Which is precisely what the OP understood when he and I moved on. Now, you do the same, and quit trying to win these trivial technical points. By the way, the other variables you just mentioned are also relationships, lol.
The truth, in regard to economic theory is, all theories work, until they don't. All end up failing. They fail as a result of another truth. Human beings are easily corrupted by power and money, among other things.
Relationships to one subset of data, not to two. There is a difference, even if you adamantly refuse to admit it, over and over. You're a sad case, Ricter. And it is obvious to anyone reading this thread. I'll be sure and bookmark it so we can revisit it whenever you are unable to answer questions posed to you. And for the second time, I am the OP.
Which will still be 100x more productive than anything you have probably accomplished throughout your inept lifetime. Especially before Google was invented.
Interesting article. Whether anyone agrees with the criticisms of these economic policies or not, it valuable to consider this point: Austrian wizards do not believe "the problem is the solution", no matter how many times it is repeated. You can ignore the Austrian wizards part and apply it to anything in our government. You can take a step back from the economic policies and look at it this way: more pandering to special interests is not going to solve anything. But I think most American voting is based on the voters' specific interest and not on what they believe is best for the country.