- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
They’re usually shredded alive almost immediately because they’re seen as “waste” since they don’t lay eggs
For some more context:
They’re usually shredded alive almost immediately because they’re seen as “waste” since they don’t lay eggs
For some more context:
animal ag predates money.
the modern animal ag industry then, pedant.
how can we test your hypothesis?
I mean it’s been tested. When there was no money in VHS they stopped making them. How is this not making sense to you?
you can still buy them new.
pedaaaaannnnttttt
when you state a falsehood, and i call it out, it’s not pedantry: it’s honesty.
It’s a clear example of how supply diminished when demand did. Nitpicking irrelevant stuff is pedantry.
you said they don’t make them, but that was a lie, and i called it out.
what was the control?
post hoc, ergo propter hoc
I don’t speak latin, sorry
it’s a fallacious form of reasoning where claiming that the correlation of events implies causation. “it happened after, therefore it was caused by” as in… veganism increased with policing and surveillance.
Do you really need this one spelt out? Sales declined and then production followed. The goal of the business was to make money so when their product stopped making money they stopped producing it.
What would you do in the same situation? The logic seems incredibly cut and dry and you keep insisting I need to give you proof, but I’d like to see evidence of the opposite happening to be honest.
but they could have changed their values. they could have decided that the goal was not to make money, but to cover the earth, nay, the solar system with vcrs. but they didnt. they chose other values, and tried to act in a way that would uphold those values. they choose the values. they choose the action. i have no resposibility for others choices in this regard.
gladly. despite the high value of faberge eggs, no more are produced. despite the high value of epipens, enough have not been produced to make them affordable to all who might want one. of course, this doesn’t actually quantify demand, and i’m still not sure how that can be done.
edit:
despite no demand for iphones in 2004, they were subsequently produced.