Yes, which is silly. But I'm no fan of Sanders and I can say that he won last night.
I primarily meant the Republican discussions, where Paul was the clear winner for most here - unsurprisingly since he's been the candidate appealing most to a lot of people here even beforehand.
For me as well in public debates the candidate I like most seems to be the best, unless they're having a real shocker of a bad performance. It's logical of course, their arguments make the most sense to us, otherwise we wouldn't support or even favour them.
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I didn't say it was complicated. I also didn't say it was easy. I said it was a complete fabrication, made by man and subject to change if we want it to change. Apparently that's a concept that is very hard to grasp for you.
Well, there are some mass-psychological aspects that can be argued to be innate to man - but in general I agree.
Economics for me is a unique field in the sense that the ones studying it are able to profoundly change the subject they're studying. Only very rarely as individuals (arguably in the case of Keynes, Friedman), but most definitely in the form of movements. No other science or field of study has that, as either the subject studied is unchangable by man anywas (natural sciences), or those that study it usually don't really exert that much influence over it (political scientists, sociologists).