• @vacuumflower
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    -41 year ago

    Firstly setting new records repeatedly for records that have existed for a 100+ years is still extremely concerning.

    Of course. So what?

    I don’t know how you think this is actually somehow a rebuttal of what I said.

    Not a rebuttal, just a response.

    My point is your “example” is made up and hence meaningless.

    I could have used p and (1-p) with p between 0.1 and 0.9. Still wouldn’t be meaningless.

    It’s as meaningful as me giving you an example where all work that is dont to pay for that additional cost is done through green means.

    It would be wrong and the example where most of the work is done through “brown” means wouldn’t be. For my example I don’t need anything more specific.

    Internet pseudointellectualism is so cute.

    What you’ve done is not understand how conditional logic works

    I’m sure I know how things to which I refer work sufficiently for this kind of conversation, to some extent I just like allowing the opponent to present all the fallacies they’d like while seeming rhetorically all right. It indicates whether they are arguing in good faith.

    If somebody is arguing in good faith, they’ll make an effort to extract something they agree with from the opponent, and make assumptions in favor of that opponent in unclear cases, otherwise the usual.

    is not based on reality

    So in reality most of the production backing your money as its accepted equivalent is being done by green means?

    Dirty solutions have environmental impact that ultimately has a monetary cost to mitigate. Just because you don’t pay for it at purchase does not mean there is not a monetary cost.

    The burden of proof that this cost is bigger than the indirect cost I’m talking about is on you. Since I’ve said only that it may or may not justify particular green means, and you were arguing with that. Apparently that anything green is always better? I don’t know what you were trying to say.