Nevix wrote: ↑Wed Dec 09, 2020 9:44 am
The economic arguments are getting repetitive.
You've consistently refused to even consider that FREEDOM, the FREE MARKET, is good.
And you refuse to consider that those are two completely unrelated things and that free market is quite often creates tyranny and oppression. That the free market creates sweat shops, wage slaves, and both in the past an into today actual slavery.
You focus so much on "wealth inequality" that you miss how class mobility is more important, and how regulations restrict newer businesses more.
You refuse to consider how wealth inequality cripples class mobility as the wealthy can be complete morons that fail and fail and fail, but still accumulate more wealth and power over time. Where as brilliant and dedicated poor people can go their entire lives without even getting a chance.
You also refuse to even consider that regulations protecting against market monopolization that are properly enforced are part of the regulatory protections.
Just drop this part. Neither of us is getting anywhere.
You equate freedom with the free market and yet you say it can only work when restricted. How do you not see the glaring contradiction there? If the free market is so intrinsically tried to freedom that you can mark them as the same thing earlier in this very post
"Respectively because while the Father and Son are both God, the Father is not the Son and the Holy Spirit is everywhere."
So Jesus IS God but he's NOT God so he's both but not both in this specific instance. The contradiction here is apparent.
No Jesus is God, but he is not the Father. The Father is God, but is not the Son.
And the sins of Man are not redeemed by Man, but instead by God posing as Man. This, even though Jesus traces his lineage back to Adam himself. Lineage matters little if God can just manifest at any time.
And Jesus is Man and God. He is both God the Son, the Living Word, and the son of Mary. There are various orthodox interpretations of this, the most common of which (hypostatic union) is that His human and divine natures are completely intertwined and inseparable.
Nevix wrote: ↑Wed Dec 09, 2020 9:55 am
Beastro wrote: ↑Wed Dec 09, 2020 2:10 amI'd say it discounts the fact central to Orthodoxy that man cannot save himself by his very nature and needs God to do that for him.
This wholly contradicts free will as presented in the Bible. If man cannot save himself, then Jesus' obedience unto death means nothing.
If man cannot save himself, then all of God's efforts to guide mankind to the Godly path were pointless, because He was always going to have to do it himself.
Jesus was only a man, but a man obedient unto death to God's will, who gave us all the opportunity to be redeemed BY OUR OWN CHOICE TO FOLLOW GOD.
But we can't save ourselves, so those choices don't matter, under the line of reasoning you're using.
That we have free will and that we cannot save ourselves is not in contradiction. We live in a flawed world and each of us in times of selfishness, desperation, or ignorance will sin. A person chooses to follow God, but it is God's grace that saves that person not their choice.
Nevix wrote: ↑Thu Dec 10, 2020 8:59 am
The Great Depression was actually caused by too much government control, as the "New Deal" raised the cost of doing business and extended the Great Depression.
It was the fact that World War 2 ENDED the New Deal that ended the Great Depression.
So your saying it wasn't extensive government control and government cash that ended the great depression, it was even more government control (during the actual war the vast majority of goods were rationed meaning you needed both the cash to buy it and a ration card to be allowed to buy it) and government cash that ended the great depression while also ignoring that the reduction in the New Deal programs in 1936 lead directly to a double dip depression and the end of the WWII also caused a recession. Like the US War Economy during WWII is by far the closest the US has ever been to having a straight up command economy.