
The difference is that the poor people are receiving the money without creating any extra wealth in exchange for the money they received.

If the poor people would have worked extra hours, or hours that they would have worked but-for receiving the money, then it would not have been so inflationary.

But, that's not what happened.

Poor people got enough money that they cashed government checks and stayed home. More money, less output means inflation.
 
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