I have been absent for the last four weeks
part of the time being spent in Canada (Quebec) at a Congress attended by
people from Benin, Ecuadore,Mexico, Poland Switzerland USA, Canada, New
Zealand discussing Social Credit. All of the economists who attended had no
problem particualarly with the A+B Theorem.
I have read a number of the messages posted in
my abscence and can only conclude that many of the participants have not
thought through the Theorem or possibily incapable of understanding.
For goodness sake it is not that difficult if
one clears one' mind and instead of introducing irrelevant items just simply
do their maths they may grasp it. One economist whom I met at the Congress had
actually gone to University to prove Douglas wrong but in doing her final
thesis suddenly concluded that Douglas was correct and it was a mathematical
impossibility for the arguments put by opponents, including other economists,
to operate the way they teach and argue.
It is probably because it is so simple that it
eludes those who wish to make a prolonged argument about it.
Vic Bridger