You are free to guffaw about your clever rhetorical turnaround, but you're missing something.Patroklos wrote: ↑2017-10-23 03:09pmIts funny watching you guys agree with me and not realize it.
Your shock absorbers illustrates MY point. They take the forces and distribute them predictably to avoid catastrophic damage, but they don't make the shocks they absorb disappear, even as forces you feel. You can mitigate the cycle, but you can't eliminate it. Maybe you have some magical 100% efficient shock absorbers on your car, but then you would be engaging in the fantasy I noted earlier.
Competently designed shock absorbers mean that when you hit a bump, you have an adjustment, but you do not have a cycle. The car bounces up, then down, then stops, because a very stiff damping force is absorbing and dissipating the energy that would otherwise go into bouncing the car up and down.
I can imagine some advocate of laissez-faire mechanical engineering designing a car suspension that bounces up and down for ten seconds every time it hits a bump. Because everyone knows "spring cycles" are natural and springs oscillate back and forth, that's what they do, why bother fixing it? But no one would ride in such a car willingly. Because while it's common sense to be aware of cyclic phenomena, it's a poor move to revere them, to treat them as inherently better because they are thus 'natural.'
Description is not prescription. The natural tendency of markets to cycle doesn't tell us any more about how markets "ought to" behave, than the natural tendency of gravity to pull things downhill tells us we all "ought to" go jump off of cliffs.
And you are still fantasizing that people fantasize about "wishing away" something. Because if libruls believed in a sensible thing like "try to mitigate market cycles and treat them as a problem to be dealt with rather than an ideal to think about with grim triumph," it would be harder to argue against them. Much easier to argue with straw dumbass libruls who secretly dream of "wishing away" market forces.Engineers understand you can't just wish away the forces of physics, and when they don't people die. Economists worth their salt understand you can't wish away the highs and lows in a market, and when they don't economies and the people in them are screwed.
So either you're making up a belief and falsely attributing it to those present... or you're doing "old man yells at cloud" berating of people who aren't here. In which case why don't you go find someone who actually believes the strawman arguments you're setting up?