Phatscotty wrote:Timminz wrote:Phatscotty wrote:what is your evidence that a lemonade stand "does not teach kids a single thing" about the words I mentioned. (business, capital, investment, and capitalism)
Even though my initial point was limited to the following: having a business fully funded by someone who doesn't expect repayment of their investment, is not a "wonderful introduction to Capitalism", I will respond to your expansion upon that statement...
I will concede the first one (business) as it's a pretty generic term, and lemonade stands do indeed teach some aspects of business (production, sales, logistics to an extent). For the other three (capital, investment, and capitalism), I maintain that lemonade stands (in the sense I've described) do not teach kids anything. If you disagree, I'd be happy to consider whatever evidence you provide.
How do you know if someone fully funded anything themselves or not? That's an assumption. Guess Beiber missed that too. Why do you assume again, if your first assumption was correct, that the repayment of the investment was not made??? Where are you getting all this from? Are you not just projecting your prejudice? Who was it you assume did not expect a repayment? the parents?
Okay. I see where we're missing each other here.
Where I come from, a lemonade stand is a young child with some lemons and sugar they got from their parents' kitchen, mixed with water, in a jug from that same kitchen, selling it out front of their house on a hot summer day. You seem to think they're more involved than that.
So that we can be on the same page, please explain to me the life-span for your idea of a typical lemonade stand, step-by-step, from idea to dissolution.
Somehow I suspect that once you've done that, we will agree entirely, except for what constitutes a "typical lemonade stand".
Protip for having intellectually honest debates in the future: If you're arguing a point, argue the point. If you want to argue the assumptions, argue the assumptions. When you argue a point, it indicates that you've accepted the premise, so when you then reply to a counter argument by arguing the assumptions, it brings the whole thing back to the start. It gets tiresome for anyone foolish enough to try to have a real discussion with you.
Yes, I just called myself foolish.